Twitter: GeoffShac
  • The 1997 Masters: My Story
    The 1997 Masters: My Story
    by Tiger Woods
  • The First Major: The Inside Story of the 2016 Ryder Cup
    The First Major: The Inside Story of the 2016 Ryder Cup
    by John Feinstein
  • Tommy's Honor: The Story of Old Tom Morris and Young Tom Morris, Golf's Founding Father and Son
    Tommy's Honor: The Story of Old Tom Morris and Young Tom Morris, Golf's Founding Father and Son
    by Kevin Cook
  • Playing Through: Modern Golf's Most Iconic Players and Moments
    Playing Through: Modern Golf's Most Iconic Players and Moments
    by Jim Moriarty
  • His Ownself: A Semi-Memoir (Anchor Sports)
    His Ownself: A Semi-Memoir (Anchor Sports)
    by Dan Jenkins
  • The Captain Myth: The Ryder Cup and Sport's Great Leadership Delusion
    The Captain Myth: The Ryder Cup and Sport's Great Leadership Delusion
    by Richard Gillis
  • The Ryder Cup: Golf's Grandest Event – A Complete History
    The Ryder Cup: Golf's Grandest Event – A Complete History
    by Martin Davis
  • Harvey Penick: The Life and Wisdom of the Man Who Wrote the Book on Golf
    Harvey Penick: The Life and Wisdom of the Man Who Wrote the Book on Golf
    by Kevin Robbins
  • Grounds for Golf: The History and Fundamentals of Golf Course Design
    Grounds for Golf: The History and Fundamentals of Golf Course Design
    by Geoff Shackelford
  • The Art of Golf Design
    The Art of Golf Design
    by Michael Miller, Geoff Shackelford
  • The Future of Golf: How Golf Lost Its Way and How to Get It Back
    The Future of Golf: How Golf Lost Its Way and How to Get It Back
    by Geoff Shackelford
  • Lines of Charm: Brilliant and Irreverent Quotes, Notes, and Anecdotes from Golf's Golden Age Architects
    Lines of Charm: Brilliant and Irreverent Quotes, Notes, and Anecdotes from Golf's Golden Age Architects
    Sports Media Group
  • Alister MacKenzie's Cypress Point Club
    Alister MacKenzie's Cypress Point Club
    by Geoff Shackelford
  • The Golden Age of Golf Design
    The Golden Age of Golf Design
    by Geoff Shackelford
  • Masters of the Links: Essays on the Art of Golf and Course Design
    Masters of the Links: Essays on the Art of Golf and Course Design
    Sleeping Bear Press
  • The Good Doctor Returns: A Novel
    The Good Doctor Returns: A Novel
    by Geoff Shackelford
  • The Captain: George C. Thomas Jr. and His Golf Architecture
    The Captain: George C. Thomas Jr. and His Golf Architecture
    by Geoff Shackelford

The fate of golf would seem to lie in the hands of the Royal and Ancient Golf Club and the United States Golf Association. Can we expect that they will protect and reverence the spirit of golf?
MAX BEHR


  

Entries in 2014 PGA Tour (262)

Sunday
Dec282014

"Top 10 in 2014: Social Media Fails"

I hope I'm not the first to wish Steve Elkington a big congrats for making Golf Channel's 2014 Top 10 Social Media Fails list...twice.

The list is a sobering reminder of the pedantic and more ridiculous scandals of 2014, all from hitting little keys on a digital device.

And a special nod to Jesper Parnevik for Instragraming his Segway accident, which made the list.

On a classier note, GolfChannel.com's most watched videos of the year list is topped by an actual golf shot and includes several other golf shots. For those so inclined.

Thursday
Dec182014

GolfChannel.com's Most Read Stories Of 2014...

As someone who hears the outrage when the media drifts into the abyss of stories deemed unseemly by the golf world, I had to chuckle at what the masses were reading at GolfChannel.com.

Kudos to G.C. Digital for posting 2014's most read stories, several of which I'd already forgotten about.

1. Report: Woods paid Galea $76K for 14 visits
2. Kerr disappointed to have to 'fire' caddie
3. Woods at Valhalla, playing PGA practice round
4. Angela Bennett, wife of Kuchar's caddie, dies
5. Hawk's Nest: Anthony Kim, where have you gone?
6. Wozniacki takes subtle shot at Rory's height
7.Watson issues statement responding to criticism
8. Report: D. Johnson suspended for cocaine use
9. McIlroy inspires Scott to switch drivers
10. Choi disagrees with penalty, WDs instead

All but one was tied to either controversy, inexplicable tragedy, First World drama, short jokes, rules violations or suspected drug use. The only "positive" story involved Rory McIlroy inspiring Adam Scott to switch drivers.

Sunday
Dec072014

Jordan Spieth Rolls To 10-Stroke Win: A Cautionary Tale!?

There are no doubt many college players and parents witnessing Jordan Spieth's success after a stellar junior career and solid run at Texas. But after winning the Hero World Challenge in stunning fashion (10 shots clear at -26 and 26 strokes better than Tiger), just a week after winning the Australian Open with a final round 63, the message from Spieth's family is genuine: they're proud, but this wasn't without moments of doubt.

Jason Sobel talks to Shawn and Chris Spieth as their son routed the Hero field and they reveal that even with Jordan's success, they wondered if it was the best thing for him to leave school early.

Less than three months after turning professional, he was competing in the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am on a sponsor’s exemption. Watching him struggle with his game, his parents sidled up in the gallery next to Steve Cantlay, whose own son, Patrick, had similarly left school early the previous year.

“I asked him, ‘Have you ever questioned your son’s decision?’” Chris recalls. “‘Because I’m questioning ours right now.’”

Needless to say, that sentiment has deteriorated.

While his friends and former classmates are preparing to embark on life in the real world, Spieth continues living in what he calls “fantasyland.” He is now the ninth-ranked player in the world, owns three victories and, yes, has earned more money than many of those other 21-year-olds will accrue in a lifetime.

“I don’t know if he’ll ever understand what it’s like to come out of college and find a job,” his mom says. “He didn’t have a job, but he knew what his job was going to be. There are kids who come out of college and don’t know what their job is going to be for 10 years.”

Even Jordan made a refreshing admission Saturday, reports Golfweek's Brentley Romine: he misses school.

"I miss school," Spieth said. "Now when I look back – it's actually been two years. Two years ago I was getting ready for my last finals. But I'm starting my third year on Tour, which is crazy to think about. … To be honest the first year I was out I really missed it a lot."

Saturday
Dec062014

Saturday's Tiger (69) Drama: Chunks Of Two Kinds

The Twittersphere barely lit up Saturday as more Tiger Woods drama overshadowed the early Hero World Challenge coverage and the stellar play of Jordan Spieth (and that was before the 21-year-old posted 63 and a seven shot lead, Steve DiMeglio reports).

While Twitter was fairly quiet (or golf writers were out...golfing), Golf Channel's Tiger Tracker was all over Tiger's temperature and vomiting drama. And after he gutted out a 69 with two more flubbed wedge shots, Woods explained why he played on.

From Bob Harig's ESPN.com report:

"I like to compete,'' said Woods, who is at 216, even par. "If I can go, I can go. I'll give it everything I have. This is different. I wasn't in pain. Just was a bit under the weather.''

Woods had a 102-degree fever on Friday but thought he might be past the problems. Instead, they got worse. Woods looked terrible on the driving range, and several times stopped and bent over as if to vomit. He nonetheless birdied the first hole then added a bogey and birdie on the front side to turn in 35.

Adam Schupak of Golfweek describes Saturday's two chunked wedges and says they overshadow what has been the more glaring issue: putting.

Who would’ve thought his driver would look like the least rusty club in his bag in Woods' first competitive rounds since missing the cut at the PGA Championship in August? The chipping woes that plagued his first two rounds continued. He chunked a chip a few feet from the Bermuda rough on the sixth hole and made bogey and then repeated Thursday’s blunder at 13 by lifting his head and stubbing it from a collection area. The ball returned to his feet and led to bogey. How bad has the chipping been? Well, fans were placing bets on Twitter if he’d do it again and someone created a parody account named “@DidTigerChunk.”


While his chipping shortcomings make for easy fodder, they have disguised how poorly he has putted so far. Woods hasn’t made a putt outside of 12 feet in three rounds.

Golf Central's report on the Woods drama and post-round comments.

Tiger also revealed after the round that his early year schedule will be different, getting the hopes up of tournament directors in Phoenix, Pebble Beach and Los Angeles that he may add one of the events he used to play regularly. My money is on Phoenix.

Jason Sobel
reports for GolfChannel.com.

Friday
Dec052014

Do Long Game Swing Issues Impact Short Game Technique?

A fascinating debate is in the offing over the coming months if Tiger Woods continues to chunk (and now blade) wedge shots as he did again Friday in the Hero World Challenge.

From Bob Harig's ESPN.com story on Tiger's 2-under-par 70 in the company of Patrick Reed, who posted 63.

The work in progress remains his short game, a good example occurring at the par-4 eighth hole Friday. It was his only bogey on the front side, but it was an ugly one, with a wedge-shot approach to the green coming up several yards short, followed by a bladed chip shot that went 40 feet past the pin. A day earlier, Woods chunked chip shots four times, so a natural compensation might be what occurred on the eighth hole.

Tiger later presented the 18th green surrounds with a huge divot similar to those of Thursday's round and again, on a shot where there was plenty of green to work with and no real fine line situation that might explain the kind of heavy shot he's hitting.

Woods said after the round that the long swing changes he's making are tied to the short game struggles. Will Gray reporting for GolfChannel.com:

“A chip shot is a smaller version (of the swing),” he said. “So this is a different path than I have been using, and it’s showing up. It’s not quite ready yet. Just going to take more time, more practice.”

Adam Schupak explored the topic of Tiger's swing changes, with complimentary remarks from Hank Haney on Twitter (“Clearly better, back on track. He wasted five years.”) and David Leadbetter, who is not seeing the direct correlation Woods and others see between swing mechanics and short game mechanics.

“Sure there is some correlation between the long game and the short game but basically it’s a pretty different approach,” Leadbetter said. “As good as a short game as he’s had during his career, why would he ever want to change that? I think he made a big mistake.”

Woods critic Brandel Chamblee on Golf Central has actually been endorsing the idea of a direct tie between Woods' swing and the embarrassing shots around the greens, saying a combination of the dip in Woods' swing, the changed release point and the setup/takeaway changes are all impacting Tiger's wedge shots around the green.

Maybe I haven't been paying enough attention to instruction over the last ten years, because I'm totally flummoxed by this notion. Though perhaps this explains why a shocking number of modern professionals are so mediocre around the greens compared to previous generations due to employing swing fundamentals for what are largely short feel shots around greens?

Here is Chamblee talking about these really difficult shots around Isleworth's greens where he says there is "nothing harder than chipping off of a tight light into the grain."

Thursday
Dec042014

Roundup: Don't Let Tiger's Chunked-Wedge Strewn 77 Ruin Memories Of Tuesday's Magnificent Press Conference

Okay, so he still a ways to go recovering the short game he mysteriously changed to match the Foley swing years and he was the worst player by a lot in round one of the Hero World Challenge, but at least Tiger has (A) his back intact, and (B) his upbeat press conference from Tuesday where he weaved through rallykillers and stuck the landing. 

As for a 77 that was four strokes worse than anyone else in the field, Dave Shedloski says the lone positive came in the form of new re-injury. Maybe. There was the explosiveness too.

Oh, sure, there was more. “Shot patterns were fantastic. And as I think all of you saw, I got my power back and I got my speed back. It’s nice to be able to start launching it again. That’s a very good sign.”

That said, his new-old swing didn’t do him many favors on his former home course, and his short game came up, well, considerably short of the standards of your average 20-handicapper, let alone the No. 24 player in the world.

“It’s weird,” said Woods, who mis-hit four chips and a bunker shot. “I didn’t think I hit it that bad. My short game was awful. It was just one of those days where really nothing went my way.”

The explosive chunk wedges were "shocking" (Steve DiMeglio in USA Today) and according to Doug Ferguson of the AP:

It was the 10th time in 12 rounds that he failed to break par since his first return in June.
Even so, some of the shots were shocking, especially around the green.

On the par-5 17th, he hit his second shot just left of the green, pin-high in a deep collection area. Woods no sooner hit his chip that he angrily swung back-handed toward his divot, knowing what was coming next. The ball didn’t come close to reaching the green, and Woods turned his back as the ball rolled back toward his feet.

Jason Sobel of GolfChannel.com noted that the ball striking wasn't so bad.

All told, he left five greenside wedge shots short of the actual greens, chunking four of them and leaving a bunker shot in the sand. If his ball-striking – which included 8-of-14 fairways and 11-of-18 greens in regulation – was a newfound bright spot during this latest comeback attempt, his short game was a dark crater of unfulfilled intentions.

Cameron Morfit of golf.com wondered about the chunks this way and called the start to Tiger 4.0 "inauspicious."

By this time people were starting to talk. Did he have vertigo? Had an optometrist botched his prescription? Watching Woods mangle all these chip shots was like watching Bobby Flay burn all the grilled cheese sandwiches.

After blistering a drive down the fairway at the par-5 17th, and getting up around the green with his second shot, Woods chunked his fourth chip of the day, this time recovering to save par. “It certainly is surprising that I could hit chip shots that poorly,” he said afterward. “I just flubbed ’em.”

Most disturbing of all the observations came from Jason Day, who saw none of the chunked shots in Monday's practice round, as reported by Golfweek's Adam Schupak.

“Monday, he was chipping fine. It was on point,” Day said. “It was surprising today to see him stub a lot of chip shots. Uphill and into the grain is very difficult, but to see that many out of Tiger Woods is very surprising.”

Robert Lusetich was the least forgiving after hearing Day's remarks, noting that Tiger "used to be able to score better than anyone who ever played this game" and "now Woods turns 72s into 77."

Why? He can't chip and he can't putt.

Chips into the grain are virtually guaranteed chunks. Woods hit four fat chips on Thursday, and not the PGA Tour-caliber chunks. These were like the handiwork of 20-handicapper Sunday hackers, laying-the-sod over chips that went a few feet and rolled back to his feet.

They were embarrassing.

Former instructor Hank Haney Tweeted a couple of interesting thoughts as the chunks unfolded...


No Laying Up Vined the chunked shots. Hat tip to Alex Myers for sharing at The Loop.

 

ESPN.com's Bob Harig predicted the reaction would look past health and to the wedge performance.

Woods actually was pleased, for the most part, with the way he hit the ball -- he didn't miss a fairway on the back nine after hitting just one on the front. And at this point -- four months removed from his last competitive round, at least a month prior to his next tournament -- that's a positive development.

Even more so was the smile Woods flashed when asked if he was in any pain.

"I have absolutely no pain," Woods said. "I haven't said that in a long time. It's very exciting to stand up there and hit some of the drives, especially on the back nine. It was nice to start launching it."

It should be noted Woods displayed similar wedge game issues at times in 2014, especially at Torrey Pines. It's an issue that's not going away, sadly. We've all been there in some way, but we were also never one of the greatest to play the game.

Wednesday
Dec032014

Steiny! Tiger's (Extra Sweet) Hero Deal

Bob Harig of ESPN.com reports that Tiger ten-percenter Mark Steinberg confirms his client's four-year deal to endorse Hero motorscooters is in "the ballpark" of the $8 million reported by media reports in India.

Even better (for Tiger)...

Steinberg said the deal is for four years and does not include a stipulation that Woods play in the India Open. Woods also will not have the company's logo on his golf bag or his shirt.

Hero sponsors the India Open, but Woods didn't know the date of the event when asked during Tuesday's press conference.

According to Doug Ferguson's AP report on the first substantial deal for Tiger in some time (I know a lot of you were losing sleep over whether he'd be able to pay the electric bill), it's all about the branding...

Munjal said Woods will be used in television commercials and other advertising in various markets, though still to be determined is whether Woods actually rides one of the Hero motorcycles in a commercial. He still hasn't ridden one.

"I'm not sure if he necessarily has to be on a motorbike," Munjal said, adding that Woods sat on a motorcycle Tuesday for a still photo to be used in advertising.

While Woods announced the event would move on to the Bahamas for the next three years, less clear is whether Hero is going with them. The World Challenge sponsorship announcement in September only mentioned this year.

**The Woods Foundation says the Hero name will be on the event for four years, starting this year.

As for Tiger's pro-am round--arguably the most scrutinized in years, and by that I mean, golf writers watched him play--it was all systems go.

Dave Shedloski of GolfDigest.com even said it was pretty boring, which is actually a good thing. And this:

Several times Woods conferred with his new swing consultant, Chris Como, who occasionally captured video of Tiger's swing on his mobile phone.

From Steve DiMeglio's USA Today report:

On Wednesday, Woods played in the pro-am, walking 18 holes, he joked, for the first time since the PGA Championship. He hit just a couple loose shots, made three birdies and went full-bore on two drives – on the 8th and 18th holes – and was not the worse for wear.

"Yeah, that is where I've been," Woods said when asked if the two swings were confirmation of his restored back. "That's the neat thing. I took that much time off right after the PGA and built up my body and made a few adjustments on my swing and hit some good shots today."

Rex Hoggard reported at GolfChannel.com that Woods was 2 under and it was if nothing had been amiss.

On Wednesday, Woods looked relaxed and on more than one occasion, like at the par-4 18th hole, he aggressively hit driver. There were no awkward moments, no painful grimaces, no cause for concern, only a scorecard that added up to 2 under par following three birdies and one bogey.

Woods tees off at 12:15 pm ET Thursday with Jason Day. Golf Channel picks up Hero World Challenge coverage at 2 p.m. ET.

Tuesday
Dec022014

Roundup: Tiger Looks Rested, Ready, Slimmer, Better...

After a year of painful press conferences denying the obvious, Tiger Woods appears to have either (A) had an intervention from Notah Begay (B) listened to his critics (C) listened to his mother (C) had a moment of honest introspection, or (D) a combination of the above. Because not only did he manage to make some major admissions for his ownself, but Woods just looked younger, refreshed and less burdened.

He may still stink it up this week due to rust, but it was hard not to watch him talk or hit balls and see that he's made positive changes in his game. So much so that it appeared to have unburdened him of the defensiveness that plagued most of these sessions in the last year.

Of course, getting to the choice words was tough, as his Tuesday Hero World Challenge press conference was nearly upstaged by some of the finest rally killers the modern game has ever seen. The Guinness World Records people are looking into whether a record was set for rally killers and also into "brand value" references by Hero CEO Pawan Mujal, whose presence also added to the rally kills.

You can read the full transcript here.

Dave Shedloski at GolfDigest.com was there and noted the new kid vibe.

Looking 10-15 pounds lighter but still just as muscular in the arms and shoulders, Woods said he had no interest in reprising the golf game from his youth until he suffered a lower back injury earlier this year that scuttled most of his 2014 season. Woods made just seven starts that included two missed cuts and two withdrawals. He failed to post a top-10 finish for the first time in his career.

Steve DiMeglio asked Woods about his back in between questions about the Hero brand nonsense and got this answer, reported on his roundup.

"The body is good. I've gotten stronger. I've gotten more explosive. I've gotten faster," Woods said Tuesday.

"I just now need to hit more balls, but the body is good. I don't have the sharp pain like I used to at the beginning of the year. I still have some aches and pains, just like anybody else who is my age and older. …

"But I'm past the rehab portion of it, and now I'm in the strength development of it, and I don't have to do those tedious little rehab exercises. I can basically play with my kids and do whatever I want. We've been playing a ton of soccer in the backyard just about every day."

He's also been hitting a bunch of golf balls in the backyard of his Florida compound.

Bob Harig addressed the Chris Como part of the equation, among other topics.

Saying it is "new, but it's old,'' Woods said he reviewed video going back to his junior golf days that preceded a 79-victory career on the PGA Tour that includes 14 major championships.

"It was quite interesting to see where my swing was then and how much force I could generate with a very skinny frame,'' Woods said Tuesday during a pre-tournament news conference. "How did I do that? How do I generate that much power? That's kind of what we are getting back into.''

Michael Collins noted Tiger's unusually forthright answers, including a rare "I don't know" uttered on many occasions, suggest a new, more humble and self-aware man.

Tiger Woods was at his most honest and vulnerable as I have ever seen him saying those three words Tuesday prior to the Hero World Challenge he is hosting this week.

That's a phrase athletes, especially ones who are considered by some to be greatest of all time in their sport, rarely use when talking about themselves and their game.

Tiger said "I don't know" more than I've ever heard him utter it in his career.

The man who appears to be behind Woods' self-realization movement, Notah Begay, talked to Golf Channel's Ryan Burr on Golf Central. Video here.

"[Tiger] called me a day or two after the PGA Championship. I could tell he was a little dejected and a little bit disappointed in how the season had gone... But mostly it was an athlete and a friend who was in pain physically… So it was time to have a candid conversation.”

And this was revealing:

“He had to take ownership over his own golf swing… My job was not necessarily to provide answers, but to ask more informed questions. ‘What did he want his swing to look like? What was most important to him?... How do we get rid of this [back] pain?’... He really started to formulate ideas on what he felt needed to happen.”

Jason Sobel said the vibe Tuesday at Isleworth was one of golf returning to normal, which could also speak to Woods' newfound comfort level with where he's at physically and mentally.

Now that Woods is returning to action once again, it feels like the golf world is getting back to some normalcy. That world doesn’t revolve around him, but he at least helps place it back on the proper axis.

Matthew Rudy talked to Hank Haney and the former Tiger instructor also sees mostly positives, even predicting a Woods run at the '14 World Challenge title.

"It's going to be an interesting week to watch," says Haney, who had his own public debut as Woods' coach at Bay Hill in March 2004. "His body looks different, and he says he's able to practice his normal amount now.

That means at least his short game should be different. Does he try to shape shots? Will he play some draws? We could see a lot of different things, and there will probably be more to come."

Brian Wacker seized on the retro effort by Woods to reclaim past elements of his swing.

Added Woods: “I think that physically, I just wasn't able to do some of the things that we wanted to do in the golf swing.”

Ultimately, that’s what prompted Woods to change coaches and go in a new, old direction.

Brendan Mohler at golf.com pulls up some old swing video and notes this about the changes.

When asked about what went wrong with Sean Foley, Woods said, “Physically I just wasn’t able to do some of the things that we wanted to do in the golf swing.” Tiger also noted that the two remain friends and often needle each other via text message.

While Woods said that he does not yet feel entirely game ready, he did note that he is pleased with the progress he’s made thus far.

“It hasn’t taken me that long to implement it. I haven’t done it in a long time but my body’s remembering it. I’m very pleased with my speed and the freedom I have, and what I’m doing with the golf ball.

“I don’t feel like I’m hitting it very hard, but it’s coming off the face faster. That part was exciting.”

Here is Woods talking about the switch from Golf Central's coverage.

And the transcript component of the day's most interesting answer related to balancing technology, technique and swing thoughts.

Q.  Is it fair to say or would you say that maybe in the last couple years, you had gotten too technical and away from some of the naturalness that you had once enjoyed in your game and your swing?

TIGER WOODS:  Well, I think that I got into‑‑ just like I think a lot of people in this generation, the new information of TrakMan, and trying to get the numbers to jive and trying to get the motions to match.  And I think that that's been extremely informative because it's helped me during this process, but it's not the only thing I'm going to do.

Still retain the feel in my hands and how I hit golf shots; but also I have an understanding that if I do something, these numbers should be like this.  Because I didn't have that understanding and I didn't have that basis when I worked‑‑ when I was going into working with Sean.

So that was very new.  That's something that I think that is very helpful but can't be the end of all things.

As for the event benefiting his foundation, in one of the worst kept secrets in golf, Woods confirmed the stop at Isleworth is a one-off move for the Hero World Challenge before going to the Bahamas starting in 2015. Rex Hoggard reports. And just think volunteers who spent over $100 for a uniform you'll wear six times…it’s a collectible!

Who is Hero and why did they mess up a perfectly interesting press conference? Bob Harig says they want to sell Americans motorcyles and motor scooters starting in 2016 and that Tiger, mercifully, has no intention of trying out the product.

But Woods admitted he has never ridden one.

"And even with Hero's valuable sponsorship this year and for the next three years, there's no way I'm about to start,'' Woods said, smiling.

Woods makes his return to competitive golf at the Hero World Challenge after a four-month absence due to injuries. The annual tournament benefits the Tiger Woods Foundation.

Michael Buteau also reported on the Hero deal that is both a personal endorsement deal and a World Challenge sponsorship, despite Tiger's best efforts to only play up the foundation portion.

Neither Hero nor Woods’s agent, Mark Steinberg, would disclose financial terms of the agreement.
In a statement, Munjal said Woods is “not just a golfing champion and an icon for millions around the world; he is indeed a phenomenon -– a symbol of humility in victory and grace in adversity.”

If you have a few extra minutes, GolfDigest.com has this Jaime Diaz reported look at Tiger's swing changes through the years.

Tuesday
Dec022014

Moving Images: Sean Foley Blesses Chris Como

Nice work by the Golf Channel cameras to be on the back of Isleworth's driving range and to get a camera in place in between all of the carts parked on the tee (classy!) for the kumbaya moment of former Tiger instructor Sean Foley blessing new Tiger swing "consultant" Chris Como as he embarks on his journey.

Love the hand to the face, nice touch. Reminiscent of Michael and Fredo on New Year's Eve in Cuba.

Tuesday
Oct142014

Elite Converge On World Challenge Again...

It doesn't matter that Tiger's moving the World Challenge to Isleworth from Sherwood or that elite players are burned out on playing high profile events...love those world ranking points, baby!

Brentley Romine on Tiger Woods drawing another fine field for his annual World Challenge, no doubt aided by the lure of easy world ranking points. Oh, and the chance to play Isleworth, of course.

Along with Tiger Woods, defending champion Zach Johnson, two-time Masters champion Bubba Watson and 2013-14 FedEx Cup champion Billy Horschel are among this year's participants in the Dec. 4-7 event at Isleworth Golf and Country Club in Windermere, Fla.

The players competing account for a combined 166 PGA Tour wins and 21 major championships.

Monday
Sep152014

"The Tour Championship was the first and only event of this year’s FedEx Cup to have an increase in overnight ratings"

A Sports Media Watch graphic pretty much sums up the dismal ratings news out of East Lake, where the third round managed to out-rate the final round and the weekend was up slightly from last year, something the other events could not claim. So the primary takeway was that this year's Tour Championship was the only playoff event not on the decline despite having Rory McIlroy involved and an eventual winner who really could use the massive winner's prize.

Monday
Sep152014

Ogilvy: "'More' didn't really work for me."

Another fun read from Geoff Ogilvy in this week's Golf World, talking about his career resurgence following a few years of struggle. As with many others before him, all the searching only made things worse.

Ryan Herrington with the highlights of Ogilvy's piece, which can be read in its entirety here.

At first my reaction was to practice harder and longer, experiment more with TrackMan, video and other equipment, and increase my work in the gym. It made me feel I was doing it the "correct" way, but it's actually easy to just work hard. Somebody next to you is hitting 500 balls, so you hit 550, and it seems you've gained ground. It's the time-honored sports approach that many simplistically ascribe to Ben Hogan, but I have no doubt even his voluminous practice was more about quality than quantity.

Bottom line, that kind of "more" didn't really work for me. For months, I found myself dragging my clubs to the airport Friday night instead of Monday morning. I finally realized I had fallen prey to a common tour disease: getting analytical, doing a lot of repetition, taking a scientific approach that tempts with possible answers.