Bunker Mulligan "Let us endeavor so to live that when we come to die even the undertaker will be sorry." ~Mark Twain

November 8, 2004

Beautiful Mornings

Filed under: Golf — Bunker @ 8:21 am

Saturday morning was one of those glorious days we get in autumn here in South Texas. At daybreak, the temperature was in the 50s, and as the morning wore on reached the upper 70s. The light breeze left something of a chill in the air, but I wore shorts and my GoreTex pullover as a concession–for about eight holes. The sky was big.

The best part of the day was playing the four holes on the back nine which meander along the bay. It was hard to focus on golf while looking across the bay to the Corpus Christi skyline, Harbor Bridge, and USS Lexington. The water was smooth. Anglers vied with shorebirds for a catch. Dolphins cruised just offshore. Blue, bright, and crisp is the best description I can come up with.

As much as I enjoy golf, some days it becomes secondary.

October 9, 2004

First round

Filed under: Golf — Bunker @ 4:28 pm

Birdie – 91
Bunker – 80

Neither of us hit the ball well, and the back nine was flooded so we played the front twice. Better tomorrow on a tougher course. Birdie won the first hole, and that was his high point today!

October 5, 2004

Golf and Life Success

Filed under: Bunker's Favorites,Golf,Government,Society-Culture — Bunker @ 6:30 am

I have been involved in sports all my life. As a kid I played baseball, fooball, soccer, cricket, and basketball. As I grew older I continued playing softball, volleyball, racquetball, and golf, and coached baseball, basketball, and football. As my knees gave out, I could no longer keep up in sports requiring quick changes in direction, and golf became my one activity.

Golf is unique, and that is something I hope continues now that Tiger-mania has died down. What makes it unique is the requirement for a player to understand the rules, and penalize himself for violating one. Some of that has been lost with the huge influx of new players over the last decade. It is coming back.

That integrity is something that can carry over for a child raised in the game. Fair play means far more in golf than in other sports because of it. For that reason, this program in the home neighborhood for Robert Tyre Jones, Jr., is especially meaningful. Bobby Jones was considered a paragon of virtue in the game. He would beat the crap out of you with no remorse, but fair play always ruled.

I bring this all up due to the article I just cited, which I found in a serendipitous way. It combines several of my interests in one successful program. East Lake Golf Club was Bobby Jones’ home course. As a boy and young man, he had a terrific temper. His golf showed it. When things went well, he had a syrupy smooth swing. When they didn’t, golf clubs were broken, and curses filled the air. Once he gained control of his demons, he was unbeatable. His Grand Slam is incomparable, and will never be matched. Unlike today’s version, he won the US Amateur, British Amateur, British Open, and US Open Championships in a single year. To my knowledge, nobody has won all four of those tournaments since, let alone all in one year. Tiger has won all but the British Amateur.

The year before Jones died, the Atlanta Housing Authority opened the East Lake Meadows housing project on what had been the Number 2 course at the country club. By the early 1980s, the project would be better known as “Little Vietnam,” a nickname given for its over-the-top crime rates and drug trade. The housing project crippled not only the lives of those residing within it, but the surrounding community as well. Drug traffickers took over the bungalows lining the golf course and converted them to crack houses. The storied golf club that had nurtured Jones was brought to the brink of bankruptcy. The community that once represented the best of the New Atlanta was now a community without hope.

Tom Cousins, an Atlanta philanthropist, decided he had thrown money around at different “solutions” for years without result, and decided to take on the task himself. He changed the entire area of East Lake by rebuilding the Country Club, tearing down the projects, and building a new community with low- to mid-range housing along with encouraging business growth. The local elementary school was rebuilt, and a charter school has taken its place.

Golf has a role, as well.

Most of the money that Cousins’ foundation put into the East Lake community went into building the Charlie Yates course and restoring the East Lake Golf Club. The Yates course is there for more than aesthetics, though its lush fairways and sparkling lake do create a pleasant environment. Borrowing an idea from golfing legend Chi Chi Rodriguez, Cousins also established a Junior Golf Academy at Yates. The academy is closely affiliated with Drew Charter School and serves as a key youth development program for East Lake kids. To date, the academy has exposed over 1,000 students to the game. To take advantage of the full range of academy activities, students must reach academic benchmarks. The best players who make grades are allowed to travel to golf tournaments. This year, in recognition of the ongoing East Lake relationship with the PGA TOUR Championship, the Junior Golf Academy will become a part of the First Tee Program–a PGA sponsored program to increase inner-city and minority children

September 24, 2004

Some Course Managers are Tough

Filed under: Golf — Bunker @ 5:28 pm

“It’s good sportsmanship to not pick up lost golf balls while they are still rolling.” ~Mark Twain


golfsign (35K)

(Courtesy No Damn Three-Putts)

Ryder Cup Post Mortem

Filed under: Golf — Bunker @ 9:29 am

I’ve read and heard all the autopsies for the Ryder Cup Matches, and the conventional wisdom is that the European team kicks American butt regularly because they want the win more than do the Americans.

Bull.

The American team may be driven by a desire not to be embarrassed, but that is just as much incentive as any other. One loony reporter asked if it had to do with the Americans being involved in the President’s Cup alternate years. Perhaps it was tedious doing this kind of thing every year. Sergio quashed that.

The European team just enjoy playing golf more than do the American players. Golf is such a mental game. Blocking out extraneous thoughts during play is important. But the Americans seem to be all wrapped up in strategy and swing thoughts. Where do I place this shot? What will the wind do to my ball? How many things can go wrong? I certainly don’t want to hit this ball into that bunker….

The Europeans just seem to be out there on a weekend outing, knowing there will be beer in the clubhouse when they finish, win or lose. They may have many of the same anxieties on the first tee box, but those butterflies quickly float away. They all seem to look at their lie, check the distance, decide what to hit, and hit. Americans have been Nicklausified. And that’s why John Daly could have helped. He is the Retro-Golfer.

Maybe it’s time to bring back some of the old guys, too. Hale, Fuzzy, Jake. They might not win, but they would be fun to watch.

September 17, 2004

Gentlemen, have a good round

Filed under: Golf — Bunker @ 7:42 am

I watched some of the opening ceremonies for the Ryder Cup Matches yesterday. Why does everything like this end up being some kind of spectacle? Instead of simply introducing all the team members and having a bit of congratulatory talk, it became a huge extravaganza which lasted far longer than my patience would tolerate. The end-all was a concert with such “appropriate” songs as Tracks of My Tears. I’m sure that got the two teams pumped up for competition!

As I write, the premier match of the entire competition has begun. Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson against Colin Montgomerie and Padraig Harrington. If the matches can offer this much power throughout the weekend, it will be the best Ryder Cup of all time. Montgomerie hasn’t played well of late, but is a tenacious competitor in Ryder Cup play. On the other hand, Tiger has begun to play well, but hasn’t fared well in Cup matches. Both Harrington and Mickelson should stabilize their teams, and I would expect this match to go 18 holes. As I checked the scores just now, they have teed off and all four missed the fairway with their drives.

This morning the teams will play Four-Ball, what most people call better-ball. That is, each player plays his own ball, and the team uses the better score of the two for that hole. It is match play, so scoring is based on which team wins each hole. They play only enough holes to decide a winner. If one team is two holes ahead with only one hole to play, the match is over and the score is recorded as 2 and 1. If one team wins the first ten holes, they win the match 10 and 8, and play ends. If they are tied after seventeen holes, a team winning the eighteenth hole wins the match 1 up. “Dormie” means that in a match, one team need only tie the remaining holes to win the match.

This afternoon, the teams will play Foursome, which is sometimes called alternate shot. Each team plays a single ball and the players take turns hitting. Prior to the match, teams decide which player will tee off on even-numbered holes, and his partner will tee off on the odd-numbered holes. The match is scored the same way.

These formats continue on Saturday, with singles matches to finish the competition on Sunday. Each team has 12 members, and Hal Sutton has said he will play all 12 Americans today. With eight players each session, both captains must make the call on who plays and who sits. On Sunday, all 24 players will be on the course.

It is still exciting to me. I intend to use a lot of internet time today keeping track!

September 14, 2004

Ryder Cup

Filed under: Golf — Bunker @ 12:45 pm

Ryder Cup 2004 / The 35th Ryder Cup Matches will be played this week. I’m really not as interested as I once was. The match has lost some appeal to me because it has become far more a commercial entity than it was in its first 30+ incarnations. Marketing the matches themselves seems a bit out of character with the concept.

I did get to see Hal Sutton’s press conference. He was, as I would expect, very direct. He was asked about the chance of his team “misbehaving” this year, and was quick to shut that down. “We’ve been apologizing for five years. We won’t do it any more. It’s time for you in the press to take some responsibility, yourselves.” Not exact quotes, but to the point.

I enjoy the Ryder Cup matches because they are match play format, four-ball, foursome, and individual. It is something we seldom get to see, and the strategy of play is different from that normally played on tour.

I’ll pull for Team USA, but I always get wrapped up in watching someone play really well, regardless of team.

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