Entries Tagged as 'Look'

Look Back to the Ten Years in Golf—-Ten Moving Moment (I)

Look Back to the Ten Years in Golf—-Ten Moving Moment (I)

New Year is coming. Ten years past, we should leave some space and time to enjoy the highlight. Look back the decade, you can find the amazing moment in golf. There are 10 moments in golf worth burning into people’s memory. These moments can be made into history.

 

1. The Tiger Slam. Give Tiger a mulligan on two swings at the 2000 Masters, and maybe he wins the straight-up Grand Slam that year. Instead, Vijay Singh won at Augusta and Woods ran the table for the next four major championships — the 2000 U.S. Open, British Open and PGA Championship, and the 2001 Masters. That wasn’t a surprise to Woods, who had talked with swing coach Butch Harmon before the 2000 season about a possible sweep because of the Tiger-favorable courses: Pebble Beach, St. Andrews and Valhalla.

 

He was scary-good as he won by a record 15 shots at Pebble Beach with a record score of 12 under par, and by eight shots at St. Andrews with a record score of 19 under. The 2001 Masters victory, the culmination of what was dubbed the Tiger Slam, meant Woods had all four major trophies on his mantle at once. (You can toss in the ‘01 Players Championship if you like.) As he stood on Augusta’s 18th green, the Slam won, Woods pulled his cap down over his face to cover his tears, then shook hands with Phil Mickelson after he putted out. “As a kid, I never dreamed about winning four straight majors. Kids don’t dream that big,” Woods said later. SI writer Frank Deford later opined: “His 2000 was the greatest year ever in golf. He changed golf, the way we feel about golf and the entire golf industry.” It was a once-in-a-lifetime moment — so far.

 


 

Bests of Decade in Golf

 

2. The shot heard ’round the world. With apologies to Gene Sarazen and Larry Mize, the most famous shot in Masters history is now the reverse chip-in at the par-3 16th by Tiger Woods in the final round when he won in 2005. You’re in a minority of earthlings if you don’t know CBS announcer Verne Lundquist’s excited call — “In your life have you seen anything like that?” — which CBS replays annually. Thanks to TV, Tigermania and the Internet, Tiger’s chip that rolled up the hill, then rolled back down and ever-so-slowly toppled into the cup is surely the most viewed golf shot ever. It didn’t matter that Woods bogeyed the next two holes to fall back into a playoff with Chris DiMarco, which he won. That glorious chip is The Shot of Augusta’s modern era.

 

3. Swede success. It was a watershed year for Annika Sorenstam in 2003. Not just because she played great golf, as usual, and won six times, including a pair of major titles, or because she was named Player of the Year for a sixth time. It all changed for her in May when she accepted an invitation to play in the PGA Tour event at Colonial in Fort Worth. In the wake of several critical comments from male players, Sorenstam became a Seabiscuit-like international underdog. She also loosened up in pre-tournament press conferences, giving folks a first look into a pleasant personality that she’d previously kept under wraps.

 

Sure, Sorenstam was the first woman to shoot 59 in competition (in 2001) and the best woman golfer of her era, but she earned more respect for her gritty showing at Colonial than for anything else she’d done up to that point. Notable trivia: Kenny Perry won the event; Sorenstam was paired with Dean Wilson and Aaron Barber; she shot 71-74, tied for 96th; she finished ahead of Mark Brooks and Geoff Ogilvy, among others. “When people talk about Colonial,” she said later that year, “the hair on my arms stands on end.”

 A lot of fans felt the same way.

4. Watson’s last stand. All four major championships in 2009 were remarkable, but they shared a common theme — they weren’t supposed to end the way they did. Kenny Perry’s bobble at Augusta, Phil Mickelson’s three-putt at Bethpage Black and Tiger Woods’ lost 54-hole PGA lead scuttled what would have been incredibly dramatic stories.

 

Then there was the British Open at Turnberry, where an aging legend returned like something out of a dream. Five-time Open champion Tom Watson, long a revered figure in Scotland, played the golf of his life on the old links at Turnberry and appeared poised to win a major championship at 59, 13 11 years older than any major champion in history. It still looked good when Watson swung a sweet 8-iron at the final hole … until the ball rolled over the green and part-way down an embankment.

 

Watson didn’t get up and down for the par he needed to win, leaving a 10-foot putt woefully short. He suddenly looked his age in the four-hole playoff and lost badly to Stewart Cink. The Scots wanted this one for Old Tom, and the trophy presentation felt like a funeral as fans silently filed out, many of them teary-eyed.
Watson’s amazing week was the golf story of the year.

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Inside Look Of Firestone

Inside Look Of Firestone

Bridgestone Invitational World Golf Championship

Course: South Course, Firestone Country Club
Location: Akron, Ohio
Since: 1999
Yardage: 7,400
Par: 70
Low Winning Total: 259 (-21) Tiger Woods 2000
Course Record: 61 Tiger Woods (2000)
Field: 81
Format: Four day, no cut, 72 hole stroke play competition
Tee Off: Thursday BST 14:30

Overview

After Jack Nicklaus won his fourth PGA Championship at Firestone Country Club in 1975 the course hosted the World Series of Golf from 1976-1998. In 1999 the World Series of Golf became one of the four annual World Golf Championships.

An elite field lines up for this year’s Bridgestone Invitational featuring 49 of the top 50 players in the world including 17 Major Champions with 40 Major victories between them.

The World Golf Championships are truly international events and there are 51 international players in the field, representing 20 countries from outside the United States. In the 10 year history three international players have won - Craig Parry (2002), Darren Clarke (2003) and Vijay Singh (2008).

Last Time Out

Vijay Singh hung on a year ago to defeat Stuart Appleby and Lee Westwood by a stroke.

At 45 years, 5 months and 12 days old, Singh was the oldest player and only player in his 40s to win a World Golf Championship event. His win at the 2008 Bridgestone Invitational made him the most successful international player in PGA Tour history.

Course

The South Course plays to par 70 and measuring 7,400 yards is one of the longest golf courses on the PGA Tour. It is an old-fashioned tree-lined golf course with narrow sloping fairways, thick rough and lightning fast greens heavily protected by bunkers.

A cool wet summer has left the course looking verdant. The rough is thick and lush and recent warmer weather has started to dry the course out. The ball is starting to roll out and by the start of the tournament conditions should be on the firm and fast side.

Fairways

The last two winners have ranked in the top five for driving distance. With half the holes measuring at least 464 yards off the tee, including a par five that plays 667 yards, long hitters of the golf ball are at an advantage.

This is not an out and out bombers golf course as many of the fairways are narrow, slopey, tree-lined and with thick four-inch rough players need to be accurate off the tee. The last two winners were ranked 11th and 21st for driving accuracy.

Greens

Usually these are some of the quickest greens the players will face all year and they are set to run at 12.5-13 on the stimpmeter. Heavy rain last Friday has softened the greens but they are starting to dry out and firm up.

There are 82 bunkers on the course and most of these can be found around the greens, so players who are inaccurate with their approach shots will be left with some very tricky up and downs.

discount golf equipment

happy day!

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All golf balls look the same, but do they perform the same?

All golf balls look the same, but do they perform the same?

Finding the right ball for you is about spin, feel, distance, and price.

Just like golf clubs, golf balls must fit the golfer, and as with clubs, you must match the golf ball that best complements your specific swing and style of play.

Golf balls, although not inexpensive, are affordable enough to allow a degree of experimentation. You should try different brands and types of balls before settling on one.

Distance and Spin
Today’s golf ball is about getting the 2 basic factors of distance and spin correct.

The trajectory (launch angle), provides the distance, and the spin provides better control of the golf ball.

Launch or trajectory angle is determined firstly by the driver, and then next by the golf ball.

If you already drive the ball long and accurate, perhaps the spin and feel of the ball around the green is more important.

Some top golfers will fit the golf ball, from the spin and feel of a ball around the green, back to the driver. Others will go from distance with a driver down to the wedge.

There are tracking devices used by professionals and ball manufacturers that track the flight and launch angle of the ball. The higher the COR of a ball , the higher the velocity this gives, but with a much lower feel to the ball

So what should you be looking for to get more distance through a better launch angle?

If you have, a low hand speed, then a ball that has high spin would give more optimum lift, hence more distance.

Conversely, a. higher hand speed would be better with a low spin.

Of course a downside to the higher spin ball, is that if you hit it incorrectly, then you will also put on the ball more side spin and the ball could go further off to the right or left of centre!

Feel
It is the core that determines the compression and the hardness or softness of the ball. The outer cover will determine the durability and spin.

The old balata balls gave lots of spin and a good feel, but were less good for ball flight, or durability.

The Top-Flite Strata golf ball, introduced in the mid-1990’s, produced the first 3 piece ball.. It merged a high-spinning, soft-feeling Tour Balata type of ball, with the low-spinning, long-flying, and durable Pinnacle or distance ball.

This remarkable three-piece ball, was, indeed, two balls in one: It was a long-flying/low-spinning distance ball off the tee, and a high-spinning control ball off the irons.

They achieved this by adding a soft polyurethane cover on what was virtually a Top-Flite distance ball, and then adding a thin middle or mantle layer that encased the ball’s already large and solid rubber core.

A few years later, balls such as Titleist’s ProVI, Maxfli’s M3 Tour, Callaway’s Rule 35, Nike’s TA2 (both the Long and Spin models), and others, including new balls from Strata, improved on Strata’s original breakthrough, by improving the durability of their urethane outer covers and making them thinner and firmer for added distance.

At the same time, advances in rubber systems allowed ball makers to design cores that were more energetic or “faster,” for even more distance on shots hit with the longer clubs, while maintaining a nice soft feel.

Tour balls today, can provide good distance, durability and spin, but at a price.

What is best for you?
If you have a high hand speed, then a higher compression ball, like a ‘DT’ ball, maybe better.
With a slower hand speed, a lower compression ball like the ‘Maxfli noodle’ would probably suit. (I am not a representative of either golf ball manufacturer).

The manufacturer, today, can make a ball with a large rubber centre that feels soft like the low-compression balls of years past, but flies far with a lot of initial ball speed like the old high-compression balls.

Therefore, it is wise now to read what it says on the box, and try them out. You will be amazed at how different balls react.

Price
Tour golf balls are still the best, but are a high price to pay.

Perhaps a happy medium is the mid-price range, which will provide good spin or distance characteristics, without having to pay through the nose. Plus if you lose those golf balls, then maybe you won’t need to spend as long looking for them.

Be honest with yourself, what is the ideal for you, is it distance or feel, or a happy medium all round.

Good luck in your ball fitting.

Bill Ritchie runs a site dedicated to providing great golf tips, from the basics through to detailed tips, and practice drills, to help improve and enjoy your golf, plus topics on rules, fitness, nutrition, sloping lies, bad weather, history, and golfing articles.

A Look Ahead of the European Senior Tour Stop at De Vere Slaley Hall

A Look Ahead of the European Senior Tour Stop at De Vere Slaley Hall

De Vere Slaley Hall is located deep within the beautiful Northumberland countryside and is home to two of the most prestigious golf courses to be found in England.

Selected to stage the next tournament on the European Seniors Tour, the PGA Seniors Championship, from 21st - 24th August, 2008. Ian Woosnam will represent Forgan of St. Andrews and will be competing to extend his order of merit lead which currently places the international legend ahead of Bernhard Langer.

Woosnam is looking for his third tour victory at Slaley Hall after success in Poland and Russia, with consistent performances at Royal Troon and Broadmoor (U.S. Seniors).

“I’m really looking forward to playing in one of the flagship events of the European Seniors Tour and it always adds something special when you’re competing with friends at a great venue” Ian Woosnam (Source: Google News).

The De Vere Collection PGA Seniors Championship will be played on the internationally acclaimed Hunting Course – an official PGA Tour venue, and host to the Great North Open.

The course spans 7,000-yards from its championship markers and carries a fearsome collection of holes.

Hunting Course demands exceptional skill and creativity to succeed. The course boasts one of the most testing par-4’s (hole 9) of the seniors tour - where players must pass-through enormous trees to the right and negotiate a stream which skirts left of the fairway. Despite a good tee-shot, players are faced with a long approach uphill to meet a sloped green.

De Vere will reunite the former Ryder Cup captain with four members of the winning team of 1987 – the historic year that saw Woosie and his team comprehensively beat America on their soil.

Ian Woosnam will be representing Forgan of St. Andrews at Slaley Hall – the world’s oldest golf brand who offer a full online custom fit service on their website: www.forgan.co.uk

The Sports HQ is part of Sports PLC - the UK’s leading manufacturer and supplier of factory direct golf equipment including golf clubs and complete package sets in men’s, ladies, junior and left-handed editions at the lowest online prices.

Classic Game Room HD - EA SPORTS TIGER WOODS PGA TOUR 10 for Wii review. Tiger Woods Golf 10 for Wii reviewed by Classic Game Room shows gameplay from EA Sports Tiger Woods Golf PGA Tour 2010 with game play during golfing in the video game. Tiger Woods 10 for Wii has 7 new courses including Bethpage Black and Oakmont Country Club, host of the 2007 US Open. The US Open can be played in this Wii game, as can frisbee golf! Yes, disc golf is here and play frisbee on the courses in the game. Graphics are imporved, new online gameplay modes and tournaments to compete in. Better menu music than Tiger Woods 09, more courses and outfits. Gameplay is pretty much the same but more of a good thing is a great thing and while CGR scores a triple bogey, EA scores an Eagle with Tiger Woods 10 (ha ha ha! get it!!) Classic Game Room HD reviews Tiger Woods and other Wii video games as a Wii reviewer reviewing Wii games for Nintendo Wii.

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