Saturday, December 29, 2012


Solheim wants equipment ratings to be part of handicap calculation

DAVID CANNON / GETTY IMAGES
John Solheim wants players' equipment to factor into their handicaps.
PHOENIX, Ariz. - John Solheim, the chairman and CEO of Ping Golf, wants to rate players' clubs and balls when calculating handicaps, just like courses are rated as part of the current system.
Ping announced Wednesday that Solheim has applied for a patent for a new system that would factor in equipment ratings when determining a player's handicap. The patent application will be published and made public on Thursday.
"The tone coming from the USGA and R&A in recent years suggests another significant equipment rollback may not be far away," Solheim said in the news release. "We've already seen it with the groove rule and the proposed rule banning anchoring. We continue to hear whispers of more changes. But ... many directly involved in the game favor more equipment options, not fewer."
In other words, why ban clubs and techniques when you could instead account for the variety of clubs when determining handicaps? For example, shooting 80 with a persimmon driver and Condition of Competition wedges would do more to lower your handicap than shooting the same score on the same course with a 460-cc driver and square-grooved wedges. When players entered their scores, they'd enter their equipment information in addition to the course's slope and rating.
During an exclusive phone interview, Solheim said that manufacturers could, for example, fine-tune golf clubs for slower-swing players to help them perform better and enjoy the game more. Scores shot with these easier-to-hit clubs would then be adjusted to account for the advantage they provide.
"The drivers of today are tuned much more for the tour-level player," Solheim said. "If we build golf clubs for slow swingers so they could get the maximum distance, the tour players would break them quite quickly."
Solheim pointed to baseball, where amateurs use aluminum bats and professionals use wooden ones. He also noted the different types of squash balls, one for beginners and intermediates and another for more experienced players.
What about the allure of playing the same courses and equipment as the pros? For golfers who see that as part of the game's appeal, bifurcation - adopting different rules for the game's elite players and weekend amateurs - would be going against the spirit of golf.
Solheim doesn't like to use the word "bifurcation," but his position on the topic is very clear. "I'm for one set of rules, if they can write the rules to give players more options through the handicap system," he said.
Solheim says a major goal of the patent is to help create a dialogue and get people talking about how to draw more interest in the game. He was not pleased when the USGA and the R&A recently announced the proposed ban on anchored putting methods.
"It was just sad, because I know an awful lot of people that anchor the club, and it's helped them enjoy the game more," he said on the phone. "It also means that they don't stand over a putt because they are afraid they are going to yip it. It's sad that [the USGA and R&A] would take that away from so many people."
Ping and Solheim are no strangers to being at the heart of equipment-related stories that have riled golf purists.
In December 2011, after the average driving distance ended above 290 yards for the first time in PGA Tour history, Solheim feared that the USGA and the R&A might change the rules of golf. He proposed "replacing today's single golf ball distance limit with three different 'Ball Distance Ratings.' One that is the same as today's limit, one that is shorter and one that is longer."
Ping also filed a lawsuit against the USGA to keep the Ping Eye2 irons legal; the case was settled in 1990.


Read more: http://www.golf.com/equipment/pings-john-solheim-wants-equipment-ratings-be-part-handicap-calculation#ixzz2GSLyBIN1

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Grip it and Sip it - John Daly goes into Adult beverage market



John Daly is following Arnold Palmer into the beverage business, but you’ll need ID to buy one of Daly’s drinks.
The Original John Daly Cocktail will debut in BevMo liquor stores in Arizona, New Mexico and California, Daly said on Twitter. The cocktail will be available in three flavors: sweet tea lemonade, peach tea lemonade, and raspberry tea lemonade.
Like Palmer’s famous iced tea and lemonade mixture -- recently celebrated in an ESPN short -- Daly already had a drink named after him. The John Daly is an Arnold Palmer with a shot of vodka, which is as good a metaphor for Daly’s game that we’ve ever heard.
However, Long John was not happy when restaurants were offering the drink. He said it was trademark infringement and he asked his Twitter followers to let him know when bars and restaurants were serving “John Daly” drinks. Now Daly is taking a page from Palmer, who partnered with Arizona Iced Tea to create an official “Arnold Palmer” drink.
“Tired of my name on menus. I don't drink but I want people to have same John Daly drink poor right out of bottle,” Daly said on Twitter.
I personally think it is a great venture for John....while he had some notoriously bad (and interesting) history, I feel he deserves to make money off something named after him....I also look forward to seeing him in a few years when he turns 50 and see how he will do on the Senior tour.
Till then, Cheers to John!


Sunday, December 9, 2012

GRIPS - Cleaning and Maintainance...on and off the course

Grips –


Grips can be either those most ignored item on the club, or sometimes the item on the club some people obsess over too much.

In other words, we have taken in clubs where the grips were so bad and worn that they adversely affected the player’s game…and most likely the safety of those nearby! Conversely, we have repeat customers who bring in their clubs and want to be re-gripped…when in actuality; all they needed was a decent cleaning.
Let’s talk about those that simply need a cleaning and how to easily do it not only between rounds but DURING the round.

Between rounds, you can use the age old method or warm soapy water where you rinse, then use the soapy water solution with a soft brush to scrub them clean…followed with more rinsing, then dry off.
The other MUCH easier way of cleaning the grips is by using a wonderful tire cleaning solution called “Westley’s Bleche-Wite” (see image) that you can pick up at any auto parts dept.


You simply find a ventilated area, stand up wind and spray and wipe off. Not only does this clean the grips very fast, but it also rejuvenates and restores most if not all of the original tackiness.
(NOTE: Keep this stuff around as I will be referencing it periodically for other great uses for golf equipment).
So this is all cool and easy to do…but what do you do when the grips get dirty and lose their tackiness in a round of golf?

A wet towel might help….sometimes it will still leave the grip wet, whereas the glass cleaner evaporates fast and residual free.

I believe it was Tom Wishon who shared this hint…which was carry a small 2-4oz spritz bottle with everyday glass cleaner.

When the grips get dirty or slippery, spritz on the glass cleaner and the grip immediately is cleaned…and unlike other cleaners made for cleaning, this will not adversely affect the grip, as some some cleaners are not designed to work with various rubber compounds.

Incidentally, along with the small spritz bottle, I also keep a 2-4oz bottle of  Anti-Bacterial hand cleaner with me. This keeps your hands clean and tacky as well!

Friday, November 30, 2012

Helpful Golf Hints - Golf Shoe Maintenance (Spike removal)


Today’s blog will be the first of many from us that will address easy solutions to common problems or tasks that all of us golfers go through.
No, I am not talking about swing fixes or how to make your game better…..heck, after years, I have not figured those things out yet, so I should be the last one to attempt to teach it now.

However, along the way we have stumbled across some great tips to maintain and (in some cases) prolong the life of your equipment and accessories.

So let’s begin today starting from the bottom….. Golf shoes.

The biggest problem golfers have with shoes is replacing the spikes, specifically, getting the old ones out! By the time arrives that you need to pull out the old spikes they have been walked on exposed to dirt, mud and all sorts of crap that seems to develop a “cement like” affect making the removal of them like pulling teeth.
Fear no more my friends…. Good ol’ Rory has got a simple solution to this dilemma!

When your wife is not looking, sneak into the kitchen and pull out one of her cookie sheets/ baking pan. (hint, they look like this)



First, heat up some water and pour it into the baking pan to where the water level is just shy of the top.
Now place your golf shoes on the sheet, spikes down. Done correctly, the spikes will be under water and the water level is about even to the sole of your shoes…..wait about five minutes, remove the shoes and with a spike wrench, the spikes will come off very easy….it never fails!

Now with the spikes out, it’s a good time to take a soft brush and clean the bottoms of the shoes, including the spike holes….then might as well clean the entire shoes.

If yours are leather, I recommend using saddle soap. It’s a great cleaning agent that not only cleans, but it has lanolin that keeps your shoes soft and prevents aging

PS – Oh crap! I almost forgot…do yourself a favor and make sure you clean out that cookie sheet and put it back where ya found it!

Note my emphasis on “CLEAN OUT” the cookie pan…for some unknown reason, apparently some women get real sore when they pull out a pan to bake something and find it caked in dirt, grass shavings…etc.

Saturday, June 2, 2012

Phil Mickelson's Stand against Cell Phones?


We all know the drill: When you're watching a tournament live, the golfers demand absolute silence when they tee off. Like, hold-your-breath-till-they-swing silence.
But since this is 2012, and not 1952, times are changing on the golf course. Specifically, many tournaments now permit cell phones. (They did in 1952, but you had to install your own telephone poles and string your own wire, so most fans didn't bother.) And most cell phones now have cameras. You see where this is going: Even though people silence their cell phones, they somehow forget to silence the "shutter click" of their cameras.
Around Phil Mickelson's pairing on Thursday at the Memprial, the cell-camera-clickers made a noise with every swing like a thousand crickets being stepped on at once.
"It took Phil out of his game," playing partner Bubba Watson told the AP. "Phil's a great player and a great champion and it just took him out of his game. It's sad. It's sad that cell phones can make or break a championship."
"There were a few phones out there," Rickie Fowler, the third member of the group, said. "There were a few times when we had to back off and reset. You could see Phil was a little fatigued and was having trouble blocking it out a bit."
Mickelson didn't point to shutterbugs as the reason for his withdrawal; instead, he cited exhaustion. While it may be true, it's a rather weak defense, and one that likely doesn't sit well with tournament host Jack Nicklaus. Let's be honest, friends: The worst day playing golf is better than the best day doing pretty much anything else. After shooting a 79, Mickelson would have needed to bring out a 62 or so on Friday to make the cut; why not play one more day?
So it's likely not the cell phones' fault that Phil is out; Mickelson generally doesn't have much of a problem saying what's on his mind, and he's aware enough of his place in golf history, and his responsibility relative to Jack, not to make a stand on such an issue.
Still, it's not going away. Watson, who despite his newfound green jacket fame still has a bit of a prickly personality at times, was pointed in his critique of cell phones. "It's been pretty bad ever since they made that rule [allowing cell phones on the course]," he said. "When they make these marquee pairings, more people are going to follow them and more people want to take pictures. So it makes it very difficult. Ever since they made that rule that cell phones are allowed, it's just not fun playing."
That's going a bit far, perhaps, but Watson has a point. You could say golfers are too nitpicky, and perhaps they are, but the issue isn't the sound itself, it's the suddenness. And when you need to keep your body working within millimeters, disruption can be costly indeed.  As with everything else, there's a sweet spot here; getting people to figure out how to silence their camera shutters is now a necessity on the golf course.
Then again, maybe this is for the best. Ten years from now, golfers will have adapted to screen out the noise of cell cameras. They'll have something else to gripe about then, surely, but it won't be this.

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Rory's #1 Ranking is new...as is his Body

Rory McIlroy has the swing and the temperament of a champion.
Now he has the body to go with it.
As McIlroy rose in the past 4 years from skinny teenager (below) to U.S. Open champ to the world No. 1 ranking -- thanks to Sunday’s heart-pounding victory over Tiger Woods at the Honda Classic -- his body and bearing changed as well (right).
His secret: bringing modern science to bear on the ancient game, and working on his legs and core muscles so he wouldn’t mess too much with a classical swing that Jack Nicklaus calls “the most natural motion in the game today.”
That, plus some inspiration from his girlfriend, No. 2 ranked tennis star Caroline Wozniacki. McIlroy found the way professional tennis players practice almost humbling.
“They work so hard,” says McIlroy, who good-naturedly joined Caroline and Maria Sharapova on the court at Madison Square Garden during an exhibition match Monday night. “That sort of made me realize that I could probably work harder, and gave me a little bit more motivation to go in the gym and hit more balls. It’s definitely paid off.”
After more than 15 years of domination by the hard-sculpted, hard-swinging Woods, the golf world is accustomed to fit golfers. McIlroy, by comparison, presents a slightly more approachable image: 5-foot-10, 160 pounds -- but with muscles that only began appearing in early 2011.
His posture and physique changed under the direction of Steve McGregor, Ph.D., a British trainer who previously worked with the burly-yet-trim Lee Westwood, no. 3 in the world. 
McIlroy made it clear in an interview with Men’s Healththat his new body is the foundation for his success. 

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Truth & Rumors: Schwartzel wants BBQ for Masters dinner


Braai
Reigning Masters champion Charl Schwartzel doesn’t want to just host this year’s Champions Dinner -- he wants to prepare it. The 27-year-old has visions of grilling up a braai [right] -- a sampling of traditional South African meats -- under the iconic oak tree outside the clubhouse. Call it Pit Masters: Augusta National EditionGlobal Golf Post has the details:
“We’ve put in the request and are still waiting to hear from them,” Schwartzel said. “But I’d love to be able to braai there. I want to braai everything myself, but we just have to see if that will be possible with the number of people there. I could end up with a very sore hand at the end of an evening turning all that meat.”

Schwartzel has already started planning his Masters braai. “I’ll keep it very simple. Ideally I would like to have a few lamb chops, some fillets and of course some boerewors (a traditional South African sausage).”
According to Scott Michaux of the Augusta Chronicle, Schwartzel would be the first champ to trade his green jacket for a green apron:
In general, the club balks at outsiders cooking in their kitchens. Other than Vijay Singh famously bringing in a prominent Atlanta restaurateur to prepare his Thai menu in 2001, Augusta National has used its own chefs to prepare whatever the host champion desires (with the possible exception of Sandy Lyle’s haggis).
New year, same old Phil
Phil Mickelson picked up his 2012 season pretty much right where he left off his 2011 season. An eagle here, a three-putt there, tee shots everywhere. It all resulted in a two-over 74 at the Humana Challenge on Thursday, a discouraging opening round at La Quinta Country Club that included a pair of out-of-bounds tee shots. Mickleson looked at the bright side
"The round wasn't indicative of how I know I was playing. I've been playing really well heading in. I played well the front nine, made some good birdies."
"And then the back nine those couple out of bounds, one was a matter of two feet and a couple of inches on the other and those could have been a big difference."
Mickleson, who dabbled with a long putter toward the end of last season, has returned to an Odyssey blade, which is “very similar to the putter I grew up with as a kid just going back to that type of freer motion.”
“I feel really good with the putter. And that was the one area that I was concerned with. I spent the whole off-season working on that, deciding on the direction I was going to go, with what putter and what have you.
“I'm trying to make, I feel like I can make everything on the greens. I had a couple 3-putts ... my speed was off on a couple, but really excited with the way it was transpiring and given the way I've been hitting it the last couple years I know I'll get that fixed and I can start shooting some numbers.”
Lefty's last win came the week before the Masters, at the Shell Houston Open.
Tiger says he’s executing “all the shots”
Hank who? After 17 months under the tutelage of swing coach Sean Foley, Tiger Woods says the Tao of Foley is finally clicking in an interview with ESPN's Bob Harig.
"Last year at this time I didn't truly understand what Sean was trying to teach me," Woods said. "I was very one-dimensional in my ball striking."
One-dimensional? Where does that leave the rest of us?
“I had this baby draw, didn't have a fade, and when I got to Dubai, my second tournament, the wind was howling and I couldn't hold the ball up against the wind with a fade.”
"One of the things we had to work on through the year was hitting all the shots. It didn't really start happening until the fall. I started picking up some good, positive momentum with the exhibitions I did in Asia, Australia and then winning [the Chevron World Challenge]."
Woods also revealed the genesis of his much-ballyhooed pairing with Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo in next month's Pebble Beach pro-am.
"He called me when I was in Australia [in November] and asked me if I was playing Pebble," Woods said. "And I said yes.” He said, 'I'd like to throw my name in the hat as a possible pairing.'
“I thought about it…"
What’s to think about? Who’s a better option? Darius Rucker? Kenny G?
"…and then I called him a day later and said, 'All right, you're in if you want to be in.'"
Gee, Tiger, way to make a guy feel good about himself. Romo later admitted that he hadn’t been that nervous since he asked Betty Finkelstein to his seventh-grade dance.
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