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Madill Golf - Two Sisters. One Sport. One Passion.
Home
Our Journey
People
Tournament Travels
    The Masters 2016
Coaching
Other Stuff
  • Home
  • Our Journey
  • People
  • Tournament Travels
    • The Masters 2016
  • Coaching
  • Other Stuff
People

Tiger, Tiger: Burning Bright Or Raging Against The Dying Of The Light

I suppose even a sporting legend like Tiger Woods will take his inspiration wherever he can but his inclination may be to consider that only fellow legends can offer the real deal.  As he makes his long-awaited proper comeback at the Farmers Insurance Open in the familiar surrounds of Torrey Pines in San Diego, he need only look across the world, to Melbourne, where his seemingly ageless mate Roger Federer is in yet another Grand Slam final.  The Swiss is 36 but still going strong, having been relatively injury-free until the later stages of his stellar career.  He has learned how to manage his body – and mind – to cope with the stresses and strains, the twists and turns of one of the most physically demanding of sports.

Federer still loves the sport and the competition and anything he wins now is a bonus.  He’ll get nervous when things get tense but essentially he’s playing without fear, for the fun of it – but with a tigerish competitive ferocity.  If Tiger’s newly fused back – and the rest of his body – can stand up to the rigours of more than a tournament here and there, he’ll be dangerous.  Not because he doesn’t care – he does, he can’t not, it’s in his blood, in his bones – but because he’s never not going to be a legend, the man many people believe is the best golfer who’s ever lived.

Of course he wants to win five more majors to beat Jack Nicklaus’s record but what’s a major?  An artificial media construct.  There are a handful of golfers who stand out as the best who’ve ever played the game.  Nicklaus is one of them.  Tiger is another.  That’s a given.  There’s Harry Vardon, Bobby Jones, Ben Hogan, young Tom Morris, maybe not that many others who scared most of the opposition into submission before a shot had been hit.  Tiger is 42, young really for a golfer these days but he’s been through a lot and the spotlight is blinding, unremitting, so who knows how much this Tiger has left in the tank.

Tiger mania continues unabashed at Torrey Pines [PGA Tour]

He’s still learning what he can and can’t do but he says he has no pain now and it doesn’t hurt when he takes the club back or before or after impact.  It doesn’t hurt when he walks and that’s all progress.  Now it’s all a bit a magical mystery tour, as he explained in his pre-tournament press conference:-

“I’d like to meet somebody who can swing it over 120 miles an hour with a fused back………no one understands that. So I have to rely on my own feels and play around with what my body can and cannot do.  It’s not going to look like it used to.  I don’t have the mobility that I used to and that’s just the reality.  Now it’s just a matter of what can I do and that’s just practising and getting my feels and trusting, experimenting a lot, to try and figure out what can this body do and how explosive can it be and how am I going to control shots with different shapes, am I going to get different feels…….Some of that stuff is different and I’m still learning it.”

It’s right up his street.  He might have launched into his shots with brutal force but he has always loved the creative side of the game, the conjuring up of miracle recoveries and if anyone can use finesse to counter today’s unsubtle power gamers, it’s TW.  Whether he ends up burning bright or raging against the dying of the light, we’ll hear all about it.  Augusta anyone?

Jamie Donaldson flirted with the magic 59 in Dubai but settled for a first round 62, 10 under par [Getty Images]

Tiger apart, there’s a lot of golf going on.  Tommy Fleetwood, Rory McIlroy and co are playing in the Omega Dubai Desert Classic and there are a load of women taking to the fairways to start their season in the Pure Silk-Bahamas LPGA Classic at the Ocean Club Golf Course in Paradise Island, Bahamas.  The LPGA’s new advertising campaign is called “A Global Tour Like No Other” and bills the players, from 32 countries, as ” the most accessible athletes in sport”.

How many air miles? The LPGA covers the globe in its latest ad campaign [LPGA]

One day, perhaps, the message will get through:  golf is a game for everyone, everywhere.

 

January 26, 2018by Patricia
People

One Size Fits All?

It was September 2015 and a tall, lone figure was on the practice ground at Royal Lytham & St Annes golf club.  Gathered a little way to the side was a group of Americans – well wishers and supporters of their team which had come to contest the biennial Walker Cup against a strong Great Britain & Ireland side.  But the Americans believed they had a secret weapon – the supremely talented 21 year old Californian, Bryson DeChambeau who had earlier that summer become only the fifth player to win both the US Amateur and NCAA Championship (the latter the top US College title) in the same year.  He had joined a fairly exclusive club comprising Jack Nicklaus, Phil Mickelson, Tiger Woods and Ryan Moore.  The lone figure was DeChambeau.  I edged closer and started to watch.

I already knew a little bit about him thanks to my research for the forthcoming broadcast of the match.  Bryson was a physics major at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas and at the age of 17, fuelled by his coach’s inspiration and Homer Kelley’s instruction book, The Golfing Machine, he had built himself a set of single length irons.  It made perfect sense to him.  With the clubs being the same length, the same lie angle and the same weight he was removing some of the myriad of variation that bedevils golf.   He reasoned he could use the exact same setup and exact same swing with every club.  That first set of clubs had evolved into the set he was swinging that day on the practice ground at Royal Lytham.  The irons were 37.5 inches long and the lies approximately 10 degrees more upright than normal, resulting in a high hand position at address.  He could therefore maintain a straight line in profile from his left shoulder down to the golf ball and more easily execute a one-plane swing.

As I watched one shot after another being dispatched into the distance I did wonder was I watching a passing fad.  After all, single set irons had been mooted as far back as the 1930s when Bobby Jones designed a set in which every two clubs were the same length – in other words, the 3 and 4 irons matched in length, the 5 and 6 and so on.  There was no advancement until the 1980s when Tommy Armour EQL irons were produced, all shafts being the length of a 7-iron.  The woods were the length of a 5-wood shaft.  They didn’t catch on.

Would this slightly eccentric young American (he has worn the Ben Hogan flat white cap since the age of 12) change the thinking of the golfing world?  Time, I thought, would tell.

Undefeated in the 2015 Walker Cup. [courtesy of randa.org]

The United States lost that Walker Cup on the windy Lancashire coast but DeChambeau was the only one of the visitors to be undefeated with two wins and a half from his three matches.  Not surprisingly, the professional ranks beckoned and in 2016 he broke through for his first win as a professional on the Web.Com Tour, the satellite tour to the PGA Tour.  That same year he signed for Cobra, who committed to mass producing single length irons.  Then came the potential game changer at the 2017 John Deere Classic.  DeChambeau recorded his first PGA Tour win, closing with a 65 to turn a four-shot deficit into a one-shot victory over Patrick Rodgers.

The story of single length irons will undoubtedly continue to unfold and be helped by the success of the young Californian.  He claims that many of his peers on tour have expressed an interest in understanding how the clubs could benefit their games.  But, most telling of all, perhaps, is the release of Cobra’s figures in the first year they have mass produced single length irons.  The Cobra F7 One Length irons accounted for a whopping 60% of their sales with the speed of their success taking the company by surprise.

Arnold Palmer’s legendary collection of clubs – but are there any single length sets of irons, I wonder? [courtesy of Latrobe Country Club]

DeChambeau has been playing single length clubs for seven years now, believing utterly in the science behind their performance.  I wonder, just wonder what the game will look like in another decade or two?  Will the professional tours be full of players who have never swung variable length clubs, just as nowadays there are players who have never hit a persimmon driver?  What a legacy that would be for Bryson DeChambeau.  It’s exactly a year ago, at the PGA Show in Orlando, that Cobra showcased their revolutionary irons – what a twelve months it’s been.  Bryson’s comment at the time?  “This is something that is going to change the game.”

The 2017 unveiling of the future of the game?

January 26, 2018by Maureen

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