Posts Tagged ‘LPGA’

2009 in Review

That’s all she wrote!  The 2009 “official” golf season is in the books and while there were glimmers of excitement, I felt like the year was not one to write home about.  Here are a few thoughts:

  • Tiger Woods eclipsed the $10 million mark again – Steve Stricker, his nearest challenger was more than $4 million behind!
Steve Stricker

Steve Stricker

  • No majors for Tiger.  If he does not win at Augusta next year I predict Hank Haney will be looking for some new students.
  • Biggest surprises in the top 20 on the money list: Kevin Na; Z. and D. Johnson; Y.E. Yang; Brian Gay; Lucas Glover.
  • How about this list of golfers outside the top 125: Chris DiMarco; Carl Pettersson; Stuart Appleby; Rocco; Chez Reavie; Johnson Wagner; Trevor Immelman; Ken Duke and multiple other tour winners.
  • The highest finish on the money list for a golfer playing fewer than 10 events: Tom Watson who finished 114th after playing only 2 events.
  • Brian Gay and Zach Johnson had breakout years.  Zach Johnson, in particular, showed that he has the potential to be a top 5 in the world player.
Brian Gay

Brian Gay

  • Kenny Perry, Phil and Steve Stricker had big years. They all won multiple times, but could not win the all important major championship necessary to be able to begin to challenge TW.
  • Rickie Fowler will be at the final stage of Q-school. His haul of $570,000 in three events was not enough to earn a card.  There is a good crop of exciting young bombers who should get on tour for 2010 – look for Fowler, Lovemark or Stanley to make a minor splash.
  • Watney, Casey and Geoff Ogilvy faded badly after promising starts.
  • Furyk, Toms, Tim Clark and Els win the Close but No Cigar/Check Casher award for raking in tons of $$ without ever having the final say.  Furyk and Els seem to be making a habit of winning this annual award.
Tim Clark

Tim Clark

  • Players who Appeared Out of Nowwhere in 2009: Ross Fisher was the Robert Karlsson of 2008; Michael Bradley (where’d he come from?); Brian Gay; Mark Leishman; Matt Kuchar; James Nitties; and the biggest surprise of all Y.E. Yang.
  • Players who Vanished into Thin Air in 2009, the “What was That Award?”: Aaron Oberholser (229); D. Hart (196); Shaun Micheel (180); Bart Bryant (167); and Trevor Immelman (156).
  • The “UnderAchiever Award” nominees are: Vijay Singh; Aaron Baddeley; K.J. Choi; Anthony Kim and Adam Scott.
Aaron Baddeley

Aaron Baddeley

  • The majors were a little uninspiring in 2009 with the winners being Cabrera, Glover, Cink and Yang.  With a little tweaking we could have had Kenny Perry, Phil Mickelson or a resurgent David Duval, the greatest victory of all time with Tom Watson at the Open and Tiger destroying all comers at the PGA.  I like the latter line up a little better.
  • The greatest event of the year that never happened: The Barclays at Liberty NationalHeath Slocum holed a par bomb on the 72nd hole to keep Tiger, Stricker, Ernie and Padraig in the club house and out of a text book 5-way playoff.
  • Michelle Wie has finally won! Great news for both her and the sputtering LPGA.
Michele Wie

Michelle Wie

  • The longest hitter: Robert Garrigus (127).
  • The straightest hitter: Joe Durant (182)
  • GIR leader: John Senden (27)
  • Best putter: Steve Stricker (2) I think this is a case for “drive for show and putt for dough!”
  • Best Moment of the Year: Y.E. Yang’s birdie on the 72nd hole at Hazeltine in front of TW.
Y.E. Yang

Y.E. Yang

  • Classiest Player of the Year: Tom Watson at Turnberry.  It will be a long time before we see golf being played the way it was meant to be played, like the way Mr. Watson showed us.
  • Worst Hole of the Year: The 72nd hole at Bethpage Black - when did you ever hear of a US Open Champion playing the final hole with a 6-iron and a wedge?
Bethpage Black #18

Bethpage Black #18

Predictions for 2010:

  • Tiger wins a major after he boots HH (he goes it alone for awhile).
  • Phil Mickelson makes a serious run at Tiger’s domination – he also wins a major!
  • Ernie Els continues to make $$ and does not win a major – or any other US event.
  • Tim Clark and John Senden win a PGA Tour event.
  • Michelle Wie wins again.
  • Annika Sorenstam plays more than one event on the LPGA tour.
  • Lorena asserts herself as the queen of ladies golf – again!
  • The LPGA tour actually finishes the season with the same commissioner it started the year with.
  • Players who re-appear in the winner’s circle: Boo Weekley,  Jim Furyk, Sergio Garcia.
  • The PGA Tour continues to struggle to find sponsors and finally agrees to lower purses at multiple events.
  • The book “It’s All About Impact” becomes a hit and sells more copies than the publisher can print……;-)

Thanks for all your support this year.  Watch next week for a major Full Swing article.

Guidelines for Junior Golfers

 

 

 

The Future of Golf

The Future of Golf

 

I have so much to say to junior golfers – they are the future of the game!  Here is a summary of what I believe to be the most important points for them to observe:

  • Always walk versus ride! Golf carts have been forced into the game primarily for financial reasons.  They do not speed up the game; they do not provide the golfer with a better experience; and they do not improve the design of golf courses!  Do yourself a favor and commit to never riding again unless it is absolutely called for.
  • Compete, casually and seriously, as often as possible. One of the primary reasons why boys are much better chippers than girls is because they love to compete and try unique shots around the practice green.  It is this competitive environment that stretches them to create new and better shots.  Apply this philosophy to every element of the game.
  • Study and learn to appreciate the history of the game.  Do you know who Bobby Jones is?  Why is St. Andrews such a special place?  Who is Dr. Alister MacKenzie? I wholeheartedly believe that this is an element of the game that is being lost on our young golfers – an appreciation of all who have walked the fairways before them.  Read books and ask questions!  You will be better off for it.
  • Take full advantage of every opportunity you are presented with.  Do not give yourself the chance to look back on your career and regret that you did not give everything 100% effort.  Do everything to the best of your ability!
  • Heart always beats out a pretty swing!  When it comes to the game of golf, this statement will forever be true.  All of the great champions played with a tremendous amount of heart; not all of them had pretty swings!
  • Have fun with the short game!  Try to hit the craziest shots you can imagine.  It will teach you how to control your club face and ultimately the ball.  I actually remember having SW long drive contests.  Try to hit the highest, lowest, shortest shots you can think of; it all adds up to creativity around the greens.
  • Work hard at the game.  It’ll teach you about life and its challenges.  Golf, like life, is not always fair, but patience, belief and persistence will pay off in the end.
  • You do not have to be the next Tiger Woods or Jack Nicklaus!  This is a huge problem I see amongst junior golfers in society today.  When did it stop being okay for junior golfers to just simply play the game for enjoyment?  It seems that every junior golfer and their parents have their sights set on grandeur and no expense or sacrifice is too great for a slim shot at stardom. If you want to be as good as you can, by all means go for it, but if you just like the game for what it is, take it easy and just have fun!
  • Play with the best golfers you can find!  Nothing will improve your game as quickly as playing with players that are a lot better than you. 
  • If you are over 15 and serious about being good you need to look into getting stronger and fitter. Find a trainer who knows the golf swing and how to train for golf.
  • Respect the etiquette, honesty and integrity of the game! Play the game at a different level than your peers.  The vast majority of champions in the game were very clear in this regard – play golf the way it was meant to be played!  Behave in a first class fashion on the course and it will start to carry over into all areas of your life.

 

Aree Song

Aree Song

 A Note to Parents:

Give your young golfers a chance to have a great time playing and practicing the game.  This way they will learn to love the game and when they love the game they will come back to it over and over.  This is the only way they will ever reach their full potential – if you will allow them to have fun while playing golf!  I have seen the game become work and a career for too many 12 and 13 year olds.  I taught perhaps the best female junior golfer of all time in Aree Song At 13 she had won the US Junior, the very first AJGA event she played in, finished in the top 10 in an LPGA major and was a first team AJGA All-American.  Aree, now in her mid-twenties, plays sparingly on the tour.  She should be a dominant force in the prime of her career!  We can all guess why she no longer has a passion for the game.  Trust me; I have seen the right way and the wrong way; tread lightly and let them have fun!

Swing Methods and the Fifteen Second Flameout

Butch Harmon

Butch Harmon

Have you ever noticed how various swing fads seem to come and go?  It seems like just the other day that Bennett and Plummer’s “Stack and Tilt” swing was the only way to hit a ball properly.  How about David Leadbetter?  When was the last time you heard from him or one of his players?  Do you remember Jimmy Ballard and “connection”? What about Jim Hardy and his “One Plane Swing”It boggles my mind how these methods pop up, become the hot item and then flare out almost as quickly as they arrived on the scene.  They all have one thing in common that led to their ’success’;  a tour golfer who wins an event or two with this ‘new and amazing swing’ they just learned.  The golfer, feeling indebted to the teacher, proudly proclaims that they could not have achieved their success without this newly discovered way to swing.  Please!
Understand that most of these ideas are thought up by very intelligent and well educated golf teachers.  The problem I have with these methodologies, however,  is that they set their own style of swinging the club.  In other words, the club must be swung in a certain fashion for it to work or function correctly.  I say an emphatic, “Nonsense!” I do not claim to know everything about the golf swing, but I do know that every great player has a different swing that produces fantastic results – or they would not be great!  There cannot possibly be one ‘correct’ way to swing the club!            
David Leadbetter

David Leadbetter

 It’s a classic case of putting form before function!  If you swing this new and amazing way you will achieve desired results!”  The best players of all time have always had a knack of getting the club on the ball correctly and the game today is no different.  A feathery needed to be stuck the same way a ProV1X needs to be hit.  Well almost!  If every golfer out there could understand impact and physics that make the ball go in the right place AND the wrong place they would be far better off.  What difference is perfecting the wrist angle at position seven in the moveaway going to make in your game and ability to compress a golf ball!  Form will always follow function.  Just ask Lee Trevino, Arnold Palmer, Raymond Floyd, Bobby Jones, Nancy Lopez, Walter Hagen, Bobby Locke…….
Function must be King when you work on your game.  Get the ball to sound, feel and fly like you want it to and you are a happy, and very good, golfer!
Things to Ponder:
  • Watching the AT&T on Sunday looked like the King (Tiger) was taking his young Prince (Kim) out for a little schooling.
  • Anyone got an over under on the number of days before Carolyn Bivens is out as the LPGA commissioner?
  • Why when a golfer sets up with their body aiming left it is an ‘open’ stance and when their clubface is aiming right it is an ‘open’ face?  Blame the Scots and single malt whiskey for that one.
  • I have a feeling Paddy Harrington will be back in contention at next weeks ‘Open’ Championship.
  • A claim could be made that Phil has choked away both majors so far this year!?

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