Showing posts with label Golf. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Golf. Show all posts

Thursday, January 1, 2026

On discovering P. G. Wodehouse......


     I know I am late to the party where Wodehouse (1881-1975) is concerned, but then better late than never.  Was recently gifted a copy of fore!, the best of Wodehouse on Golf.  (Thanks David).  What a hoot!   Here is a wee excerpt:


We of the present day, living in the midst of a million marvels of a complex civilization, have learned to adjust ourselves to conditions and to take for granted phenomena which in an earlier and less advanced age would have caused the profoundest excitement and even alarm. We accept without comment the telephone, the automobile, and the wireless telegraph, and we are unmoved by the spectacle of our fellow human beings in the grip of the first stages of golf fever. Far otherwise was it with the courtiers and officials about the Palace of Oom. The obsession of the King was the sole topic of conversation.


Every day now, starting forth at dawn and returning only with the falling of darkness, Merolchazzar was out on the Linx, as the outdoor temple of the new god was called. In a luxurious house adjoining this expanse the bearded Scotsman had been installed, and there he could be found at almost any hour of the day fashioning out of holy wood the weird implements indispensable to the new religion. As a recognition of his services, the King had bestowed upon him a large pension, innumerable kaddiz or slaves, and the title of Promoter of the King’s Happiness, which for the sake of convenience was generally shortened to The Pro.

At present, Oom being a conservative country, the worship of the new god had not attracted the public in great numbers. In fact, except for the Grand Vizier, who, always a faithful follower of his sovereign’s fortunes, had taken to Gowf from the start, the courtiers held aloof to a man. But the Vizier had thrown himself into the new worship with such vigour and earnestness that it was not long before he won from the King the title of Supreme Splendiferous Maintainer of the Twenty-Four Handicap Except on Windy Days when It Goes Up to Thirty⁠—a title which in ordinary conversation was usually abbreviated to The Dub.


All these new titles, it should be said, were, so far as the courtiers were concerned, a fruitful source of discontent. There were black looks and mutinous whispers. The laws of precedence were being disturbed, and the courtiers did not like it. It jars a man who for years has had his social position all cut and dried⁠—a man, to take an instance at random, who, as Second Deputy Shiner of the Royal Hunting Boots, knows that his place is just below the Keeper of the Eel-Hounds and just above the Second Tenor of the Corps of Minstrels⁠—it jars him, we say, to find suddenly that he has got to go down a step in favour of the Hereditary Bearer of the King’s Baffy.



Tuesday, May 23, 2017

If only the inverse were true......







The quant funds do less of that. The computers abstract out most of the human drama and just quietly go about picking stocks. Their understanding of human behavior is statistical, not personal; they don't befriend corporate executives on the golf course to pump them for information, but they do notice that executives with low golf handicaps tend to produce lower stock returns

-Matt Levine, as borrowed from this post

Friday, January 27, 2017

Appropriate ways to celebrate..........




My Dad never stopped giving me guidance about how I should look at my life and career.  By 1961 I had already established myself as a perennial winner and a major champion with two Masters titles and the 1960 U.S. Open.
     But my father was determined that no matter how much I won, how successful I became or how much I earned, he wanted me to remain humble.  He wanted me to stay grounded and to focus on my work and not get too caught up with all the accomplishments.
     One of the best lessons he ever gave me came after I had won the 1961 British Open at Royal Birkdale.  I had been dining with dukes and princes over the course of an entire week and came back to the United States the conquering hero.  Naturally, I was feeling pretty good about myself.
     When I got back to Latrobe, I was very excited about my victory and the chance to share it with my family.  My dad greeted me with open arms.  I could see how happy he was for me.  But in his second breath he said, "Now, why don't you put down that Claret Jug.  I need your help mowing the back nine."
     Looking back, this was a very important marker to me.  It reminded me that if I'm going to be successful, I must continue to grow with a balance of confidence and humble appreciation for all the people involved in making it possible.  If I didn't understand where I had come from and how I had gotten there, then the chance were I was not going to be as successful going forward.  And I would certainly not have the proper attitude about how to live my life and do the right things.
     Did I mow the back nine for him?  You bet I did.  And you know what?  There was a certain peace and serenity in doing such a familiar, simple task.  It was satisfying in its own way.  Looking back, it was a rather appropriate way for me to celebrate winning the Open Championship.

-Arnold Palmer,  A Life Well Played:  My Stories

Thursday, January 26, 2017

Unintended consequences................




A seven-stroke lead with nine holes to play disappeared on me almost in a flash.  Bill started playing well at the same time, which contributed further to my anxiety and increasingly poor play.  As for the playoff the next day, I tried as hard as I could, but I just couldn't muster any intensity, and my concentration was lacking, too.
     Did it hurt?  I won't lie; it hurt a lot.  When pressed about it, San Francisco was the toughest, given the lead that I had.  Especially with my mentality about winning, about feeling that I had to win, losing was a bitter pill, and this might have been the most bitter of all.  But as awful as I felt after losing to Billy in that playoff, in many ways my life improved.  In the aftermath of that lose, more of life came calling, and I continued on with a slightly different perspective.  I was better for the experience.
     I was a better person.  I had a better perspective on things.  I would never have felt good if I had not experienced losing, because losing is part of your life.  But there was something else.  For quite a few years I had received my share of fan mail, but after the loss at Olympic, the letters were different.  People wanted to help.  They were comforting and encouraging.  It was just a different sensation entirely, and it meant a great deal to me.  I looked at everything a bit differently because of that.  I had always appreciated folks, my "Army" of fans, but their gestures of support in defeat meant more to me than any adulation I experienced in victory.

-Arnold Palmer,  A Life Well Played:  My Stories

The tourney in question was the 1966 U. S. Open

Wednesday, January 25, 2017

Life its ownself..................................




For a lot of players, golf is a way of making a living.  For me, golf always has been a way of being alive.  And nothing compared to the feeling of going for a victory.  I never felt I like I had to win at all costs, but I went all out.

-Arnold Palmer,  A Live Well Played:  My Stories

Tuesday, January 24, 2017

Parenting..............................


Deacon and Arnold Palmer


I've always had a fairly easygoing disposition.  But in my younger days would wouldn't have known it if you'd seem me on the golf course.  Something significant happened to me in 1946 that really changed how I went about my business on the golf course.
     My mother and father were on hand to watch my match in the West Penn Junior finals.  At one juncture I missed a short putt, something that infuriated me.  (It still does.)  In frustration, I flung my putter in disgust over the gallery and some small trees.  I won the title, but you wouldn't have known it on the car ride home.  I was met with stone silence.  Finally, my father spoke up.  "If you ever throw a club like that again, you'll never play in another golf tournament."
     I knew he was serious.  To Pap, there was nothing worse than a poor loser - except being an ungracious winner. ... I never threw another club again.

-Arnold Palmer,  A Life Well Played:  My Stories

Monday, January 23, 2017

On finishing..........................





     If I was what you might call a "fast finisher," it was because I was always mentally receptive to a fast finish;  I was receptive to the idea that there was always time to make up some ground right to the very last hole.  I played to win even when common sense dictated that I no longer had a realistic chance.  Even when I was playing my worst or when all the breaks seemed to be going against me, I approached each shot as an opportunity to get going again.  That was my golfing personality.

-Arnold Palmer,  A Life Well Played:  My Stories

Friday, January 13, 2017

Trouble shots.........................


         Because Pap didn't allow the members to practice chipping and putting on the greens, he certainly wasn't going to let me do it, which is one reason why my short game was rather weak in my early amateur days.  On the other hand, I tended to be perfectly comfortable hitting shots from places where no other golfer ever wanted to be.  It turned out to be an important lesson about the game:  you've got to learn to live with trouble, and you've got to learn how to get out of it.  In golf, as in life, you get some good breaks and some bad breaks, but if you're going to depend on the breaks always going your way, you're in for a surprise.

-Arnold Palmer, A Life Well Played:  My Stories

Monday, January 9, 2017

On good behavior...................


Arnie presents Jack the 1963 Masters Green Jacket

Jack presents Arnie the 1964 Masters Green Jacket



     But believe me when I say that despite the pain of losing major tournaments to each other and the wild swings in fortune that defined our relationship, we had a lot of fun being in the center of all that attention.  And neither of us ever lost sight of what it was all about, sports and competition, not life and death.  That meant that the guy who lost was always able to congratulate the guy who won with all sincerity.  Likewise, the winner, understanding the disappointment the other man was feeling, was able to be humble and kind.
     I can't think of a better way to behave whatever side of the fence you end up on in your daily pursuits.

-Arnold Palmer, A Life Well Played:  My Stories.  As extracted from the chapter "Jack."

Wednesday, December 28, 2016

Focuses............................




     Every time I've ever hit a shot, I tried to hit it in the hole.  That includes a tee shot on a par-5.  Now, that wouldn't have been very realistic, but that's how I hit every shot in my mind's eye.
     I think this might be one of the best thoughts you can have when playing golf, because it really focuses your mind on the ultimate goal.

-Arnold Palmer,  A Life Well Played:  My Stories

Thursday, December 15, 2016

Improve.......................























     Working with golf clubs wasn't just a function of being a professional golfer.  To me it was fun, and I looked at each club I worked on as if I were molding a work of art.  Just like my golf game, I was always looking to improve my equipment, too, and that gave me the sense that I was improving on me as I improved on them.  I think that is the essence of life - always striving to do something better.  Or even perfectly.

-Arnold Palmer,  A Life Well Played:  My Stories

Monday, December 12, 2016

Great moments in parenting................


"Hit it hard, boy, go find it, and hit it hard again."

-Arnold Palmer, quoting his father's advice about golf, from the opening sentence in A Life Well Played:  My Stories

Monday, September 26, 2016

Gone, but not forgotten............................





"I'm not much for sitting around and thinking about the past or talking about the past. What does that accomplish? If I can give young people something to think about, like the future, that's a better use of my time."


-Arnold Palmer

Friday, July 8, 2016

The right shot..................


     Watson had questions about Nicklaus's play:  Why did he hit that shot?  Why did he use that club?  Why didn't he go for the birdie?  What Watson noticed most was how often Nicklaus would hit conservative shots.  This was exactly the thing that turned him off as a youngster, when he preferred the risk-taking brilliance of Palmer.  But once he reached the PGA Tour, he saw golf - and Nicklaus - in a whole different way.
     Nicklaus told him, "More golfers lose golf tournaments than win them."
     This fascinated Watson.  Nicklaus was not thinking about great shots  most of the time; he was thinking about avoiding big mistakes.  It seemed counterintuitive to Watson;  he had always played the game fast and loose and full of aggression.  But watching Nicklaus changed the way he thought.  He began to take fewer chances.  He began to look for the widest part of the fairway and aim for it.  He hit away from bunkers.  He would try for the heroic shot only when none of the safer options made sense.
     "No golfer hit the right shot more often that Jack Nicklaus,"  Watson would say, and yes, that's the secret of golf.

-Joe Posnanski,  The Secret of Golf:  The Story of Tom Watson and Jack Nicklaus

Friday, July 1, 2016

Opening paragraphs.........................



     Ben Hogan found the secret first.  The other golfers of the time looked at Hogan with a mixture of wonder and pity.  He practiced golf.  He practiced swinging a golf club mornings, afternoons, evenings, and well into darkness.  He practiced until his hands bled, even hard scabs formed, and then until they bled again.  Years later, when people talked about how much Hogan suffered for his craft, he corrected them.  "I did not suffer," he told them.  "I loved it all."  How could he explain this?  Hogan loved to practice more than he loved playing the game itself.


-Joe Posnanski,  The Secret of Golf:  The Story of Tom Watson and Jack Nicklaus

Sunday, April 3, 2016

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Only 3,963 hours to go.....................


Remember Malcolm Gladwell's story about it taking 10,000 hours of practice to develop mastery?  Well, here's a 30-year-old guy willing to put it to a test.  Can he go from never having played golf to becoming a pro in 10,000 hours?

“The more he’s improved, the harder it’s gotten to get better. Going from bad to good is way easier than going from good to great. And going from great to world-class? That’s rare territory. The line is thin, but the gap is wide.”

My guess is that he can become a PGA professional and work at a country club somewhere.  I suspect being successful on tour is another story.  That game is as much mental (if not more) as it is physical.  Stay tuned though, I'm pretty much loving the experiment.