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Stinky Golfer Paradise

The articles in this category are the epitome of the GolfStinks ethos. Here's where you'll learn how to take the frustration out of your golf game!

Does Golf Get Better With Age?

August 20, 2014 | By Greg D'Andrea | 1 Comment

The dads of Stinky Golfer Tom (left) and Stinky Golfer Greg (right).

They say wine gets better with age, but what about golf?

I’ve stated many times on this blog that my game hasn’t improved much since my teens. When I first started keeping my handicap about 20 years ago, it was an 18. Today I’m still an 18. Despite this though, golf, for me anyway, has gotten better. In fact, it’s gotten much better. OK, I know what you’re thinking; “How could it have gotten better if you’re still playing at the same level?”

Well, the simple answer is; the experience has gotten better. It’s true. The experience of golfing has become more enjoyable for me even though my scorecard reads pretty much the same. I think this is true (if you’re honest with yourself) for many golfers and it’s a fundamental reason why so many of us continue to play throughout our lifetimes without actually playing any better.

When was the last time you heard someone say: “I’d been playing golf for 40 years, but wasn’t getting any better at it so I finally gave up.” It’s almost comical because you never, ever hear anyone say that! Why? Because you don’t have to be good at golf to love it. And the older you get, the more you enjoy and appreciate just being out on the course.

When I started golfing in my early teens (and up through probably my late 20’s), I thought I was enjoying myself out there – and technically I was. I would play every weekend – up to 50 or more rounds a year. But now in my late 30’s with two young kids, I’m lucky if I play five times annually. But you know what? I really enjoy those few times out.

I imagine as people get older – especially after retirement, they experience a similar enjoyment out on the links. Older folks might have a different appreciation than someone my age, but it’s that appreciation – the gratification of just being out on a golf course – that makes the game more enjoyable over time.

Best of all, this enjoyment is out there for every golfer to experience – you just have to stop worrying about your score and have fun instead. And because golf is one of those sports you can continue to play late into life, this game can be an invaluable source of enjoyment for years to come.

So, does golf get better with age? You bet your ass it does.

Filed Under: Stinky Golfer Paradise Tagged With: #enjoygolf, enjoyment, fun

Our Top 5 Posts of All Time

August 13, 2014 | By Golf Stinks | Leave a Comment

G BALL LOGO ALTSo tomorrow we’ll celebrate five years of blogging, which by blogging standards is pretty darn good! As is tradition on our birthday, we’ve decided to highlight our top 5 posts of all time.

If you’re new to our blog, this list is a great place to start enjoying our content…And if you’ve read our stuff before, it’s time to enjoy these all over again!

And what would a birthday be without a gift? Be sure to check out our newsletter where we’re holding a contest to win a free golf shirt and a dozen golf balls! But subscribe today because the contest is tomorrow!

# 5

Micwhite-tail-deerhael Phelps, Deer Antler Velvet & Getting Drunk
Imagine a week in which golf headlines included an Olympic swimmer, a strange form of PEDs and inebriation on the course. Well back in January of 2013, that week actually happened!

# 4

i-hate-golf5 Reasons Why They Hate Golf – Some people just don’t like golf – it’s sad but true. In July of 2011, we tried to explain why anyone could possibly be a golf hater.

 

# 3

golf cellphone10 Golf Etiquette Rules Most Jackasses Ignore – In this April 2011 post, Stinky Golfer Greg lists his biggest golfer pet peeves in a no-holds-barred rant about cell-phone use; playing from the wrong tee-box; and giving unwanted swing advice.

# 2

noGirlsAllowedMale-Only Golf Clubs; Sexist Bastards or Constitutional Right? – We opened up a can of worms with this post from 2009 on the rights of private golf clubs vs. the sentiments of the 21st-century.

 

# 1

golffight5 Ways to Start a Fight on the Golf Course – Back in August of 2013, we explained that it’s not impossible to get yourself into a rumble on the course…

 

Filed Under: Stinky Golfer Paradise Tagged With: top posts

Make More Time For Golf

August 11, 2014 | By Chris Chirico | 1 Comment

thVYDG9HBMOne of the reasons (among many) that I don’t golf as much as I’d like is simply because I don’t have the time.  I don’t mean the time required to play a round – I don’t really care if that takes five or six hours.  I mean the time to get out to the course at all!  Between all of the commitments required in everyday life, golf has taken a backseat.  And that’s been no more apparent than during this season.  I have played exactly one 18-hole round this year.  One!  How can I even call myself a golfer with that in mind?!  Well, there are things that we can do to make time…and believe me, they’ve all crossed my mind at some point.

1. Quit your job.  Several years ago, I was laid off from my place of employment.  It was a sad time.  My boss clearly didn’t want to do it, but tough decisions had to be made.  As he shook my hand and told me how sorry he was, I said to him “Don’t worry about it.  I understand and I’ll be fine.  This just gives me a little more time to play golf.”  And that it did.  It’s amazing how much free time is made when you don’t have to go to work.  In hindsight, I probably should have been saving that money due to the whole “no job” thing.  But hey, hindsight is 20/20, and at the time it seemed like a good idea.

2. Take a leave from your job.  OK, maybe taking a leave to play golf is not necessarily the best idea I’ve ever had.  However, hear me out.  I know someone who worked their behind off for quite a while.  He saved up a bunch of loot and took six months off to travel around Europe.  Now that’s something which, to me, seems worth taking some time off of work.  That’s something most people will never have the chance to do at any point in their lives.  And here he was doing it in his 20’s.  So if you can save the money and get the time, that can be turned into an extended golf trip.  Travel around the country or the world, playing your dream courses!  Again, if you have the means…it seems worth it.

3.  Married?  Don’t be.  First off, I am not suggesting you get divorced so you can play more golf.  I mean, what kind of an a-hole would ever suggest that?  What kind of jerk would suggest throwing a marriage away so you can hit the links more often?  Now, with that being said…marriages and families do seem to take time away from the course.  If golf is more important to you than a spouse and a family…don’t get married, don’t have kids.  Speaking from experience, your free weekends will quickly no longer be free.  Speaking further from experience…I will soon see if this free time actually is made.

OK, so there are my ideas.  I didn’t say they were realistic ideas.  But ideas nonetheless.  Either way, we all want to play more golf and we all need to figure out how to do it.  Lord knows I do.  Again…one 18-hole round this season?  By mid-August?  I’m on the edge of no longer being able to call myself a golfer.  I’m becoming just a guy who plays golf on occasion.

Swing ’til you’re happy!   

Filed Under: Golf Life, Stinky Golfer Paradise Tagged With: divorce, family, married, time for golf, work

Be A Better Golfer

August 8, 2014 | By Pete Girotto | Leave a Comment

golf holeAll my life I was always told that practice makes perfect. If you want to be good at something you have to really work hard and put in the time. Whether it was sports, a job or whatever. There’s no easy way.

Or is there? Let’s take golf for example. It’s a hard nut to crack man! In order to get better we need to invest a lot of time and money. Who has that anymore? Regardless, we still want to be a better golfer.

So, here lies the question; How do we become a better golfer without practicing? Simple. Make the game easier. Just like Taylormade’s CEO Mark King suggests; You take a standard golf hole cup and expand it almost 4 times it’s original size and voilà…you just became a better golfer.

Boy, that was easy but I’m not sold on this yet though. A 15 inch golf cup, to me, seems like it belongs to a toddlers first golf set. This will obviously lower our scores and make putting a lot easier but it still doesn’t feel right. Maybe it’s too drastic of a change…but I do want to lower my score.

Hit’em long…yell FORE!!!

Filed Under: Stinky Golfer Paradise Tagged With: golf practice, Mark King, play better golf, Taylormade

Most Golfers are Consistently Inconsistent

July 23, 2014 | By Greg D'Andrea | 3 Comments

stinkygolfercrossingStatistically, my average score has stayed pretty much the same over the past 20 years. Why? Because I’m consistently inconsistent. The problem of inconsistency afflicts nearly every golf hack out there and as a result, we don’t really improve our games much – at least not without a good amount of practice and/or lessons.

My handicap has been around an 18 since I started keeping track back in the mid-90’s. Sure I may have a decent round every once in a while, but I’ll still have a wretched round thrown in there too.

Many times, I’m inconsistent within a round! Take this past Saturday for example; I parred 3 holes on the front but also took two 9’s! Two of them!! I finished with a 52. Meanwhile, I caught fire on the back – parring 3 more holes and even dropping a 20-foot putt for bird! And no nines (or 8’s) either!  So I shot 42 on the back, which made a 94 for the full 18-hole round. Which, when you think about it, is pretty in-line with my 18 handicap. You see? I’m consistently inconsistent.

Typically during a round, one part of my game is “on” while another part is “off.” Today I can putt but not drive. Tomorrow I can hit it off the tee but my chipping has gone to hell…It seems like I can never put it all together. Saturday, my irons were terrible on the front but then “something” happened and they improved on the back – leading to my 42. That “something” is a frustrating anomaly better left to discuss on another day.

How about this: You hit an awesome drive (best one of the round) only to flub your shot from the fairway. Happens to me all the time – especially on par 5’s where I need a good drive to put me in good position to make the green in regulation. Of course, instead of that happening, my inconsistency causes me to knock my second shot down ultimately leading to a double-bogey seven.

What also kills me is the inconsistency of the same shot back-to-back. Let’s say you hit one off the tee OB and decide to hit another. Nine times out of ten, that second shot will be straight down the middle. Why couldn’t you have done that the first time?!? This is why golfers invented the Mulligan.

So, we average golfers are consistently inconsistent. But what are we going to do about it?

Well, unless you’re ready to practice 10 hours a week and/or plunk-down tons of cash on lessons from a pro, there’s probably not much you can do about it. Gimmicks and gadgets don’t work; books and magazine articles are helpful but not really practical when you have to translate the lesson on the page to your swing on the course; and buying new equipment rarely solves anything (unless your clubs are actually falling apart).

So where does that leave us? Well, for many of us (who have jobs, families and other responsibilities) it leaves us right back where we started: Being consistently inconsistent. But that’s OK! If we’ve said it once, we’ve said it 1,000 times – Golf isn’t just about playing well (if that were the case, most of us would have quit a long time ago).

It’s also about camaraderie; being out in nature; taking the time to do something you love! If you happen to play well that day, fantastic! If not – will you regret playing at all? Of course not. Chances are even if you did play wretchedly, there was something positive you will remember – a long putt perhaps, or a great drive? Consistently inconsistent or not, I love playing this game.

And that’s all that really matters.

Filed Under: Stinky Golfer Paradise Tagged With: #enjoygolf, golf lessons, golf pro, inconsistent, only a game, practice, quit golf, stinky golfer

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