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How TV Can Make Me More of a Golf Fan

July 22, 2013 | By Chris Chirico | Leave a Comment

First and foremost, let me state that I am in no way, shape or form being compensated for this post. I am offering up my opinion purely based on my experience.  My experience with what you ask?  My experience with DirecTV and how they made watching The Open Championship a better experience for me.

As I’ve stated before, I love to play golf, but I’m not a huge fan of watching it on TV.  Truthfully, I find it a bit dull.  So when I got a message on my TV from DirecTV regarding watching The Open Championship on multiple channels, I didn’t pay it much mind.  I figured it’s just a couple more channels that I won’t be watching.  But early on Saturday afternoon, something told me to take a look anyway…and I’m glad I did.  When I tuned to the channel in the message and began to watch, I was presented with another menu option.  When I hit the red button on my remote to bring up the additional options, the fun began.

Option #1 – “The Top 5 leaderboard” – A nice, quick reference when you just want to know who’s on top and what’s their score, without waiting for 156 names to scroll across the bottom of the screen.  But, if you want to see the entire leaderboard while scrolling through it at your own pace, well that’s available at…

Option #2 – “Leaderboard” – You don’t have to watch the bottom of the screen for the leaderboard and worry about missing the name you may be looking for.  Also, if it’s moving a little too quickly, you can use the menu to scroll at your own pace.

Option #3 – “Tune To” – This gave me five further options:

a.  “The Open Mix” – This splits my TV to show four separate screens – ESPN, Holes 1 & 18, Holes 7/8/9 and the International View.  More on this below.

b.  “ESPN” – This channel would show an alternate feed from ESPN (which was showing the regular broadcast) even when they were on a commercial.

c. “Holes 1 and 18” – Just as it sounds.  This channel would rotate between holes 1 and 18.  So rather than bounce all around the course, you see every player that passes through both holes.

d. “Holes 7/8/9” – See above, but for holes 7/8/9 instead.

e. “International View” – Not exactly sure where this feed was from, but I’m going to make the pretty obvious guess that it would be Scotland.  If not, then somewhere in the U.K. at least.  Anyway, it was another alternate feed from the other two ESPN’s.

Option #4 – “Scoreguide” – This is an option that shows up on all of the sports channels on DirecTV, and it showed up here as well.  This option gives you the scores from the rest of the sports world as well as the option to switch over to that channel if the game is on one of the channels you get.  It’s a nice feature for keeping up on scores from other sports or other games when you don’t want to change the game you’re watching.

I’ve had three different TV providers, and so far I’m pretty high on DirecTV.  It’s great if you’re a sports fan.  For me, I’m a big football fan and love NFL Sunday Ticket.  How can you beat having the option to see every game?!  And being able to plug-in your fantasy league matchup is the cherry on-top!  But this experience with golf as well has opened up a new option for me.

Now, when the PGA Championship rolls around in a few weeks, I’ll know that watching golf on TV will be that much better than it was before.  However, this in no way trumps Sunday Ticket.  Any final round still takes a backseat to the NFL.  Sorry.

Swing ’til you’re happy!

Filed Under: The Pro Tours Tagged With: DirecTV, ESPN, fantasy football, fantasy sports, golf stinks, golfstinks, nfl, NFL Sunday Ticket, PGA CHAMPIONSHIP, Scotland, the open championship, U.K.

Why I Don’t Bet On Golf

July 8, 2013 | By Chris Chirico | 2 Comments

I really can’t afford to do it, but I sometimes can’t help myself.  I like to bet on things.  I don’t know about anyone else, but the prospect of winning a few extra dollars makes any game more interesting.  It’s one of the many reasons I enjoy fantasy football.  But I like to bet on the games themselves, get into pools, draw horses names from a hat for the Kentucky Derby…whatever.  And not just on sports either – a co-worker is pregnant, let’s start a baby pool!  But there’s one sport that I’ve never bet on and I’m just not sure I ever will – golf.

Is it me, or is golf just too hard to bet on.  For me, there’s two reasons this is the case: 1. In the bigger tournaments where the superstars are, the odds are always crappy.  You have to put down way too much money to win anything significant.  2. In rounds when the stars aren’t playing, the field is so wide open and some names are so unfamiliar that there’s rarely a “good bet.”  Take for example this weekend.  Leading up to it, everyone was saying that Mickelson is the favorite among golf betting fans to win the Greenbrier Classic, and he is one of the superstars.  But lo and behold, the weekend rolled around and he was nowhere to be found.  At +2, he didn’t even make the cut!  So much for favorites.

So, what about the majors, when all of the stars come out to play?  Well, the odds for the Open Championship later this month have Tiger as the early favorite at 8 to 1.  But with his relatively inconsistent play, is that where you want to put your money?  And with the field full of such stars, the odds are probably not even as good as they may appear to be.  So what to do?  All of those names at the top look tempting, but then again, so do many of the names on the list.

You see what I mean?  There are just too many options and the field is just too wide open.  Do you go with one of the favorites, or one of the sleepers?  And in the majors, are there any sleepers really?  It’s just too damn complicated.  So for me, I think I’ll stick with football and pregnancy pools.  However, that being said, I’m going with Luke Donald.

Swing ’til you’re happy!

Filed Under: Golf Life Tagged With: betting on golf, fantasy football, golf betting, golf stinks, golfstinks, Kentucky Derby, Luke Donald, Phil Mickelson, sports gambling, The Open Championship, tiger woods

Finally…A Birdie Hits The Golf Links

July 1, 2013 | By Chris Chirico | 4 Comments

Really?  Is that all it takes to become an internet sensation?  Is this all I would have to do to go from a relative nobody to getting a story on ESPN?  I’ve flipped the bird to many people on many occasions, so why not me?  Oooohhh…I have to do it on a golf course, during a tournament, I guess.  D.H. Lee must have just beaten me to the punch.

So it finally happened in golf.  A pro finally had enough of a heckler in the gallery and sent a message.  And I’m not talking one of those flipping out about a camera click messages.  I’m talking the “We’re #1!” message.  The old one-gun salute.  We’ve seen it in other sports – remember Jack McDowell?  We’ve even seen baseball and basketball players run up into the crowd to go after fans (Ron Artest and Chad Kreuter come to mind).  But this is new to golf.  If a camera doesn’t click or someone doesn’t whisper during a swing, then there is almost no interaction with the gallery, either positively or negatively, whatsoever.  So what is the PGA to do with this?  Do they suspend him?  Do they fine him?  You know the PGA can’t have any of their players disrespecting their fans like that.  Or…can they?

I can’t be the only one who thinks golf could use a bad boy, right?  And I don’t mean a bad boy off-the-course such as a Tiger Woods or John Daly.  I mean an on-the-course bad guy that you want to hate, but at the same time you kind of root for because he’s different than every other boring face in the crowd.  Now I also don’t mean the PGA should encourage this kind of behavior, because it can get old fast, especially if too many players are getting in on it.  But if they take a guy like Lee, maybe pull him to the side and tell him something to the effect of:

“Pssst…hey, D.H.  That little act you pulled last weekend sure brought us a little more attention than usual.  I’m not telling you to do it again.  But…I’m also not telling you not to do it again either.  Maybe not the finger next time, but a little something else, ya know?  I promise we’ll make it worth your while.”

Want to get people to tune into an event that normally doesn’t quite get the ratings?  Want to make people interested in the highlights from a smaller tournament that normally just kind of slips under the radar?  D.H. Lee could be your guy!

Swing ’til you’re happy!

Filed Under: The Pro Tours, Uncategorized Tagged With: Chad Kreuter, D.H. Lee, golf stinks, golfstinks, Jack McDowell, John Daly, pga, Ron Artest, tiger woods

Why Do Golfers Take Their Rules So Seriously?

June 10, 2013 | By Chris Chirico | 3 Comments

It’s strange but, it seems we here at Golfstinks have spent an inordinate amount of time over the past week or so going on about the rules of the game.  The reason it’s funny is because all of us here aren’t really sticklers for the rules.  For the most part, we all go by the old “play it as it lies” rule.  And if we can’t, we’re not all about pulling out the book.  We’re not going back to the tee to hit another ball.  We’re not marking off exactly two club lengths.  We simply drop the ball in a reasonable spot, take a stroke if necessary, and move it along.

But we understand that some golfers are a bit nutty over the rules.  Many golfers carry that book with them in their bag.  Heck, some of these golfers practically have it memorized!  But my question is, why so serious?  What is it about golf that makes its players take it, as well as the rules, so seriously?  Like every game they play is a major with a million dollars on the line.

Just a few guys out on their local course with their buddies is pretty much the equivalent of a few guys out on a local basketball court, right?  Or some guys playing in a local softball league.  Well, I’ve done all three, and no players are as passionate about the rules as golfers.  Now, I said “passionate,” but that can easily be replaced with “annoying.”  I’ve seen golfers pull out their rule books on the local course.  I’ve seen players hold up the group behind them by following the rules to the point where every I is dotted and every T is crossed.  I’d like to see someone head down to a local basketball court and try to call an intentional foul…or just about any foul for that matter.  In any pickup game I’ve ever played, I have never seen a technical foul called.  But some golfers?  Come on now.  Same out on a baseball or softball field.  Anyone ever see a balk called during a game?  But I’ve seen golfers pull that damn book out for anything questionable.

So what is it?  There’s nothing wrong, obviously, with playing by the rules. So I’m not knocking it, unless you’re holding everyone else up.  Then that just gets us right back to the whole etiquette thing.  But why is it that people playing other recreational sports can separate the rules from just simply having fun, but so many golfers can’t?  I would ask if it’s a competitive thing, but I can tell you right off the bat, that’s not it.  On the basketball court we’re playing for fun.  But I’ll be the first one to tell you, in my experience, no recreational players in any sport are as competitive as basketball players.  Even in my softball league…we all understand it’s mainly for fun, but no one on my team has the “I don’t care if we win or lose…I’m just having fun” attitude.  First and foremost…we want to win.  Yet still…not one of us is playing the game with a copy of the rules in our pocket.

So do golfers just think they care more about their sport?  Do they feel they are doing the sport more justice by playing as “by the book” as possible?  Do they truly believe they are cheating if they don’t do everything exactly as written?  Are they missing out on some of the fun by acting this way?  Are they putting too much pressure on themselves and therefore losing some of the enjoyment?

See, golf for me is a release.  I have a full-time job which puts enough pressure on me as it is.  The last thing I need is more pressure when I’m trying to do something that should be an escape from the rest of my life.  So why do people do it to themselves?  If you’re one of those golfers who are strictly by the book, then please let me know what I’m missing.  Because I don’t quite understand, but I sure would like too.

Swing ’til you’re happy!

Filed Under: Golf Life Tagged With: golf etiquette, golf major, golf stinks, golf tournament, golfstinks, rules of golf

Who Should Teach The Rules Of Golf Etiquette?

June 3, 2013 | By Chris Chirico | 1 Comment

Last week I asked what was more important, golf etiquette or the rules of the game.  I mentioned that I don’t care if someone bends the rules a bit, but how I would rather they show a little respect for the game as well as its other players.  But that only led me to another question – who should teach the rules of etiquette to new golfers?

Personally, it was my friends who taught them to me as they taught me the game itself.  Some they would tell me ahead of time.  Others they would correct as I was making the mistake.  Let’s face it, there are an awful lot of etiquette rules.  But if you really think about it, they all kind of come down to common sense, keeping up with the pace of play and respect for others on the course.  If you know the basics of the game, then the etiquette part should come much easier.

But again, who should be teaching these rules?  Is it the responsibility of the player?  Should they be researching these rules themselves?  What do they do, get a copy of this?  Or maybe spend a few bucks extra to get this instead? Well, I guess if that’s what it takes.

Seriously though, should it be the responsibility of each individual course to explain the rules of etiquette?  Should the pro-shop attendants or the course pro be there to explain the rules.  Or maybe something as simple as a handout along with the scorecard before you leave the pro shop?  Not every course has ranger, a pro, or much of a staff for that matter.  So they simply don’t have the ability or resources to try to enforce the etiquette rules.  So who then is responsible?  Well, quite simply.., we are.

We can’t expect the courses to take on the responsibility of teaching the unwritten rules of the game…or even the written rules for that matter.  And we sure can’t count on people buying books.  So the responsibility falls on us as golfers.  If we are teaching the game to newbies, it’s our job to explain these unwritten rules.  If we’re playing with someone who is unclear, it’s our job to fix that.  If we don’t do it, then who will?  And we can’t just assume people already know.  And we can’t release them onto a course without anyone having confirmed they know said rules or is there to assist them along the way.

But to put it simply, I just don’t want to be stuck behind a group like the one described in my last round.

Swing ’til you’re happy!

Filed Under: Golf Life, Uncategorized Tagged With: course pro, golf etiquette, golf etiquette for dummies, golf stinks, golfstinks, rules of golf

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