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Competition and Sportsmanship Taught Through Golf

January 13, 2014 | By Chris Chirico | 1 Comment

Most kids are not interested in golf if it’s not introduced to them first.  Kids just don’t generally gravitate toward the Golf Channel.  They don’t turn on ESPN to see what Retief Goosen is up to at the Sony Open.  They’re interested in the more popular spectator sports like football, basketball and baseball.  And I for one don’t blame them.  Face it golfers…watching your sport is relatively dull.  As challenging as it is, and as much skill is required…watching someone drop a 50-foot birdie putt does not compare to a diving catch in the end zone, a thunderous dunk or an outfielder pulling a homerun ball back into the yard for an out.  You can see what I mean.

But what golf can offer is a level of competition that can certainly be equivalent to that of any other sport.  But it’s not just the competition, it’s the competition combined with safety and sportsmanship.  And those are some qualities that should make parents happy as well.

When it comes to competition, golfers are a different bunch…and I don’t mean the pros.  When you compare your average weekend golfer with that of any other weekend sports enthusiast such as the flag football player, beer-league softball guy and rec league basketball player (and let’s face it golfing friends, they are their sports equivalent to what you do on the links), it’s only the golfers who question the skill level of each other.  Some of these golfers wear their handicaps like a badge of honor…like it makes them superior to another golfer.  See, someone like me, I can’t even tell you what my handicap is because…quite honestly…I don’t care.  But in the other sports previously mentioned, you don’t see this.  When was the last time you heard two beer-league softball players comparing batting averages?  Have you ever heard two rec league basketball players bragging about their average points per game?  No, of course not.  They would just sound silly.  But golfers?  It’s a new level of personal competition.  And sometimes, I don’t think they even realize they’re doing it.

Something all parents are concerned about when it comes to their children’s participation in sports is safety.  It’s the NFL that really brings this to light, mainly with the concussion problems.  Football is a violent contact sport played by big, strong, fast men.  There are going to be injuries.  There are going to be broken bones, concussions, tears, strains and the like.  Some will be short-term, some may be life-altering.  And further, during last weekends 49ers-Packers game which was played in wind chills of -20 degrees, is the fact that football players play through any weather condition other than lightning.  One can understand why a parent would not want their child to participate.  So what sport, requiring you to get out of a chair, is more safe than golf?  There is no physical contact outside of a handshake or pat on the back.  And the sport is normally only played in optimal conditions.  What’s the risk?  You didn’t hear someone yell “Fore?”  OK, so it can hurt if you get hit by a ball…but it’s rarely been known to cause any serious injury.

Last but not least is the sportsmanship facet of the game.  I don’t know about anyone else, but the trash-talk and self-promotion in some sports has just gone too far now.  I love football…far and away my favorite sport…but I can’t stand watching a wide receiver get up and celebrate every catch like they just won the state lottery.  Or every time a basketball player throws down a dunk, they have to let out a scream, pound their chest and stare down the crowd.  Congratulations!  You did your job!  I’m not a trash-talker…never have been and really don’t like them.  It’s really beginning to lose its place in sports now.  Golf?  It doesn’t occur unless it’s at a personal level.  But doing it just for trash talk’s sake?  Enough already.

Golf may be a relatively dull sport to watch on television.  But when introduced and taught properly, it’s a great sport to have your kids pursue.  The combination of competitiveness, safety and sportsmanship can teach life-lessons, as well as provide years of entertainment and recreation for anyone who sticks with it.  If it goes further than just the level of a weekend hack, great!  But if not, at the very lest it was a useful tool.

Swing ’til you’re happy!

Filed Under: Golf Life Tagged With: competition, espn, golf stinks, golfstinks, Green Bay Packers, nfl, Retief Goosen, San Francisco 49ers, Sony Open, sportsmanship, The Golf Channel

Is The Pro Golf Season Too Long?

December 9, 2013 | By Chris Chirico | Leave a Comment

Does the pro tour need an off-season?
Does the pro tour need an off-season?

I’m watching some college football games on Saturday afternoon when across the bottom of the screen scrolls an update reading Tiger Woods leads in some golf tournament.  As I reach for the remote to rewind what I just saw (gotta love DVR), I’m thinking to myself that I couldn’t possibly have seen what I think I just saw.  They must have just been mentioning his name as part of some other story.  I mean, it’s December.  What golf tournament is still going on?

But sure enough, I was wrong.  Tiger, at the time, was leading the World Challenge in California.  So I know I’ve mentioned it before but, come on.  Doesn’t golf have an off-season?  If you take a look at the PGA Tour schedule, it sure doesn’t appear so.  Don’t get me wrong, golf is great.  But wouldn’t some down time make for more excitement when “golf season” came around?  Everyone has heard the expression “Too much of a good thing.”  Well, why wouldn’t that apply to golf also?  I love football, but I would lose some interest if it was on every weekend.  I need the off-season to keep me excited and interested.  But if there isn’t going to be an off-season, then why not add a wrinkle here and there?

What do I mean by a wrinkle?  How about we see more of a connection between the pros and the hacks like us?  If they’re going to play in December, lets see them play somewhere other than southern California where the temperature is still 70 degrees.  Head a little more north and play where the temperature is hovering around the 45-50 degree mark.  Myself and three other stinky golfers played a nine-hole round last month on a shoreline course.  The temperature topped out around 45 degrees and the wind was blowing/gusting from start to finish.  I’d like to see the pros play in that once in a while.

Did anyone happen to see the Eagles-Lions game this weekend?  They played that game in blizzard conditions with 4-6″ of snow on the ground.  Now I don’t want or expect to see golf played in that weather.  However, let’s do something other than the “challenge of playing by the ocean breeze of Pebble Beach.”  I mean, please.

The problem I’m getting at is, I enjoy golf, but I had absolutely no idea that a golf tournament was taking place this weekend.  I truly believe the sport could be helped by simply creating a more condensed season.  I mean, December?  The NFL is into the final few weeks of the regular season.  The NBA is now in full swing, as is the NHL.  There’s simply too much competition for viewers.  Shorten the season to April through early November (at the latest).  The only competition through a good part of the season is baseball.

If it seems like I’ve said this before, it’s because I have.  But I’m truly only trying to help!  The whole point is, if I as a golf fan had no idea that a golf tournament was even happening this weekend, then there may be a problem.  Not that I would have been watching anyway with football going on…but you see my point.

Swing ’til you’re happy!

Filed Under: The Pro Tours Tagged With: golf tournament, MLB, NBA, nfl, NHL, PGA TOUR, tiger woods, World Challenge

Why Doesn’t Anyone Care About College Golf?

September 23, 2013 | By Chris Chirico | 2 Comments

Lot’s of sports fans love college sports.  Some love it more than pro sports, which I do not understand.  I mean, when given the choice (especially if watching live, ticket price not being an issue), I would want to see a competitive event between the top players in the sport.  How can you enjoy watching minor league or amateur sports more than watching the best of the best compete?  And don’t give me the tired old “The college kids aren’t playing for the money.  They’re playing or the love of the sport.”  It’s time to stop living in the past.  This is the NCAA…it’s all about the money from one angle or another.

Let me be clear though, I do watch college sports simply because it’s a sporting event.  But I’ll give you an example of something I can’t stand about college sports, and being that we’re in football season, I’ll use football as an example.  Do you want to know what stinks about college football?  These – 76-0.  72-0.  54-6.  59-13.  77-7.  56-0.  70-7.  Those are scores from the games of this past Saturday’s AP Top-25 ranked teams.  20 of the 25 teams played.  Seven of them won their games by at least 40 points.  What is enjoyable about watching a game with a final score of 76-0?  In the history of the NFL, there has been exactly one 70+ point victory and it occurred 73 years ago!  In college football, there were three 70-point victories just this weekend!

I hate that there are so many of these mismatched games which, in my opinion, should not even be played.  But they are.  Why?  Money of course.  But in the pros, the gap between the best and worst teams in the league is relatively small.  Only a few players and a few decisions separate the cream of the crop from the cellar dwellers.  This is why it’s rare for a blowout of these proportions to occur and why pro sports are better all-around.  But you know what college sport isn’t like that?  Golf.

The best part of competitive pro golf is that the difference between the top players and the lower tier players is really only a few strokes per round.  In college, it’s not much different.  And with the competition being more…well…competitive, this translates to a good spectator sport.  So why is college golf not seen anywhere on television?

In this day and age, where there are literally hundreds of television channels available, how is it that a popular sport with good competition taking place on a pretty regular basis, not getting any air time?  And when I say not any, I mean almost none!  College golf doesn’t even get so much as a mention on sports channels or highlight shows.  It’s even an afterthought on the Golf Channel.

The question is, why?  It’s a college sport, which many sports fans love.  It’s a very competitive sport with, as in the pros, relatively little difference between the top players and the lower tier.  So where is the attention?  Where are the cameras?  Where’s the fanfare?  You know, catching some of these players when they’re still in college can begin to create star-power prior to the next big thing hitting the pro links.  It seems to work for the college football and basketball players.  Just sayin’.

Swing ’til you’re happy!

Filed Under: Golf Life Tagged With: AP Top 25, college basketball, college football, college golf, college sports, golf stinks, golfstinks, NCAA, nfl, The Golf Channel

Made In The U.S.A.

August 2, 2013 | By Pete Girotto | Leave a Comment

made-in-usa-metal-11092702It’s good to see that manufacturing is coming back to the U.S. I saw a segment on World News last night called “Made In America”. They featured, get this, the new Motorola cell phone being manufactured right here in the good ol’ United States. Texas, to be exact. Who would have thought we would ever see the day an electronic device such as a cell phone would be made here and not in China?

This got me wondering about golf equipment. Now, I know there are companies that make clubs and stuff here but would it help sales if they used that in their marketing? I’ll tell you what, Nike, Taylormade, Callaway or whoever can tell me their clubs hit farther and straighter than the rest but we all know the deal with that. Sell me on something else.

If my decision came down to two sets of clubs and I knew one them was made here…I’m buying the U.S. made set. Now, not being hypocritical, I use Mizuno irons because they were pretty much given to me and no it wasn’t by Mizuno…we’re not that big yet. But if I had to purchase them, I would support our companies here.

The U.S. has a long tradition with iron and steel. Starting with Carnegie up to today. We named a music genre after it, actually a few if you count all the types of “metals” i.e heavy, speed etc. One of the NFL’s most celebrated teams is named after steel. Considering all the metal involved in a golf club, it only makes sense to be made here. Just my $0.02…

Hit’em long…yell FORE!!!

Filed Under: Stinky Golfer Paradise Tagged With: Calloway, Carnegie, golf, golf clubs, made in U.S.A., mizuno, Motorola, nfl, Nike, Taylormade, world news

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.

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