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Golf Pros Dicked Over By Dick’s

July 25, 2014 | By Pete Girotto | 2 Comments

dicksIt’s no secret our country and perhaps 85% or better of the rest of the world is suffering from a down economy. Considering the situation, most turn to basic financial survival instincts and resort to cutting back spending by starting with the luxuries. Unfortunately golf tends to fall into this category.

As a matter of fact, Dick’s Sporting Goods recently laid off around 560 golf pros from their stores (in case you didn’t know, Dick’s employed actual PGA pros at their stores, up until this week that is, to distinguish themselves from an online outlet). Their reasoning for the mass cannings? According to a story by ESPN, Dick’s blames the economy, less people playing, too many products flooding the market and a downward trend in their golf equipment sales.

After hearing of this, we connected with someone (a golf pro who shall remain anonymous) that just happen to be one of the Dick’s casualties this week. Here’s what he had to say:

1. How do you feel Dick’s handled the situation?

“I thought they could have changed our role before they laid all of us off. They still sell equipment that many customers seek advice on. Which ball should I play? What loft is a sand wedge? As it was, I was already one of two people to cover an entire floor. I carried more kayaks down than golf clubs at times. Tennis was given to golf to cover and sell as well. So in my opinion, since your gonna staff it anyways, why not someone who knows what they’re doing? The company strives for a customer service number – who better to service people but a golf professional. I think they should have looked at some of their processes to save money. For example, each week the regional manager would have a conference call with corp[orate], then they would have a conference call with the district managers, then they would have a call with store managers who relay the information to the dept manager, who has an hourly associate do the task. Seems like a big waste of corp[orate] dollars to me.”

2. Dick’s attributed the layoffs to the game’s dwindling popularity – were you able to witness any slow-down at the store?

“I was at the driving range on a Wednesday afternoon and just about all the bays were full. I couldn’t get a tee time because the local course was booked. I think people are still playing. While I was there, everyday a steady flow of people came through the store. In my opinion, the rule restrictions out on clubs years ago changed the market. While the companies all claim that the new models are better etc., in most peoples eyes it wasn’t much better than the clubs they purchase a couple of years ago. If they did like the new models, most buyers realized that the price would be half in 6 months. They should have given the pros more say in what sells. For years I begged them to send me wide shoes. One style was available in wide in the store. So just about every Friday, someone would come in looking for shoes for the weekend and left with nothing.”

Hmmmm. So now that we have (kind of) heard both sides to the story, I almost forgot to mention another reason that Dick’s used as part of justifying their layoffs: The decline of Tiger Woods. Tiger Woods?!?! I mean I kind of get it but it’s a tough sell to say part of the reason a pro lost their job is due to the decline of Tiger Woods. Regardless, we want to wish all those involved a quick return to the job they love.

So, how do we turn this negative into a positive? I like to refer to Warren Buffet’s theory of “Buy when there’s blood in the streets.” Obviously this refers to the calculated purchasing of stocks when everyone is selling, but relating this theory to golf, now is a good time to get in.

Many golf clubs, associations and instructors are dropping their prices to attract more golfers back. So if you’re looking for those golf lessons or club to join, now might be a good time to do so. Hey, it worked for Warren Buffet…

Hit’em long…yell FORE…Hug a Golf Pro this week!!!

Filed Under: The Economics of Golf Tagged With: dick's sporting goods, ESPN, lay-off, pga golf pro, tiger woods, warren buffet

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.

Who’s Up For A Golf Brawl?

June 17, 2013 | By Chris Chirico | Leave a Comment

Ever get into a rumble on the golf course?
Do fights on the golf course really happen?

As they say, there’s no such thing as bad press.  And last weeks bench-clearing brawl between the L.A. Dodgers and Arizona Diamondbacks was proof positive.  Now baseball brawls are not uncommon, but they happen infrequently enough that it’s a big deal when they do.  It’s not like a hockey fight where they happen so often that it’s just become part of the game.  No one outside of hockey fans cares about a hockey fight anymore.  But a bench-clearer in baseball?  It’s all over ESPN, Sportscenter, sports highlight shows and, with this particular one, even my local news the next morning!  Imagine that type of coverage for a regular golf tournament?

Come on now…admit it.  Deep down, I know most of us golf fans have a little voice telling us how much we’d like to see Tiger and Sergio come to blows right on one of the tees, mid-tourney.  I know some of you probably just gasped.  “How could he say something like that?”  But think about it from the stand-point of adding attention to the game.  Something like that would add so much more coverage to the sport, which in turn will lead to more viewers and more fans.  people who are not even golf fans are going to be curious about that.  Hell, they may even tune into the tournament just to see if something else erupts!

I used Tiger and Sergio as examples.  But in reality, it could be anyone on the tour really, however it would only help if at least one of the brawlers was a bigger name on the tour.  The younger generation of sports fans has fewer and fewer golf fans within.  Younger fans look to more physical, fast-paced sports.  And with the rising popularity of extreme sports or X-Games type sports in recent years, several sports are either losing fans or gaining them at a slower rate.  But none more than golf.  So something new needs to happen.

More attention needs to be drawn to the sport, and not only during majors.  I’m sure many people will think that a brawl will just be a black eye on the sport, and maybe it will…temporarily.   But like a brawl in any other sport, it will blow over in a pretty short-period of time.  Afterward, it will just be remembered something like “Hey, do you remember that time when (insert golfer here) and (insert other golfer here) went at in during their round?  That was awesome.”  Well, as long as the fight is a good one and doesn’t look something like this:

Because if it does look anything like that, then the sport is about to lose several more potential fans and gain a whole mess of hecklers.  Talk about a black eye…

Swing ’til you’re happy!

Filed Under: Golf Life Tagged With: brawl, ESPN, extreme sports, fight, Sportscenter, X-Games

Bo Knows…Golf?

December 10, 2012 | By Chris Chirico | Leave a Comment

Just recently I tuned into one of ESPN’s 30 For 30 documentaries – this one entitled You Don’t Know Bo – obviously a documentary about the great Bo Jackson.  When I was a kid, I loved watching Bo play football, play baseball, act in commercials…everything.  I loved just the idea of Bo Jackson!  To see a guy who can be one of the best players in Major League Basbeball then head over to the NFL and one of the best players there as well, is simply amazing.

Now there have been several other multi-sport athletes in the major American sports – Deion Sanders, Brian Jordan and Danny Ainge quickly come to mind.  But despite a relatively short career (eight years in baseball and four in the NFL), none of the others are remembered more as multi-sport athletes more than Bo.  Perhaps that’s deserved though as he is the only player in history to be voted an all-star in baseball and a pro-bowler in football.

Now golf, though there are many athletes who play the game well, has had only one true multi-sport athlete – Babe Didrikson Zaharias.  And though we are aware of guys like Tony Romo who are great golfers that play other professional sports, I wonder why no one has tried to make golf the other half of their multi-sport athletic career.  Perhaps it has something to do with the business of sports today.  With all of the money and huge contracts floating around, the last thing an owner wants to deal with is the risk of injury due to a player participating in another sport.  But seriously…who gets injured on the PGA Tour?

It was a special kind of owner – Al Davis – who would allow a player, especially a star, to miss five or six games of an NFL season to play another sport.  But golf?  If an NFL player was to primarily play in the summer months, during the off-season, then I don’t really see the issue.  But in other sports such as basketball or baseball, the case may be different.  Baseball is played during prime golf season.  It’s played on the weekend – often bigger/more important/rivalry series are played on the weekends.  So MLB owners are not letting players leave to play in a golf tournament.  Basketball on the other hand plays primarily in the winter, until the late regular season and playoffs which occur in the spring.  So in all likelihood, unless the team has no shot at the playoffs, then they aren’t going to be let off the hook either.  However, the NBA off-season runs from mid-June through early October.  So NBA golfers like Ray Allen and Chris Paul could get a few months in if they wanted.

So with the opportunity there, why have some of these athletes from other sports not tried to play on the tour?  Is it due to the fact that, since they can’t do it full-time, they’ll never fully excel?  That makes sense I guess.  The pros are the pros because they work hard to be pros.  So playing part-time only in opens, pro-ams or charity events probably just doesn’t cut it.

Now I understand it’s golf, and it’s not exactly a physically demanding sport, so the Bo Jackson and Deion Sanders comparisons can be put aside.  But it would be a multi-sport athlete nonetheless.  It’s been a while since we’ve seen one and a multi-sport athlete always gets sports fans excited.  So could a multi-sport athlete help generate more interest in golf?  Well, it sure couldn’t hurt.

Swing ’til you’re happy!

Filed Under: The Pro Tours Tagged With: 30 For 30, Al Davis, Babe Didrikson Zaharias, Bo Jackson, Chris Paul, Deion Sanders, ESPN, MLB, multi-sport athlete, NBA, nfl, PGA, Ray Allen, Tony Romo

What Would a Melee Do For Golf?

November 19, 2012 | By Chris Chirico | Leave a Comment

So if it hasn’t been shoved down every sports fans throat by now, there was a fight last weekend after a NASCAR race between a driver and a pit crew member for another driving team.  Really now?  Have you seen the video?  Of course you have…you can’t escape it.  Of course, in every angle of the video, you can’t see a thing worthwhile happen.  You can’t see a punch thrown or contact made.  Nothing.  But I’ll tell you what, NASCAR and they’re fans are eating it up. 

Me, I couldn’t possibly care less about NASCAR.  How anyone can sit for hours watching cars drive around in a circle (yes…I understand it’s an oval, but that doesn’t have the same ring to it) blows my mind.  So to me, that’s why NASCAR fans are eating it up.  It’s because something that could possibly be exciting, other than a car accident, actually happened!  Can you imagine what fans of the NHL must be thinking about this?!  They must be laughing all the way to the penalty box! 

But of course, as I try to equate things in other sports to golf, I wonder if the PGA Tour could use something like this.  Because lets face it, watching the PGA Tour is almost as dull as watching NASCAR.  But what if Rickie Fowler was to, I don’t know…step in Rory’s line?  Or cough during his swing?  What kind of reaction do you think there would be if Rory blew up and smacked Fowler across the lips right there on the 13th green?  I’d have to imagine that ESPN would be all over it!  That footage would be on 24/7!  And could you imagine if Tiger was involved?!  They would start a new channel that night!  And the first show airing would be ESPN Tigercenter! 

But the real question is, would that be a bad thing?  They say there is no such thing as bad publicity, but golf is so rooted in the “gentleman’s game” mindset that one would have to imagine the PGA would want this swept under the rug as soon as possible.  But would they be making a mistake by doing this?  Would the publicity do something to help bring in a younger generation of fans who typically find the game boring.  Maybe it’s not a good reason to get them to watch, but at the same time, if it gets them to watch…isn’t that reason enough?

Swing ’til you’re happy!                 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: ESPN, golf stinks, golfstinks, NASCAR, NHL, PGA, PGA TOUR, Rickie Fowler, rory mcilroy, tiger woods

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