GolfStinks

A Golf Blog for the Rest of Us!

  • Home
  • About
  • Most Popular
  • Categories
    • Stinky Golfer Paradise
    • Golf Life
    • The Pro Tours
    • Reviews
    • The Economics of Golf
    • Golf Growth & Diversity
    • Health & Environment
    • Golf Destinations
  • Golf Terms
  • Newsletter

Maybe Golfers Are Getting Younger After All

September 9, 2013 | By Chris Chirico | 1 Comment

(photo by  Fairy Heart ♥ / CC BY 2.0)
(photo by
Fairy Heart ♥ / CC BY 2.0)

It’s a subject we’ve gotten into a few times in the past, but it looks like a tour pro is beginning to see a problem as well.  I’m talking about kids playing on the pro golf tours.  At one time it was a sixteen year old.  Then it was a fourteen year old.  Now, the European Tour is pushing the envelope and had a thirteen year old participate in the European Masters this past weekend.  So really, at what point is the line to be drawn?  Well, it seems Miguel Angel Jimenez is one player who has had enough.

Jimenez spoke out against the idea of having a thirteen year old in the tournament saying he should be playing against other players his own age, and that this type of pressure could ruin their careers.  He even went as far as to accuse the organizers of using a kid to gain publicity for the tournament.  Some other players defended the decision saying that the additional promotion is good for the game.

So what do you think?  Is thirteen years old too young for a player to participate in a golf tournament?  Especially when it’s a tournament as big as the European Masters?  If you don’t think so, keep in mind, this same kid also played in the Volvo China Open back in May at the age of twelve!  Me personally, I think so.

While I do agree that the extra promotion for the tournament is good for the sport as a whole, I feel more strongly that this does, in fact, cheapen the sport.  A thirteen, fourteen or even a sixteen year old could not even be on the same court/field as a professional in any other major sport without risking his life.  But in golf, it seems that these young players are popping up in more tournaments, and they’re getting younger and younger each time.

Also, as far as using young players simply to promote the tournament, I agree with Jimenez.  I don’t think there is any other legitimate reason to add a thirteen year old kid to your tournament other than to help generate more of a buzz surrounding it.  You mean to tell me there is no other tour pro deserving of a spot in the tournament ahead of a thirteen year old kid?  How do you think that makes the tour pro’s who didn’t get the invite feel?  One of them has to be thinking “Are you kidding me?  I don’t get an invite, but a kid still struggling with his math homework does?!”

So where does it end?  When is it enough?  At what age do we put a cap on it?  Is it 12?  11?  10?!  Come on now.  Do we really need to see this?  We all know right from the start that the kid has no shot at winning.  He barely has a snowballs chance in hell of even making the cut!  So is it worth, as Jimenez says, ruining their careers?  Well, I guess that’s up to the promoters.  But as Jimenez indicated, and has sometimes been shown, sometimes it’s more about the money and promotion than it is the players.

Swing ’til you’re happy!

Filed Under: The Pro Tours Tagged With: European Masters, European Tour, Miguel Angel Jimenez, Volvo China Open, Ye Wo-Cheng

Extend Your Golf Career; Quit Skiing

January 7, 2013 | By Chris Chirico | 3 Comments

Why risk injury when you can be lollygagging along on the golf course?
Why risk injury skiing when you can be lollygagging along on the golf course instead?

Have you ever wondered why some professional athletes have a clause in their contract that prevent them from participating in certain off-season activities?  For instance, some baseball players are not allowed to do things such as play a pickup basketball game.  I believe it was Roger Clemens who once had a clause in his contract stating he was not allowed to do the simple task of mowing his lawn.  But hey, when you’re paying a guy over $10 million a year, the last thing you want is for him to get hurt doing something outside of playing the sport you’re paying him to play.

Recently, I’ve penned a couple of posts about athletes from other sports taking up golf as a second sport, as well as golfers playing other sports.  But it’s Miguel Angel Jimenez who may have put those arguments for the golfers to rest after his recent skiing accident.

If you haven’t heard by now, a little over a week ago Jimenez broke his leg while skiing.  The result?  After surgery he’ll be unable to play for at least three months and possibly as long as five.  Now, that may be a bit of a stretch as far as the multi-sport athlete argument, but you would have to imagine what’s going through the minds of many GM’s in the major sports right now.  That’s one more clause that may have to be put into future contracts if it’s not already in there – no skiing.

For a golfer to have such an injury, I don’t think it will take much of a toll physically since the sport doesn’t exactly demand much stress on the body.  For golfers it’s more about the time away from the game and what it’s going to do to your swing.  But for players in more physically demanding sports that include running and hitting, an injury like that could be either career-ending or certainly career-debilitating at least.  Think former Chicago Bull Jay Williams who violated his NBA contract by riding a motorcycle, and subsequently crashing it, thus ending his NBA career.

NASCAR star Jimmie Johnson may have a bit of experience with a golf injury, although his occurred when he fell from a golf cart.  Supposedly Johnson actually fell from the top of a moving cart, injuring his wrist in the process which caused him to miss a month of racing.  Of course, the PGA Tour doesn’t use carts, and even if they did, something tells me they wouldn’t let you ride on top of one.  But, I guess if you’re going to act like a jackass, you get what’s coming.

Now since PGA Tour golfers are, in effect, “independent contractors,” there really isn’t anything to stop them from pursuing another sport or taking part in any off-the-course activities.  So it’s really a matter of risk of injury to themselves which would effectively take money out of their own pockets.  Jimenez could be out as long as five months.  If that’s the case, that’s five months worth of tournaments he’ll miss out on.

With that mentality in mind, it’s easy to see why golfers would not want to participate in other professional sports, but athletes from other sports may well consider golf as a second sport or one to consider upon retirement.  However, it seems one bit of advice might be to avoid skiing.

Swing ’til you’re happy!

Filed Under: Golf Life Tagged With: Jay Williams, Jimmie Johnson, Miguel Angel Jimenez, multi-sport athlete, professional athlete, Roger Clemens, skiing

Awards

Badges Badges Badges Best Mens Blogs Badges

Advertisements

GPI


 


Archives – Read all 1,000+ GolfStinks Posts!

Blogroll

  • Aussie Golfer
  • Black Girls Golf
  • Devil Ball Golf
  • Front9Back9 Golf Blog
  • Geoff Shackelford
  • Golf Blogger
  • Golf For Beginners
  • Golf Gear Geeks
  • Golf Girl's Diary
  • Golf News Net (GNN)
  • Golf Refugees
  • Golf State of Mind
  • Golfgal
  • My Daily Slice of Golf
  • Pillars of Golf
  • Ruthless Golf
  • The Breakfast Ball
  • The Grateful Golfer
  • UniqueGolfGears.com

Questions / Advertise

info@golfstinks.com

Disclaimers

See here

Privacy Policy

See here

Copyright © 2009-2024 GolfStinks.com - All rights reserved.