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Every Golf Tournament Could Be An All-Star Game

January 28, 2013 | By Chris Chirico | 5 Comments

So we all know by now that the NFL’s Pro Bowl has become more of a side-show than an actual competitive game.  Defenses haven’t really shown up since 1998.  Star players opt out.  Super Bowl players don’t participate.  The rules are changed to make the game “safer.”  It’s a sham really.  It’s bad football, but it’s still football nonetheless, so I usually watch.

Like any all-star game in any sport, the potential is there.  It has the chance to be such a great game!  How could a game featuring all of the league’s best players at their respective positions not be fantastic if played as hard as the game should be played?  But with the risk of injury, the changes in rules and lazy play, it becomes just the exhibition game that it actually is.  But all of the pieces are there…it’s just missing that meaningful game feel.

But this is an area where the PGA Tour has a leg up on every other major sport.  They have the ability to put together an “all-star” lineup at every tournament if they would simply shake-up their tournament schedule a bit. 

I’ve said it several times before, but the PGA Tour needs a real championship at the end of their season.  Enough of the money leader.  Enough of the ranking system that no one understands.  The players need to battle it out on the course.  And if there was a smaller, more streamlined schedule in which players were required to play in order to qualify for the championship, then every required tour stop would result in a star-studded field.  If this was the case you’d have to imagine the TV ratings would rise, as would the gate.   

But you can’t expect every player to play all of the tournaments, right?  Of course not.  Only a certain amount of the stops would be required – maybe in the 15-20 area.  The rest would be their choice to play either for a shot at the purse, the chance to make some more money or just to keep the competitive juices flowing.  But certain stops would be required to qualify.  Play all of the required stops and you play in the championship.

The point is, the PGA Tour has the ability to field an all-star game every time out.  What if every meaningful tournament featured all of the top players on the tour?  No one skipping out on tournaments because if they did, they wouldn’t qualify for the championship.  I don’t know about you, but I don’t watch golf on TV very much…but an idea like this would certainly get me more interested.

Swing ’til you’re happy!

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: all star game, football, golf stinks, golfstinks, nfl, PGA TOUR, PGA Tour oney leader, Pro Bowl, Super Bowl, TV Ratings

Do Great Golfers Make Great Instructors?

January 25, 2013 | By Pete Girotto | Leave a Comment

Here goes with the age old question. Do great athletes make great coaches? Well, I tend to believe that a majority of the great athletes might have some coaching ability because it’s still fresh in their minds but that’s about it. You see, very few people can excel and become great at one thing never mind two. Same goes for golf…or does it?

If you go to your local track and want to take lessons, who’s the person that gives them? The course pro and there’s a high probability they are incredible golfers too. It’s funny because when I look on the side line of any other professional sport, I’m going to go ahead and guess that most of the coaches couldn’t perform at the level their players do. Nor could they have had done so in their prime.

Here’s something even better, certified golf pro’s battle it out on two fronts. The first being they need to keep their skills honed and scores low and secondly, they go through a few years of certification training to teach plus continue with refresher courses. A lot easier said than done but the proof is definitely in the pudding. How many NFL coaches do you know of can do a sub 5 second 40 yard dash without keeling over? 

OK, I got a little carried away, I completely understand the physical requirements of an NFL player are much more demanding than a pro golfer’s. The point is that in order to teach someone how to golf, you’re most likely great at it. And “it” meaning teaching and golf! So, make sure you support your local track and golf pro!

Hit’em long…yell FORE!!! Be the ball, Danny…    

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: be the ball, golf, golf instructor, golf pro, nfl

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

Getting Together To Watch Some Golf

September 17, 2012 | By Chris Chirico | Leave a Comment

So regular season football has been on for two weeks now, and for two weeks I’ve had a few buddies come over to watch the games with me.  Our faces are being stuffed with pizza, wings and chips.  Beers are being guzzled.  Ooh’s and aah’s spread throughout the room after big hits and great catches.  Football season is in full swing and I love it.

It’s all of this that makes me realize what that one thing is that’s missing from golf that keeps me from having the guys over to watch a round – everything. 

A long time ago I wondered the reason my buddies and I get together to watch football, along with the occasional baseball and basketball games, but we never do for golf, even though we all enjoy and play the game.  But I’m thinking that sometime in the next few months, I may try to have a golf get together.  But a few dilemmas exist.

1. It’s going to be limited to only certain months of the year.  Think about it, if the weather is nice enough, we’re going to be playing golf, not watching it.  It’s the same reason that, despite there being a PGA Tour stop only fifteen minutes from my house, I’ve only attended it three times.  If the weather is nice enough to wander around a golf course, then I’m going to wander a golf course with my clubs in tow. 

2. As mentioned before in the linked post above…it’s boring.  Let’s face it, watching golf on TV is just not very exciting.  “Hey guys, want to come by my place Sunday and watch the sun move across the sky?”  Yeah, that’ll be a blast.  “Hey man, I just painted my garage.  Why don’t you head on over and we can watch it dry together?”  If I was to actually ask either of these questions to my buddies, do you know what the response would be?  “Thanks but no thanks dude…I’d rather watch a golf tournament.”

3. How do you plan ahead for it?  Do you just pick a time and say come over then?  What if it’s the final round and you’re only interested in one particular golfer?  How much of that golfer do you really get to see?  Let’s go to 13.  Now back to 7.  We’re going to head over to 17 now.  We end up watching a bunch of practice swings before we see eleven seconds of real action…if you can really call it that.

You know, this idea is actually beginning to start sounding bad.  I don’t want to have the guys come over and be bored.  None of us want to sit and watch golf when we could be playing instead.  And honestly, it just seems hard to plan for.  So if I’m going to do it, it looks like it’s going to have to be a final round, which means a Sunday.  It’s going to have to be in the cold weather, or else we’ll be playing.  So that leaves a Sunday in the winter. And that, my friends, is football time.  So it looks like my idea is going to have to be put on the shelf.  Oh well, maybe one of our rounds will be rained out.   Then there may be some time to watch golf.

Swing ’til you’re happy!              

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: football season, golf course, golf stinks, golf tournament, golfstinks, nfl, PGA TOUR

ARE YOU READY FOR SOME…Golf?

September 5, 2012 | By Greg D'Andrea | Leave a Comment

The start of the NFL bodes well for golfers... (photo by Greg D'Andrea)
The start of the NFL bodes well for golfers… (photo by Greg D’Andrea)

So today marks the start of the 2012 NFL season – are you excited? Perhaps I should rephrase that: ARE YOU READY FOR SOME FOOTBALL?!?!?!? I know I’m excited!

Here in the United States, football (not to be confused with fútbol) is all the rage. It’s quite physical, requires extreme athletic ability and fits perfectly into neat little 3-hour programming blocks for TV networks.

What’s more, legions of football fans (myself included) also partake in fantasy football – a betting game involving pretend teams of real NFL players – so for many, there’s double the reason to get lost in this pigskin-mania that sweeps the nation every autumn.

That being said, every Sunday from September through January, millions of Americans plop down in front of the big screen – snacks and beers in hand – to watch the football games. That’s games with an ‘s’ – not just one game, but typically several games throughout the day.

In fact, many people get so lost in gridiron-gaga, that time typically dedicated to “other things” gets diverted to watching football. One of these “other things” of course, is golf. Last year, Stinky Golfer Chris explained how the start of the NFL season marks the end of his golfing season.

And this is where I break from the normal football fan/golfer. Remember when I said I was excited the football season was starting? Well I am. But not because football is on every Sunday. You see, the reality is I don’t really watch football!

Now don’t get me wrong – I like football, but these days I don’t sit in front of the TV all day going from game-to-game whenever a commercial comes on. I may watch 10 minutes here or 5 minutes there – but that’s it.

Yep, I won the Super Bowl in my fantasy league last year and never even watched one entire game! But what’s even cooler is how empty the golf course is on Sunday afternoons here in the Fall. I can make a 1PM tee-time and zip right through 9 holes on a course where it would normally take two and a half hours to play during non-football season!

And autumn in New England is the best time to play golf to boot! You have perfect weather and an empty course – how much better can it get? So to all you football fans who are also golfers – please, please, please keep packing on the pounds in front of the tube all Sunday while I’m out enjoying a perfect day on the links – I wouldn’t want the course to start getting crowded again!

OK, I should admit that I do check my fantasy football app on every tee-box. Hey after all, I’m still an American.

Filed Under: Golf Life Tagged With: fantasy football, football, nfl

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