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Giving Golf A Second Chance

July 16, 2012 | By Chris Chirico | 1 Comment

The old second chance.  Many people deserve it.  Few get it.  But what about golf?  How many people do you think quit the game and leave it behind for good?  I’ll bet it’s a much higher number than the people who quit the game and come back.  But I recently read an article about a man who plans on doing just that. 

This particular gentleman gave up the game back in high school.  Now that in itself is kind of strange, being that it seems to be the time when many are being introduced to the game.  It was for me.  I didn’t start playing in high school, but I had a part-time job at a local golf course, which is where I first discovered the driving range.  But that’s about as deep into golf as I got until my mid-20’s. 

But as we’ve mentioned before, sometimes life gets in the way of golf.  It does for most of us.  There’s always something to do that keeps us away from this great game.  And once we get pulled away from the course for a significant amount of time, many of us never go back.  But thankfully, some of us do.  Our writer realized after several failed home improvement projects, that he needed something else to do with his free time.  So, looking for something more social, enter…or…re-enter golf.

So now, he’s faced with some of the the decisions with which many of us were faced when we first took up the game – taking lessons and purchasing clubs.  So if I could inject a bit of my own advice, I would like to say just a couple of things.

1.  Enjoy the game for what it is – a game.  If you take your game or your lessons too seriously, you’ll be missing out on some of the fun. 

2.  Use the time on the course for something more than just playing golf.  Make a day of it with your buddies.  Relax, talk, hang out, have a couple beers…make it a good social experience with your friends. 

3.  Understand that you will never be a pro.  And if you’re taking up the game later in life, understand that you will likely never even approach the point you think you will reach.  If you hit more bad shots than good…who gives a crap?!  Is it your job?  Are you blowing a million dollar purse?  Are you losing your chance at making the PGA Tour?  No!  You’re just out there having a good time.  Continue to do that.     

4.  As for your clubs, before you go out and dump an obscene amount of money into a driver and a set of irons, make sure you’re going to stick with the game first.  I bought a cheap set of clubs to start with and used them for a good twelve years before I got custom-fitted for a set.  And though they feel like they’re helping, my scores certainly don’t reflect it.

Point is, I’m glad to see someone returning to the game.  But I’d be happier if they were to stick with it.  And a few simple ideas with which to approach the game can make the experience all the better. 

Swing ’til you’re happy!      

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: custom club fitting, golf clubs, golf lesson, golf stinks, golfstinks, PGA TOUR, taking up golf

Why Exactly Are You Playing Golf?

May 7, 2012 | By Chris Chirico | 2 Comments

IMG_2330
Is golf too much work and not enough fun for you? (photo by Greg D’Andrea)

So a buddy of mine just got engaged this past weekend.  After offering up my congratulations, I proceeded to fill him in on the support group for men who have fallen victim to the engagement/marriage syndrome.  I let him know that we meet whenever necessary at local bars and golf courses.  He doesn’t realize it right now, but he’ll be joining us there soon.

It was only a joke, but it made me think about the reasons some of us are out on the links to begin with.  Get away from the wife and kids for a few hours.  Love of the game.  An escape from a routine.  The competition.  The challenge.  All of the above maybe?  For me, it’s a little bit of all of these.  But at the same time, it’s none of them.

Some people just don’t get why I golf.  I’m not talking about the people who are non-golfers and for one reason or another dislike the game.  I’m talking about other golfers.  Now I don’t mean a guy who watched me play a round and then said to me “Dude, why are you even out here?  You stink at this game.”  He’s right, I do stink at golf.  But I’m talking about the guys who don’t understand that I’m only out on the course to hang out with my friends and do something we all enjoy.  The actual game is secondary to me.

The comment I made earlier regarding the meetings at bars and golf courses is what made me think of this.  But to me, playing golf with my friends, and heading to the bar with my friends, are pretty much interchangeable.  And I truly believe this mentality is what keeps me enjoying the sport (just as much as enjoying the bar).  I’ll explain.

Golf, to me, is a social activity.  It’s not a competition to me.  It’s not something at which I need to excel.  It’s not something at which I expect to become great, nor do I really care if I do.  It’s something I do with my friends as “hang-out time.”  It’s about the equivalent of going to a ball game together, to the bar, the casino, dinner or whatever.  It’s just good quality time with people whom I don’t always get to spend enough.  But that’s where I want to draw the line on golf.  Any more, and golf would no longer be all about fun and socialization.

The day I actually go out and pay for a lesson will be the day that I have begun to take golf too seriously.  And that, friends, is where other golfers don’t understand why I play.  It is completely lost on them that I’m not concerned with getting better.  But the attitude of other golfers is what gets lost on me!  Why so many people have the urge to spend money with a pro to get better at a sport at which they will never actually compete is way over my head.  They ask me “Don’t you want to get better?”  But when I respond with “Don’t you ever want to play simply for fun?” they look at me like I have three heads!  Like the whole concept of playing for fun is completely foreign to them!  Like it’s never even crossed their mind.

I’ve said it several times before, but I’ll never get it.  I didn’t hire a hitting coach when I played softball. I didn’t bring in a shooting instructor when I played basketball.  I don’t look to the The Mad Fisherman when I’m having a slow day at the lake.  So why would I pay a golf pro to help me with my swing?  I do all of these things for the same reason – fun.  Not to try and become a pro.  Why should golf be any different?

Now I’m not at all knocking people who take lessons.  I understand that many people want to be better golfers.  I understand that most people take the game much more seriously than I do.  If that’s what you want to do, then by all means, do it!  Take multiple lessons.  Get better.  Become a great golfer!  But what I am knocking is the people who have this over-bearing opinion that I NEED to take a lesson.  Or that golfers who are new to the game MUST seek out a pro.  It’s just foolish.  Further, I’m of the opinion that this mentality is something that keeps new, younger players from taking up the game to begin with.  People already see the game as expensive, uptight and boring.  Now, to add in that they have to pay a pro to help them?  I’m sorry, but that is the wrong way to introduce players to the game.

Think about someone introducing you to the game.  They say to you “Come on, we’re going to go play golf.  Let’s spend a bunch of money on your clubs, more on the accessories you need to play such as balls, tees and stuff like that.  Then we have to buy you some shoes.  Then we’ll go hire a pro to teach you how to swing.”  Are you freakin’ kidding me?!  If my friends introduced the game to me like that, I wouldn’t be playing today.  I would have said “Thanks, but no thanks” and gone right back to playing basketball and softball.  They play for fun, and that’s exactly how they introduced it to me.

Now keep in mind, I love playing golf.  Although I play for fun, I do try to play well while I’m out there.  I might as well, right?  I’m not a student of the game.  I don’t follow it professionally.  I’m not concerned with becoming a great player.  But don’t think just because you take lessons that you love the game any more than I do.  Maybe you do, maybe you don’t.  But your desire to get better doesn’t measure anything.  We just love the game for two different reasons.

All I’m saying is before you encourage people, especially players new to the game, to spend the money on lessons with pros, find out why they are out on the course playing golf to begin with.  You may think you’re being helpful.  But what you may see as helpful and necessary, they may see as a complete turn-off.  I almost never give advice to anyone about their game.  But if I was to do so, the only advice I would ever actually give is…

Swing ’til you’re happy!

Filed Under: Stinky Golfer Paradise Tagged With: golf lesson, golf pro, PGA TOUR, The Mad Fisherman

Ladies and Gentlemen, Welcome to the PGA Draft

April 30, 2012 | By Chris Chirico | Leave a Comment

Anybody catch the NFL Draft this past weekend?  If you’re a football fan, then you probably watched at least some of it.  Even if just to see what your favorite team did with it’s top pick or two.  I know I was tuned in for quite a while.  And I thought breaking it up over three days was a mistake, but boy was I wrong.  Some co-workers and I, who all happen to be Patriots fans, we’re discussing the first round on Friday morning in anticipation of the upcoming rounds.

It seems kind of funny doesn’t it?  Watching teams just pick their players, some of whom will not even make the team.  But that’s how big the NFL is.  It sometimes seems the draft is second in the sport’s popularity to only the Super Bowl.  And it’s only getting bigger.  Now it’s in prime-time, broken up over three days.  And this year, an unprecedented five international players were drafted (players not from the U.S. but attended college and played football here) as well as an American born player who attended college in Canada.  The sport is now truly going global.

About a year-and-a-half ago, I asked the question “What if PGA Tour golf was a team sport?”   Now, after tuning into the NFL draft for a while, it got me thinking about it further.  As I said, the draft is a big event for the NFL and it’s fans – maybe second only to the Super Bowl.  Well, if golf was a team sport, then why not the same intrigue there?  After all, the PGA doesn’t have a “Super Bowl” of it’s own (although it should), but it does have four majors that are always popular.  And, like the Super Bowl but on a much smaller scale, these are the only tournaments that non-golf fans really care much about at all.     

Now when I say teams, I don’t necessarily mean that teams such as the Florida Whiteshoes or California Earthquakes have to be created, although that would be great, wouldn’t it?  But it could be something like Nascar does with teams – owners, but still individual drivers.  Or, they could be sponsor teams such as Team Callaway, Nike or Ashworth, etc.. 

Imagine Team Nike drafting someone out of college or the amateur rankings with the #1 overall pick.  Follow that up with Team Callaway trading out of the #2 spot in exchange for the #5 pick and another player on the tour.  I don’t know about you, but this sounds like fun!  Although, obviously individual player sponsorships would probably get in the way here.       

Additionally, it could also be a good way to bring attention to college golf.  See, you don’t have to be a football fan to know who Andrew Luck or Robert Griffin III is.  But truthfully, I can’t name one college golfer right now.  I’m sure there’s a college golfer who is somehow ranked as the #1 golfer in the country at that level…but I have no idea who he is.  That seems wrong to me.  But something tells me that if there was a big event to introduce these guys to all the PGA Tour fans, that would probably change.   

Ahhh, listen…I’m just a football fan who’s excited about my teams draft picks.  I’m one of those people who feel the draft is pretty exciting.  To me, it’s almost like an unofficial kickoff to the preseason, or at least a halfway point between seasons.  After all, the first preseason game is just over three months away.  I always look for ideas to inject some excitement into golf and try to help increase viewership and popularity among the younger generation.  And judging by the current state of the game, no one else seems to have too many great ideas.

Swing ’til you’re happy! 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Andrew Luck, Ashworth, Callaway, golf stinks, golfstinks, nfl, NFL Draft, Nike, Patriots, PGA, PGA TOUR, RG3, Robert Griffin III, Super Bowl

A New Kind of Apparel For the Golf Fan

March 26, 2012 | By Chris Chirico | 3 Comments

When you look at a golf blog and see the name Woods, obviously you think of Tiger.  So when a football jersey sporting the name Woods appears on that golf blog, some confusions likely ensues.  But any NFL fan knows that, pictured to the left, is an Ickey Woods jersey. 

And to prove the NFL’s marketing genius, every NFL fan who sees this jersey instantly recognizes it despite the fact Ickey has been out of the league since 1991 and played a total of only 37 games in his injury-shortened career.  Further, his career numbers have been eclipsed by several players in just a single season!

Jersey sales rake in boatloads of money for the NFL.  You can see them worn everywhere at NFL stadiums as well as just out and about.  I have several myself.  It’s a great way for the NFL to market their teams, as well as the players, at the same time.  This is something that the PGA is sorely lacking.  But because there are no uniforms or teams on the PGA Tour, there really isn’t much that can be done about it.  Or, is there?

The golfers themselves can cash in on numerous sponsorships.  But how much does a BMW logo on a players shirt help the tour?  Take a look at Tiger Woods for instance.  Nike has made it’s own brand out of one player.  What’s to stop Callaway from doing the same for Phil?  Or any apparel company from taking on Rory? 

Better yet, the PGA Tour puts out it’s own apparel line.  I have a white PGA Tour polo shirt, so I know they exist.  They could simply start there.  What if fans could purchase shirts, hats, golf shoes, etc. directly associated with their favorite tour player, much the same as a Patriots fan could purchase a Tom Brady jersey?  This way, the players as well as the tour are getting free advertising as soon as someone walks out their front door wearing one.

I remember back in the 90’s when sports jersey sales were really taking off.  Back then, besides a regular jersey from any sport, you could find lots of cross-promotion between sports going on.  Hockey jersey’s with NBA logos and baseball jersey’s sporting NFL teams were not uncommon.  This is a direction the PGA could choose to go.  Not too mention, most of the fans who would be purchasing something like this would be on the younger side – a demographic that the PGA needs to get more interested in the sport.  

But the problem is, not many others besides me seems to know PGA Tour apparel exists…not even the PGA, or one would think by looking at their apparel website.  This site tells you almost nothing about the actual apparel.  Not too mention, it looks like the PGA doesn’t do anything about it either as there is an advertisement clearly marked ’09, as in 2009, at the bottom of the page.  A three year old advertisement?  Yeah…they’re paying attention.

See, something like this, to me anyway, should be a no-brainer.  But instead, a worthless website that generates little traffic, is simply wasting the PGA’s money rather than doing something to generate revenue as well as the popularity of it’s players and the tour itself.

I know this all sounds a little silly, especially to the purists, snobs or the the fans who, for some strange reason, dress like they are about to step onto the course when they’re doing nothing more than watching a tournament.  But to put all of this in simpler terms, at the next tournament you attend, wouldn’t it be cool to see a baseball-style jersey with the back marked “Lefty 01” rather than just a bunch of polo shirts that all seem to blend together? Well, I think it would. 

Swing ’til you’re happy!           

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: BMW, Callaway, golf apparel, golf stinks, golfstinks, Ickey Woods, NBA, nfl, Nike, PGA, PGA TOUR, tiger woods, Tom Brady

The Golf Tour of The Average Hack’s Dreams

March 12, 2012 | By Chris Chirico | 1 Comment

It’s an idea that’s crossed all of our minds numerous times.  It’s an idea we’ve tackled here at Golfstinks on more than one occasion.  It’s something of which many of us have thought we’d like to be a part.  It’s a golf tour for the regular guy.  Yes, it turns out, they do exist after all! 

This past weekend, I attended the Connecticut Golf Show.  It was here, among the rows of reps from resorts, club manufacturers and apparel companies, that we came across a little organization called The Tour of Western New England.  It’s this tour, and others around the country like it, that is the answer to many golfers prayers – the opportunity for the average hack to play, and compete, in an actual tour. 

No, you don’t travel all around the country playing the top courses with the stars of the PGA Tour.  Instead, you play courses in your general area, competing against other golfers like you.  And let’s say they’re not so much like you – maybe they’re golfing prowess is far superior to your meager skills.  No worries, handicaps are involved.  So the playing field can truly be about as level as possible. 

So what does it take to join?  Well, it’s $90 up front to join the tour.  What does that $90 get you? Tee times, access to private courses if they’re a tour stop, guest privileges at most events, handicap tracking and access to other local tours.  Not bad for only $90.  From there, you pay for your golf at each tour stop, and that’s it…you’re in.  You can play in as many of the 20-25 events as you’d like, you’re eligible for prizes, carts and meals are included and with the private course stops along the way, you have the opportunity to play some courses you normally would not.  Again…not bad for $90.

So who does this tour fit?  Well, just about anyone who has the time to play often and enjoys playing different courses week after week.  If you’re the kind of player who has to play the same course or two over and over, then this isn’t for you.  However, if you are that type of player, you’re truly missing out on the beauty of the sport. 

As I think about it, I see that a tour like this is right up my alley, as well as the alleys of most of my golfing buddies.  We like playing as many different courses as possible.  We’ll get competitive at times.  And hey, if prizes and meals are included…there’s a strong possibility you can lure me in.

Swing ’til you’re happy!                

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: connecticut golf show, golf stinks, golfstinks, PGA TOUR, tour of western new england

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