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Is Playing Golf Like Riding A Bike?

April 23, 2012 | By Chris Chirico | 1 Comment

If only golf was as easy as riding a bike...
If only golf was as easy as riding a bike…

Everyone has heard the saying “It’s just like riding a bike.”  It seems to be used for everything.  But what about golf?  Is golf like riding a bike?  Can it be picked right back up again after a significant layoff?

I think much of it has to do with your skill level.  If you’re a golfer who’s used to shooting around par, but you come back after a long break and shoot an 80, something tells me you look at that differently than someone who shoots around 100, then comes back to shoot a 110.

Personally, I’ve never had a long enough break from golf to measure the result on myself.  However, I’ve been around players on both ends of the spectrum and have had the opportunity to see what a long layoff has done to them.  I’ll start with the good player.

I once played a few times in a local golf league.  On one of the occasions, I played with a guy who was described to me as a scratch golfer and even a “borderline pro.”  I guess this guy was so good, that he decided at one point in his life to quit his job and pursue a spot on the PGA Tour.  Needless to say, since I was playing with him on an average local course, he didn’t make it.  But somewhere between his attempt at a pro career, and a short time before we played together, he had taken a few years away from the sport.  As I understand it, after failing to qualify, he felt like a failure and had no desire to go back to playing non-competitive golf.  So he gave up the game entirely…for a few years anyway.  But you wouldn’t have guessed that when I saw him!

Despite taking the game back up just over the prior couple of months leading up to our round, this guy went out and shot in the high 70’s while clearly playing with an “I don’t care” attitude.  He was out there just playing with his buddies, relaxing, joking around and having fun.  Some of the guys who had played with him years before told me that he would have been absolutely miserable and down-right pissed had he shot a 78 or so back then.  But now, it’s no big deal.  Good for him.

Now, at the other end of the spectrum, I had a guy ask me if I wanted to get out and play a round with him because he hadn’t gotten the chance since he had kids.  Now again, we’re talking a few years since he had been out on the course.  Before the kids, he was a golfer like me – happy when he breaks 100, which didn’t occur very often.  And sure enough, when we got out on the course, he shot a 102.

So, is golf like riding a bike?  Once you know how to play, do you always know how to play?  Can you take a few years off and pick back up right where you left off?  From the two experiences I’ve had with people who have done so, it would seem that, yes, you can in fact do so.  But is that the same for everyone?  Would it be the same for me?  Personally I hope to never find out.

Filed Under: Golf Life Tagged With: bicycle, bike, breaking 100, golf league, scratch golfer

The Handicap: Golf’s Version of Male Penis Envy

December 15, 2010 | By Greg D'Andrea | 3 Comments

Is this you during a conversation about golf handicaps?
Is this you during a conversation about golf handicaps?

There’s a conversation that inevitably happens while in the presence of other golfers whom I’ve never met…and it goes something like this:

Golfer #1: “I’m a 12 handicap!”
Golfer #2: “Really? I’m a 10!”
Golfer #3: “I’ve recently worked myself down to a 4!”
#1 & #2: “Wow! That’s awesome!”

Then they all turn and look at me. With my hands in my pockets and my head down, I haphazardly kick at a broken tee by my feet. Briefly, it crosses my mind to lie. But then I immediately realize my first shot would expose me for who I really am. Sheepishly, I utter the truth: “I’m an 18.”

Silence.

Then #3 breaks the ice by telling #1 to go ahead and tee off.

F#$%ing golf handicaps. I suddenly feel like the least endowed man in the locker room. That’s the way it is with the handicap system – it groups the good players and the hacks into separate buckets. This is even more true when you’re off the course. Think back to when you’ve met someone at a non golf-related event and realized you both like golf. I’d bet one of the first things that came up was your handicap.

A few years ago, I was at my wife’s work holiday party and she introduced me to her co-worker’s husband. Not knowing many other people there, we struck up a conversation that eventually led to us talking about golf. His first question after both of us acknowledged playing golf was, of course, “What’s your handicap?” Turns out this guy was a 7. Though we continued our conversation amicably, I just got the feeling he immediately placed me below him in the category of general life successfulness.

OK, perhaps that sounds a bit nuts. But we class people all the time for non golf-related stuff, don’t we? Consider this: You’re introduced to someone from the same town as you. One of the first thoughts would be to tell each other which neighborhood you live in, right? Well if that person lives in the nicest neighborhood in town, do you think to yourself: “Hmmm, must be rich” (or something along those lines)? Be honest!

Well, it’s the same for golf, except our measuring stick is the handicap system. Have you ever noticed foursomes are generally comprised of people with similar golfing abilities? For example, my foursome’s handicaps range from 18 to 26. Likewise, a group of low handicappers typically won’t play with hackers. I’ve actually heard a few decent golfers state they won’t play with anyone over a 10 handicap because it will “ruin their game.” WTF? You know, many people who keep a handicap typically play the same course all the time. If I played the same course all the time, I bet I could lower my handicap too. I mean, probably not down to scratch, but…but I digress.

Anyway, as golfers, perhaps we need to change the way we interact with each other (grant me some leeway here). What if we thought of it in these terms instead: Asking someone to reveal their handicap is like asking them to reveal their salary. To me, it elicits the same kind of subliminal “classing” in someone’s head.

Generally speaking, most hacks are pretty down-to-earth about their golfing wretchedness. I know I am. In fact, if people didn’t ask me about my handicap the second they realize I play golf, I’d tell them almost immediately that I stink at golf anyway. But asking for someone’s handicap – that just instantly puts your game on a scale – people know exactly where they stand in comparison to you and that leaves me feeling a little “exposed.” But if I just tell someone “I stink at golf” – that leaves it rather ambiguous. Then if we go play and I shoot an 89, they tell me: “Oh, you’re much better than I expected!” See? I like that approach way better than letting a statistic speak for me.

So seeing as the vast majority of golfers stink, it’s probably best to keep your handicap to yourself…

And then only reveal it when you need to (like at the club tournament table)…

Oh, and even in that case, for God’s sake, whisper it!

Filed Under: Stinky Golfer Paradise Tagged With: average golfer, foursome, handicap, scratch golfer

Pro Athletes, Scratch Golfers

December 21, 2009 | By Chris Chirico | 1 Comment

Michael Jordan on the Golf Course
Michael Jordan on the Golf Course
A few months ago I wondered do golfers golf on their days off. Now I’m wondering about other athletes. How many of them golf during their off seasons or after their career is over? We all know the obvious – Michael Jordan, Charles Barkley and Rick Rhoden. But we always hear about some football or baseball star who also happens to be a scratch golfer. Is it just me or is that insane? To be able to play your sport at the highest level and in your spare time just happen to be a great golfer also? Amazing. At this point I would be happy to be just a halfway decent golfer!

While there have been no recent two-sport stars involving golf, looking at the latest Golf Digest list of top athlete golfers, there are a few guys out there who would have a legitimate shot if it weren’t for golf’s Thursday-Sunday tournaments schedule interfering with their sports schedule. Most would have to wait for their career to be over or cut their careers short as Robin Yount almost did back in 1978. For those who didn’t know, two-time MVP and MLB Hall-of-Famer Robin Yount actually quit baseball back in the spring of ’78 to pursue a career as a professional golfer. The experiment failed and Yount was back with the Milwaukee Brewers a few months later. But how good do you have to be to quit an H.O.F. baseball career to pursue golf full-time?

Looking at the aforementioned list, I’m amazed at some of the names and numbers I see. Right off the bat, #1 ranked Tony Romo, QB for the Dallas Cowboys, has a handicap of +3.3 and won two tournaments in his off-season! As a matter of fact, the top five athletes on the list – Romo, Craig Hentrich, Mark McGwire, Mike Schmidt and Jerry Rice – all have handicaps better than scratch! Now I can see how the latter three have time to work on their games as they are all retired now. But Romo and Hentrich are active NFL players! Do they have that kind of time to get this good?

Scanning through some of the other names, I see that pitcher Livan Hernandez is actually considering golf as a second career after baseball. Although the only info I can find linking Hernandez to golf is when he pulled some golf clubs out of his trunk and attempted to hit a 65-year old man with them. Whether or not that’s the case. he’s still a scratch golfer.

How about Boston Bruin Marc Savard? He missed qualifying for the 2008 Canadian Open by one stroke. He could have been a real-life Happy Gilmore! Except a better hockey player.

Boston Celtics star Ray Allen is apparently the best golfer in the NBA. Although New Orleans Hornets guard Chris Paul isn’t far behind.

There must be something in the water in Minnesota. Twins teamates Joe Mauer, Nick Punto and Joe Nathan are all on the list. They could roundout a foursome with their choice of former Twins stars Harmon Killebrew or Rod Carew who find themselves ranked also.

Apparently Reggie Jackson plays five days a week. Must be nice…

Should I be surprised to see Bo Jackson’s name on this list? A guy who was an All-Star in MLB and Pro-Bowler in the NFL until an injury cut both careers short, has a handicap under ten. I should mention he’s also a banker and business owner in Illinois. I guess Bo really does know a whole bunch of stuff!

Some time ago, a stinky golfer told me he believes as long as a person has at least a pretty good bit of athletic ability to them, they can be a good golfer. I agree with him. Golf doesn’t necessarily require a person to be in top physical condition, however it does require a certain amount of coordination and athletic ability. Some people have to work hard to be good athletes while some others have the gift of a natural ability. Most of the athletes on the list possess that gift. This is what allows them to excel at multiple sports (maybe even professionally) while most of us work hard just to be average at one. I’m comfortable with that, but what I wouldn’t give to stand at a podium one day and say: “It was a tough eighteen. All of the competition was great. I’m just glad I could hold everyone else off at the end. Now I have to run. I’m starting the back end of a double-header tomorrow night.”

Filed Under: Golf Life Tagged With: athletic ability, Charles Barkley, Michael Jordan, scratch golfer, top athlete golfers

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