Masters Starter Harison Dies at 82

If you’re not going to make it in sport then the next best thing is to have a ringside seat as the drama unfolds.

That was certainly true of Phil Harison, one of the most famous voices in golf. Harison, who has died at the age of 82, was the starter at The Masters for 60 years. In that time he introduced every post war great the game has seen.

From Ben Hogan through Jack Nicklaus to the arrival of Tiger Woods, Harison was there. The quiet Southern accent bringing an understated dignity to the opening hole of America’s most famous course: “Fore please, Jack Nicklaus now driving.” For Jack Nicklaus you can substitute any of the game’s greats.

No mean golfer himself, he scored a hole in one in a match with President Eisenhower and another in a match with Jack Nicklaus, Harison attended every Masters since 1932. As a link with the game’s past they don’t come much bigger than Phil Harison: not only did he see Bobby Jones play, he actually played with him.

Recalling one such round with golf’s finest amateur and the father of The Masters Harison said:

”I kept making putts from here across the room. I wasn’t nervous I was enjoying the day so much. Toward the end, Mr. Jones said, ‘You have a good round going. I’m proud of you.’ After that, I didn’t finish so well. Shot 75.”

In 2007 Harison, recovering from a car accident, summoned the strength to start the tournament for the last time, guiding the first two groups off the first tee.

Phil Harison’s grandfather, Dr William Harison, was one of the men who introduced golf to Augusta in 1897. The nine hole course he helped create was built on ground that would later form part of Augusta National. Harison’s childhood home stood behind the first green at Augusta. At the age of eight he was a patron at the first Masters, at the age of 21 he joined his father and brother as a member of the club.

In the wider community Harison was a devoted family man who gave countless hours of service to his church and community. He raised millions of dollars for health charities, perhaps inspired by his grandfather who worked as a doctor for the poor of the area.

Augusta National chairman Billy Payne said:

“We are deeply saddened by the loss of Phil Harison. Phil was a cherished member who made significant contributions to the Masters. As the starter on the first tee, he was the face of the Masters to many patrons. He did a wonderful job in that role.”

Not just the world of golf but the wider Augusta community will this week be mourning the passing of a true Southern gent.

There Is Still Life in Sorenstam and Scott

Annika Sorenstam is the veteran past-master who many believe has already passed the torch to her younger rivals. Adam Scott is the rising youngster who many believe cannot rise any higher.

Both players proved over the weekend that they are neither willing to go away nor set a limit to high they can go with thrilling play-off victories.

Swede Sorenstam was the dominant player on the LPGA Tour until Mexico’s Lorena Ochoa unseated her last year. However, she showed that she can still win at the highest level with a play-off triumph over youngster Paula Creamer at the LPGA Stanford International Pro-Am in Miami.

Scott blew a three-stroke lead at the Byron Nelson Championship in Irving Texas before sinking a 48-foot birdie on the third extra hole to beat Ryan Moore.

With top-ranked Ochoa taking a break this week, Sorenstam was able to steal the spotlight with her 71st career title and second of the season.

After an injury-ravaged 2007, Sorenstam has quietly gone about rebuilding her game while Ochoa takes the headlines, deservedly so given that she has won five of the six tournaments she has entered this season.

Overnight leader Sorenstam closed with a 70 to end on eight-under-par 275, tied with Creamer, who shot a final-round 69. The Swede parred the extra hole for victory and said in an AFP story that she is regaining top form.

“I’m excited at the way the season has started. Since the British Open, I’ve been top 10 I think every tournament except two. That is as consistent as when I was at my peak. I just had a few more victories. I feel good about my game. I would say it’s very, very close. I believe my injury is really healing and I’m starting to feel shots again, which is the feeling that disappeared a little bit when I didn’t have the control. Now I feel like I have control again and that’s what I want to take from this week.”

Australia Scott, meanwhile, proved to himself that he has what it takes to win even when struggling.

He took a three-stroke lead into the final rout, lost it, then made a nine-foot birdie putt on the 72nd hole to force a play-off. After duelling with Moore for three more holes, he nailed a long one to claim his sixth PGA Tour triumph.

He moves to fifth place in the Official World Golf Rankings http://www.officialworldgolfranking.com/home/default.sps after this win. He said in an AP article:

“In the end, I think (the statement) was to myself, I could actually win it when things weren’t going my way. But it wasn’t quite the statement I had in mind. I would have liked to have gone out there and have played like Ryan played and won by a few.”

Scott finished with a 71 to total seven-under 273 while Moore closed with two-under 68. The duo finished four strokes ahead of Bart Bryant (72). One stroke further back were Nicholas Thompson (67), Mark Hensby (69) and Carl Pettersson (69) .

On the European Tour, Irishman Darren Clarke ended a three-year drought by winning the Asian Open in Shanghai.

Clarke screamed in delight as he drained a 30-foot putt on the final hole to beat Dutchman Robert-Jan Derksen by one stroke at the Shanghai Pudong Golf Club.

The tournament is sanctioned by the European Tour and the Asian Tour. He said on the Asian Tour website:

“This one is very special. This is the toughest one of all of them and it’s nice to get back up to where I feel my golf should be. It’s nice to win again and it’s a really, really good feeling.”

Clarke totalled 280 after his final round of 73. Australia’s two-time British Open champion and former world number one Greg Norman completed a fine tournament with a 71 to finish eight shots behind at 288.

Jacquelin Hopes for French Revolution at Ryder Cup

This year’s Ryder Cup competition could have a Gallic flavour if Raphael Jacquelin and his French legion have something to do with it.

Frenchmen have won two of the past three European Tour events and Jacquelin is hoping the country can have a strong presence in the European squad who are defending the Cup at the Valhalla Golf Club in Kentucky this September.

Thomas Levet, who played in the 2004 Ryder Cup, won the Andalucia Open last month while Gregory Bourdy triumphed at the Portuguese Open the following week.

Jacquelin is trying to defend his title at this week’s Asian Open in Shanghai, a tournament that is jointly sanctioned by the European Tour and Asian Tour. He said in a Reuters report:

“It is not a big surprise as the French group is improving a lot. We are all working hard to compete at the top in Europe and maybe later the top of the world. There is a lot of competition and it is good. It’s the way to go. And maybe we will see a French player in the Ryder Cup team at the end of the year.”

Another Frenchman who is coming up the ranks is 23-year-old Michael Lorenzo-Vera, who finished second equal at the China Open last week.

Bourdy and Levet are 29th and 30th respectively in the European Tour Order of Merit while Jacquelin is 63rd, three places behind Lorenzo-Vera.

Bourdy was 16th in the European Ryder Cup rankings on April 21, 2008, the highest-ranked Frenchman, while Levet was 40th. Lorenzo-Vera was number 50 while Jacquelin was 63rd. Only the top 10 qualify automatically for the Ryder Cup team, to be captained by Nick Faldo.

Shark Comes Out of Hiding in Shanghai

In an era before Tiger Woods, there was Greg Norman. Sure, he didn’t win as many majors – two British Open titles to be exact – but that never stopped the Great White Shark from being one of the golfing world’s best drawcards.

That was more than a decade ago, though, and the former world number one is now more occupied with his businesses than he is with playing.

However, he is scheduled to make a rare competitive appearance in this week’s Asian Open, co-sanctioned by the Asian Tour and European Tour, at the Tomson Shanghai Pudong Golf Club in Shanghai, China.

At 53 years old, Norman has made a successful transition into the world of business, which involves a lot of golf course design. And as he said on the Asian Tour website, he still has the appetite for the game.

“I’ve always been a believer of promoting the game of golf, whether through the business world or through opportunities like this, playing. I’ve seen what has happened here in China and it’s phenomenal to see that.

“I haven’t really quit the game of golf. I still practice, I still play. As long as I get invited to come back, I’m going to continue to play in certain places around the world. We have a couple of job opportunities here and will have some meetings this week.”

This will be Norman’s third start this season, though no one is counting on him adding to the more than 90 tournaments he has won worldwide.

The Aussie spent 331 weeks at number one in the world rankings before Tiger came along and played a huge role in helping to popularise the sport, especially as a television spectacle.

He is also well-known for his near-misses at majors, having completed a Grand Slam of almost winning the US Masters, US Open, British Open and US PGA Championship at various times.

No doubts Norman’s followers will look forward to seeing him play this week at Shanghai, taking time out to remember all the great golfing moments he has provided over the years.

Practice Like You Want to Play

I have spent the last few weeks on the road with some of my students at Futures Tour Events in Florida. These were the first events of the season and as expected, I learned a lot about my student’s games. I always say a golfer has four games or swings: They have their practice range game; their golf course game; their golf tournament game; and lastly – their last nine holes, with a chance to win a tournament game. Ideally, we want all of those games to match. Unfortunately, even for the highest level golfer, sometimes they get progressively worst.

I would like to share Stella Lee’s experience over the last few weeks and show you a couple things that can help improve your scoring. Stella had two problems which didn’t allow her to play up to her scoring potential in the first two events – rhythm and comfort zone. On the golf course, her rhythm got much slower on short shots and she wasn’t quite ready mentally to shoot a score in the 60’s.

Let me first give you some background on Stella and what we’ve worked on the last few months. Then, we’ll tie it together — so just like Stella will hopefully do this summer — you can also play golf up to your true potential.

I first met Stella at The LPGA Qualifying Tournament last fall. We met to discuss the possibility of working with one another after she missed the cut. At the time, she was living just outside Los Angeles and was understandably frustrated with her game. After spending an hour with her, I saw a number of simple things we could incorporate that would help achieve her two main goals — more distance and accuracy. I was happy to hear later that week, based on our initial meeting, she had decided to move to Orlando to work with me this past winter. I was happy for a couple reasons. First, she is a great girl who is lot of fun to be around. And second, I thought I could help “unclutter” her mind and simplify the way she swung the golf club.

After a very good junior and college career at University of California Irvine, Stella turned pro in the 2004. She played the Futures Tour and had a reasonable first year. She made 6 of 8 cuts and had a stroke average of 73.5. But, something happened to Stella during her first season that happens to many girls when they make the transition from a junior/college golfer to that of a professional. She started to change things. She went from a very good scorer in her junior days, who relied heavily on short game, to someone obsessed with more distance. She had never been long as a kid, but neither were the courses. Now, the courses and girls were longer — and she started to feel somewhat inadequate.

Does this sound familiar? So many times we play with someone much longer, and if not careful, it makes us change things in order to compete. When in reality, we don’t compete with length. We compete with score. Granted, hitting it longer, with no loss of accuracy, is a great advantage. But very few players have it all. And,, a lot of times we’ll play with someone who’s very long while theyre having a great day – and because they make it look so easy – we feel the need to change. But, I promise you this – a lot of those long players would change positions with a short straight hitter on many a day. I for one was one of those players back in the 90’s when I competed in events. There were many times my 300 yard drives couldn’t find the golf course, when I thought how much easier life would be if I hit it 250 yards right down the middle. So, the moral is, everyone is searching a little.

Okay, back to Stella. When we did our initial talk, I asked about her short game. She said putting was her strength. First, I love when a player tells me they are a great putter. I know someone who really believes that, has chances to make the LPGA Tour. I’ve known many girls who hit it like a top 20 player in the world — but putt and chip like a 10 handicap — who now have “real jobs.” But, I also know many girls who’ve made a living on tour for years, who are very unimpressive on the driving range. Of course, do not get suckered into a putting match with these girls, or else you’ll be buying dinner. Trust me, I speak from experience. So, because of Stella’s assertion that she had a great short game, we did not spend too much time this winter working on that area of her game. Basically, we worked on swing mechanics for a couple months and then started playing golf to test her new move on the course. As we started playing, I was happy with her swing progress, but was not too thrilled with her short game. But, she, and some of my other students who also play the Futures Tour, kept assuring me that her short game was great. So, against my better judgement, I didn’t say much as it related to short game. However, I did make some comments and reminded her that 68% of all shots happen inside 100 yards. So, 68% of her practice should also be inside 100 yards.

As the first event drew closer and her swing felt more comfortable, Stella did start working on her short game more. We practiced a lot together and her stroke and chipping method were spot on. However, when we played, she wasn’t getting the most out of her game inside 100 yards. I recommended she work on a more consistent routine, as it seemed she was taking an awful long time of chips and putts. But, she wasn’t comfortable with hitting it quicker on short shots and was okay waiting until she was ready. Even if that meant standing over the ball longer on certain shots. I told her – I was okay with that on one condition – and that she was controlling the situation and not letting the situation control her. If she was waiting to get more focused – okay. But, if she was waiting because she was unsure – then not okay. I described Jack Nicklaus’ putting routine. Nicklaus was potentially the greatest pressure putter in the history of golf (at least before Tiger Woods came along) and his routine varied from stroke to stroke. Basically, Nicklaus would stand over a putt until he knew it was going in. And would not stroke it until he had that very positive feeling. So, I told Stella — if this is why you are waiting so long, then cool. She said it was and reassured me again — that her putting and chipping were the best part of her game.

Stella hit the ball beautifully during the first Futures Tour at Cleveland Heights in Lakeland, Florida. And again during the second event at LPGA International in Daytona, Florida. She averaged an amazing 13 fairways hit per round, as well as 13 greens. In the two events, she only had one penalty stroke. So, based on those hitting stats, you would assume Stella had a great two weeks. In fact, for someone who has such a great short game, with those hitting numbers, you would probably assume she won or came very close to winning both tournaments. Well, sadly, you would be wrong. Stella had a disappointing two weeks. She finished well down the pack in Lakeland and missed the cut in Daytona. Why? Simple, her short game let her down.

In my opinion, these two reasons are why Stella struggled with her short game in the first two events. And why I think she will get better and better each week if she works on this as diligently as she worked on her swing this winter.

First, her routine was awful. I know that sounds harsh – but it’s true. Here’s the thing – and we all fall victim to this – myself included. If you practice a certain way and then play differently – you will certainly struggle. And especially when there is pressure. Stella was spending the few weeks before the first event making 100 five foot putts on a chalk line every day. She got so good at this drill, she literally could do it with her eyes closed in 15 minutes. But, the one thing she didn’t take into account as she was practicing and making those 100 putts every day was rhythm. As she practiced, she would roll a ball over, look at the hole and stroke it in. It was the same tempo every time. Yet, when she got on the course in the tournament, her rhythm completely changed. Instead of looking and rolling the ball in. It was looking and waiting. Sometimes as long as five seconds just staring at the ball. So, now all that great practice she did on that line was useless really. Useless because she didn’t take the same feeling to the course. Instead of her five foot putts being an instinct – which is what we all want – it became a mental endeavor. She was thinking about it too much. Looking back at it now, we both learned something from the experience. She either needed to do one of two things. Practice on the line slower – just like she would do in the event. Or, putt in the event quicker – just like she practiced on the line. If she had done that, I believe she would have won the first event and come in the top 3 in the second. Wow – what a difference in confidence level that would have been. And all because of pacing.

Pacing is such an important fundamental. I bet you can think back to a lot of your great rounds and remember you pace. So many times I’ve asked people what they remember about their best scores. And almost always, they say the same thing. It felt like I was in slow motion they say. Or, sometimes they say it felt like they were moving much quicker and not thinking. Either way, it’s the same thing. It’s pace. Try and recreate your ideal pace as often as possible — especially recreate the pace you practice at — and you’ll find yourself scoring much better.

The second thing that stopped Stella and also stops the average golfer is comfort zone. Comfort zone is a very underrated factor to a golfer’s improvement. Think about it. How many times have you had a great front-nine followed by a lousy back-nine — only to shoot the same exact score you always shoot? Or vice versa? Sometimes we all get a little uncomfortable scoring lower than we’re used to. And for Stella, who had struggled for a couple years, it wasn’t time for her to be one of the best players on the Futures Tour. She wasn’t ready yet. She was finding ways to shoot the same exact scores she had shot the year before. In spending her entire winter focusing on a mechanical change, she lost sight of something very important for a professional golfer — score. She hadn’t quite given herself permission to be the best player yet.

I see this a lot with average golfers. They hit the ball better because of lessons or a program like Andy’s – but still don’t score that much lower. I hear it all the time – George, I’m hitting it so much better – but now I can’t chip. Or, my short game is so much better, but now I cannot hit a fairway. This is the same situation – they are not quite ready to get out of their comfort zone.

I believe you will see a great improvement in your scoring ability if you focus on these two things. First, recreate the pace you practice on the golf course. And secondly, see yourself shooting lower scores. Give yourself permission to be a lower handicap.

Good Luck!

Ochoa Makes It Four Straight

Lorena Ochoa made LPGA history over the weekend when she became the first female pro in 45 years to win four tournaments in four straight weeks.

Ochoa shot a three-under-par 69 in the final round to win the Ginn Open by three strokes from rookie Yani Tseng. It was four straight for the Mexican magician and her fifth in six starts this season.

She hit three straight birdies on the eighth, ninth and 10th to take the lead, finishing 19 under 269 for the tournament.

The last LPGA pro who won four weeks in a row was Mickey Wright, who achieved the feat in 1962 and 1963. Kathy Whitworth won four starts in a row in 1969 and Annika Sorenstam did it in 2001 but their victories were not in consecutive weeks. Both had taken a week off during their winning streaks.

The 26-year-old Ochoa appears to be in dreamland these days, winning almost everything she enters. But the world number one knows that the good times won’t last forever, as she told AP:

“I’m very grateful. It’s been a blessing, you know. But I know that bad times will come. It’s just the way life is. I’m just trying to enjoy my moment, and I would like to enjoy it for a long time. So even if it’s going to be an up-and-down ride, hopefully I can stay there.”

Sorenstam and Nancy Lopez hold the record for most wins in a row at five, though, again, they were not in consecutive weeks.

Ochoa has a chance to match that in two weeks time when she competes in Tulsa, Oklahoma. She will skip next week’s Stanford Invitation Pro-Am in South Florida.

From four in four weeks, we go to two in two years, with Boo Weekley taking victory at the Verizon Heritage tournament at Hilton Head Island.

Weekley closed with an even-par 71 for a three-stroke victory over Anthony Kim and Aaron Baddeley to successfully defend his title. He was 15 under for the tournament at
269. Jim Furyk was four on 11 under while Cliff Kresge took fifth place a further one stroke behind.

This year’s victory was much less tense than his one-stroke victory over Ernie Els in 2007, when he had to chip in on the final two holes to claim the title.

He protected his three-stroke overnight lead by trying to stay conservative while his challengers faded away. Kim’s hopes blew up on the par-four ninth where he took a double-bogey. Weekley said:

“I chipped it in back to back last year, and I didn’t get to stand there and turn to the crowd and do the fist pump. I wanted to do the moonwalk, the belly-roll. It was a lot easier than last year, wasn’t it?”

On the European Tour, Irishman Damien McGrane won his first title with a commanding nine-stroke victory at the China Open at the Beijing CBD International Golf Club.

Playing in stormy conditions, McGrane managed to finish with a 73 for a total of 10-under-par 278. That was nine better than Simon Griffiths and Oliver Wilson, of England, and Frenchman Michael Lorenzo-Vera.

In Breach Of Rule 13-4a

Recently I received this question referring to Rule 13-4a, and thought it would be useful to share my reply with everyone:

RULES OF GOLF QUESTION:

“My ball is laying in the centre and to one end of a bunker.The bunker rake is the other end of the bunker. The sand in the middle of the bunker has been raked and is loose. The sand around the perimeter is flat and hard. I walk around the perimeter of the bunker to get the rake before I play my shot, turning the rake upside-down and dragging it behind me to cover my spike marks. I place the rake in the bunker approx two meters from my ball, then play my shot.

Is there any penalty? I was penalised two shots, but my argument is that I was not testing the sand and was nowhere near my ball. I would value your opinion.”

RULES OF GOLF ANSWER:

“You definitely incurred a two stroke penalty penalty. See Decision 13-4/0.5 “Examples of actions that would constitute testing the condition of the hazard in breach of Rule 13-4a include the following ………….. smoothing a bunker with a rake, a club or otherwise.”

You may pick up the rake and then place it alongside you in the bunker before taking your stroke out of the bunker, but as soon as you smoothed your footprints you incurred the penalty.

If you think that you were hard done by take a look at what happened to Stewart Cink recently, please scroll down to 4. Bunker Down for the full story.”

Visit here for more Rules of Golf questions.


Disclaimer: Whilst every attempt has been made to ensure the accuracy and reliability of this information on the Rules of Golf I am human and have been known to be wrong! Neither I, nor anyone connected with GolfSwingSecretsRevealed.com, shall be held responsible for any losses caused by reliance upon the accuracy or reliability of such information. Readers should refer to the full text of the rules and decisions as published in the official publications of the R&A and the USGA, The Rules of Golf 2008-2011 and Decisions on the Rules of Golf 2008-2009.

Golf Officials Bid For Olympic Spot

If Tiger Woods is still as competitive in eight years time as he is now, he may be looking to go where neither Jack, Arnold, Gary, Snead, Jones nor any of the other greats of the past century have been – Olympic gold.

That’s right. Golf is making another push to be part of the 2016 Olympic Games. The International Olympic Committee (IOC) will meet next year to decide on the 2016 hosts and whether or not to change the sporting roster.

Before anyone cringes and utters the line “golf is not an Olympic sport”, it should be remembered that golf indeed WAS an Olympic sport long before the likes of badminton, table tennis and other codes came on the scene.

Canadian George Lyon won the last Olympic golfing gold medal at the 1904 games. And it almost sneaked into the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta with Augusta National, the home of the Masters, slated to host the event.

However, IOC officials were not happy with Augusta’s exclusive all-male membership so the sport never got a look-in.

To succeed in its bid, golf would need the support of all the professional tours. The International Golf Federation, which would front any bid, would also have to convince the IOC that the sport is global enough to warrant interest among fans.

The IOC need not be persuaded about golf’s popularity around the world. That is clear from the number of tours, tournaments, golf clubs and players sprouting up from everywhere.

One of their main concerns would be whether golf has succeeded in shedding a perceived elitist status. Basically, does the common man regularly play golf or is it a middle-class to rich sport?

As tennis proved, having an Olympic tournament does not detract from the traditional grand slams such as Wimbledon and the US Open.

Similarly, the Masters, US Open, British Open and PGA Championship would not lose its shine during Olympic years, as PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem told AP writer Doug Ferguson.

“I do not believe that Olympic golf would have any effect on the stature or prestige of these other significant events, but rather would provide another complementary opportunity for our players to compete and demonstrate their skills on a global stage.”

The IGF, which is jointly headed by USGA executive director David Fay and Royal & Ancient Golf Club chief executive Peter Dawson, would be encouraged by Finchem’s backing because they would need tours from the United States, Europe, Japan, Asia and Australia to throw their support behind any bid. Finchem said:

“The most important thing is to get the professional bodies behind it. And then it’s good ol’ fashioned lobbying. And we’re willing to do that.”

As for Tiger, would an Olympic gold count as a major title? Or would have already surpassed Nicklaus’ record of 18 major titles come 2016?

If he still feels the same as he did back in 2000, then you might not see him at the Olympics at all, should golf get in. When asked about golf in the Olympics, he replied: “I don’t think it would be a big priority in our game.”

Woods Goes Under The Knife

Only days after finishing second at the US Masters, Tiger Woods was having surgery on his knee. Now he is expected to be out for up to one month, or even longer.

The world number one, who finished second to South African Trevor Immelman at August over the weekend, underwent arthroscopic surgery on his left knee in Utah on Tuesday.

He is unlikely to defend his title at the Wachovia Championship starting on May 1 and may even miss the next event, the prestigious Players Championship in Florida.

However, he has timed the surgery so he can come back in time for the season’s second major tournament, the US Open at Torrey Pines from June 12-15.

The San Diego course has been good to Woods in the past, having won the Buick Invitational six times. But the question is whether he will have enough preparation when it hosts the US Open. Woods said on his website:

“I made the decision to deal with the pain and schedule the surgery for after the Masters. The upside is that I have been through this process before and know how to handle it. I look forward to working through the rehabilitation process and getting back to action as quickly as I can.”

The first time Woods had this kind of surgery was way back in 1994, when he had a benign tumour removed from his left knee. He also had an arthroscopic procedure in December, 2002, according to Reuters. His manager, Mark Steinberg, was quoted by the news agency as saying:

“Tiger has been experiencing pain in his knee since the middle of last year. When he had it looked at by his doctors, arthroscopic surgery was recommended. Tiger has played through the pain in the past but knew it would be better for him to have the procedure done as early as possible.”

South Africa’s First Star Deserves Respect

South Africa has a new golfing superstar. With many wondering if Ernie Els’ time as force in the majors is now in terminal decline, with Retief Goosen perhaps not the player he was a few years ago, Trevor Immelman’s Masters victory has delivered a new force.

Yet one star continues to transcend them all. Immelman’s hero, Gary Player, continues to be the most recognisable of South African sporting heroes. In his seventies the man who, with Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer, changed the face of golf, continues to travel, play and promote the game that made him rich.

But Gary Player is not feted the way Nicklaus is. Or the way Palmer, Watson and Trevino are (all of whom won fewer majors than the Black Knight). The BBC commentary at the Masters picked up on the perceived lack of recognition: tellingly there was nobody in the booth prepared to wholeheartedly advocate Player’s claims for immortality.

In the national press here in the UK there has been an undercurrent in all the coverage of Player’s record 51st appearance at Augusta. The sneering, the outright hostility, is never far away when some journalists talk about him.

True, Player missing yet another cut is hardly news. But his playing partners on Thursday and Friday looked to be enjoying playing with a legend. And on Friday, dressed from head to toe in white but hell bent on refusing to surrender, Player broke 80. In his seventies and, whisper it, beginning to look something approaching his age, the world’s most travelled athlete gained some measure of self respect against a course that was ravaging men half his age.

But still Player is not celebrated in the way his peers are. His last, perhaps most impressive, major at Augusta in 1978 is rarely lauded in the way Nicklaus’ similar rolling back of the years is talked about. (Despite Player shooting 64 to win in ’78 compared to Jack’s 65 in 1986).

The galleries rarely seem to cherish seeing him in the way they clutched the maturing Palmer to their hearts. If Palmer had kissed the 18th green the way Player did on Friday you can imagine the patrons at Augusta would have gone into paroxysms of delight. Player’s ovation was respectful not warm. Arnie was celebrated for what he had achieved, what he meant to people. Player, at times, seems celebrated for nothing more than still being here.

In Wednesday’s Par Three event Player played with Nicklaus and Palmer. Some three ball, to be sure. But it seemed that Player was an interloper at that feast of legends. They loved Arnie, they loved Jack. They watched Mr Player.

Why is it that Player does not seem cherished in the way that other greats are? Arnie’s Army accounts for a lot of the affection that Palmer enjoys. But Player’s star shone for longer. Arnie’s career at the highest level was emphatic but brief.

Player’s detractors would argue that his own insistence at his place in the game’s firmament makes it hard to like him. You can only concede this point if you accept that the Golden Bear has been quick to point out his own achievements down the years. True, it can be irritating when you here Player drop in his claim to be the most travelled athlete in the world in every interview. And there is only so much you can hear about his fitness regime or his thoughts on diet without wanting to lie on the couch and eat ice cream.

But it is that fitness regime, the insistence on practicing, the thousands of miles travelled that have helped mould the professional game as we recognise it today. Immelman was quick to pay tribute to Player on Sunday evening, recognising the debt that golf, and South African golf in particular, owe him.

But in a cynical media world Player’s boyish enthusiasm for life and for his own achievements mark him down as something of an oddity. For years little more than tolerated, the tide seems to be changing in favour of ridicule and hostility.

Many of these journalists will have met Gary Player. Many, like me, will never have even been in the same room as him. He may well not be a likeable guy. But lots of old sportsmen are not nice people and they are still respected for their achievements.

If you find it irritating that Player still hangs around then fine. But he deserves to do what he likes, he’s earned that right. Don’t canonise him but at least let respect for his achievements overrule personal antipathy.

In a game as civilised as golf it would seem churlish if Player was turned into some sort of joke, barely tolerated and judged for getting old not for being a great champion. Player deserves more than being celebrated only when he’s gone.

A Funny Kind of Failure

Goodnight and goodbye. The Grand Slam year is over before it even began. This will please some people: already a trawl through the UK press sees Tiger being written off, called an elder statesmen and generally mocked for ever claiming he could win the Grand Slam.

The facts are that Tiger didn’t play well. I doubt I was alone in thinking that, particularly on Friday, he was chasing too hard, locked in a fruitless pursuit of the impossible when concentrating on the simple stuff might have brought him back into contention sooner. But he finished second. So no Grand Slam this year. But another example of just how far ahead of the rest he is. In a mediocre week for the Tiger it took an immense (once in a lifetime?) performance from Immelman to beat him. And when the sun eventually sets on Tiger’s career the second places will provide the commentators with another measure of his greatness – just as it is a measure of Nicklaus’ greatness that he was so often there or thereabouts in the final shake up on a Sunday afternoon.

Was he wrong to say this could be the Grand Slam year? Yes, if only because hubris is unbecoming in a man who has fostered his public image so carefully. Was he wrong to believe he could do it? Absolutely not. He might well do it in the future. Or he might go on to win another Tiger Slam in the next four majors.

Can we describe Woods’ Masters as a failure? We can. But only because we measure Tiger by a different set of rules. Losing the Masters was not the real story. The aborted Grand Slam effort was. Nobody else in golf is measured in this way. Tiger’s success has brought him so much, but it has its drawbacks as well. The prizes may well be greater, but the price of failure will also cut that much deeper.

I for one am saddened that the Grand Slam year has ended so soon. It would have been fun. The eyes of the world would have been on golf. And it would have been a moment of history, one of those rare occasions when sport transcends boundaries and captivates the globe as one man reaches for immortality and touches the limits of what was thought to be possible.

But the lesson for Tiger is that when you are that good there will be those who dream of you failing as much as there will be those who dream of you excelling. So this week Tiger will be compared, unfavourably, to Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus and Nick Faldo who triumphed from behind on bygone Augusta Sundays. The commentators won’t point out that those three shared something that Tiger won’t know for years: that exalted triumvirate were raging against the years as much as the field, proving that the old dogs still had the stomach for a fight. That will come to Tiger, but not now.

They will say that a younger man has won. They will not dwell on Tiger’s relative youth. If golf is now a young man’s game (and Tiger has made it so) then Tiger remains a young man.

They will say that he can’t win the biggies from behind. That is a blip that one day, some day Tiger will rectify. They will not point out that their new hero, Immelman, hasn’t proved he can win a major from behind either. It is one of those stats that can mean everything or mean nothing. 13 majors is a statistic that can’t be disputed.

And what will Tiger be left with? The “what ifs” of putts that didn’t drop, of birdies that could have sparked a charge being negated by carelessness on the next hole. Of a week that didn’t go right but proved again that he is the dominant beast in golf’s jungle.

The Tiger will rise again. The commentators will again fall into line. This week, this year, was not to be. But with Tiger in our game we can bask in greatness that doesn’t even come along once in a generation. Let’s not turn on him now. Let’s enjoy him for as long as he lasts.

Immelman Follows in Player’s Footsteps

Like all budding golfers, Trevor Immelman had a hero to look up to. And like only a handful of budding golfers, Immelman emulated his hero.

Being South African, there could be no other inspiration for Immelman than Gary Player, a three-time US Masters champion. And while Player was missing the cut in his 51st Masters appearance, Immelman went on to take the Green Jacket.

The 2006 USPGA Rookie of the Year did it in style as well, keeping his cool as others fell around him and hanging on to an overnight lead with Tiger Woods chasing hard after him.

In the end Woods, who finished second by three strokes, was never really in it as Immelman, who only five months ago was being operated on, marched to victory.

The story of Player’s voicemail to Immelman after the third round is now sure to become part of golfing folklore. Player, after his two rounds, flew to the Middle East for business but left a message on Immelman’s voicemail encouraging him to go on and become the second South African to win the Masters. Immelman told journalists:

“It gave me goosebumps because … he told me that he believed in me and I need to believe in myself. And he told me I’ve got to keep my head a little quieter when I putt. He said I’m just peeking too soon. He told me to just go out there and be strong through adversity, because he said that adversity would come today and I just had to deal with it.”

Woods appeared to be preparing a final-day assault on the lead after his third round of 68. However, his struggles over the first two rounds were too much to overcome and he ended the last day with 72 for a total of five-under-par 283.

Immelman’s 75 on the last day was good enough for eight-under 280. Stewart Cink and Brandt Snedeker tied for third on 284. Cink closed with 72 while Snedeker ruined his title chances with a 77.

Phil Mickelson, Padraig Harrington and Steve Flesch were two strokes back in fifth place with two-under 286.

For Immelman, the joys of a Green Jacket are far removed from the trials of life 15 months ago when he had to have a golf-ball sized tumour removed from his diaphragm.

It was non-cancerous but the operation to remove it involved slicing open his back and muscles to remove the tumour, which had to be dug out from between his ribs.

As he recuperated, he was not to know that in a few months he would be making golfing history. He didn’t even make the cut in his first three tournaments back but the Masters had a special magic.

“I was just so out of it at the time that you could have shot me in the leg and I wouldn’t have known about it. One minute, the week before, I’m winning a golf tournament and the next week I’m lying in a hospital bed, and you just realise that it just can get taken away so fast.”

Immelman, who took a two-stroke lead after the third round, was poised to go five ahead on the seventh hole on Sunday with a three-foot birdie putt. However, he wavered by missing the putt and then appeared to lose his way with a six on the next hole.

After saving par on the ninth, he negotiated Amen Corner with aplomb and never again looked like he would throw the title away.

No Joke As An Indian, Thai and Chinese Walk Into Augusta

Discounting Tiger Woods’ Thai heritage and Vijay Singh’s Fijian-ness, no Asian has ever won a major tournament.

However, there are at least three golfers from different parts of the continent in the field for this week’s US Masters in Augusta hoping to break that duck.

From the sub-continent, we have Jeev Milkha Singh, son of former Indian Olympic sprinter Milkha Singh. He certainly has the game, having previously won on the European Tour, including tournaments outside Asia.

Then there is the Southeast Asian representative,Thailand’s Prayad Marksaeng. He would, of course, like to win at Augusta but his target is more realistic, that of finishing all four rounds.

There is also East Asian Liang Wen-chong, last year’s Asian Tour Order of Merit winner, who is only the second Chinese golfer to play at the Masters.

Jeev Milkha Singh

Jeev is making his second straight Masters appearance and has landed British Open champion Padraig Harrington and 2003 Masters champ Mike Weir in his first two flights.

Last year, he finished 37th and is hoping to better that performance this week. Jeev is one of the pioneers of Indian professional golf, which is producing quality players faster than any other country in Asia.

Jeev finished tied for 39th at the recent Houston Open, He told the Asian Tour’s website:

“I’m really excited. In Padraig and Mike, they are two nice guys. I’ve played with them often enough and I’m looking forward to it. It’s a great feeling, the second time my dream has come true. I qualified for the Masters last year and now I couldn’t have asked for a better invite in my life. I’m really excited to be here. The golf course is in excellent condition and I’m looking forward to a good week.”

Prayad Marksaeng

Prayad is the third Thai to be playing in the Masters following Sukree Onsham and Thongchai Jaidee. The 42-year-old is hoping to perform well at Augusta in memory of mentor Supphaphorn Maphungphong, who passed away in November.

Supphaporn was considered the grandfather of golf in Thailand, which has produced many top-class golfers over the years.

Just two weeks after he died, Prayad won the Asian Tour’s season-ending Volvo Masters of Asia in Bangkok and dedicated the victory to Supphaporn. He said:

“It wasn’t only my dream to play in the Masters, it was also Supphaphorn’s dream. He was my mentor and he always looked after me. I will do my best for myself and for Supphaporn as I want him to be proud of me. He loved me a lot and I will try to make him proud. If I look up to the skies, I’m sure he’s watching.”

Liang Wen-chong

Liang had a practice round with three-time Masters champion Gary Player earlier in the week and he is hoping to use some of the South African great’s tips during in Augusta.

Like Prayad, Liang is hoping to play all four rounds at the Masters, and become the first Chinese golfer to do so. In the first two rounds, he will be playing with Spain’s Jose Maria Olazabal and South African Rory Sabbatini.

Liang earned his place in the Masters after finishing on top of the 2007 Asian Order of Merit standings. He has shown encouraging form of late, finishing joint 12th at the recent Zurich Classic. He said:

“I played with Mr Gary Player, who is playing his 51st Masters and he was so relaxed and humorous. We saw each other last week and he invited me to play a practice round here. He taught me a lot through his experiences of playing here. I’m very thankful that Mr Player took the time to play with me and teach me a few things.”

We will leave the last word to Gary Player himself, who is delighted to see the Masters attracting a diverse playing field, especially with players from Asia.

“I’ve always been very global in my thinking and my business and to see a young man from India and China out here, that’s what we have to do. Golf brings people together and it’s magnificent. Liang was so well mannered, so humble and I was able to give him a couple of little tips about the golf course.”

Ochoa Makes A Splash at Kraft Nabisco

Lorena Ochoa is getting to be as predictable as the world’s number one men’s player, who shall remain nameless so as not to hog the limelight.

Ochoa stormed to a five-stroke victory at the Kraft Nabisco Championship, a major tournament on the LPGA Tour, to confirm her status as the world’s leading women’s player.

After her victory at the Rancho Mirage, she made the traditional leap into Poppie’s Pond, first started by Amy Alcott in 1988. However, she was not alone as she was joined by her caddie, parents, brother, sister-in-law and about 15 others.

Maybe each jumper represented a major championship victory. With the way she is playing, that doesn’t sound beyond her reach.

Her Rancho Mirage victory over the weekend was her second major triumph following her British Open success at St Andrews last year.

It was also her third victory in four attempts this season, a percentage that, if she can maintain it, means many more major titles to come.

Ochoa hit a final round of five-under-par 67 on the Dinah Shore Course for a total of 277. Encouragingly for the women’s game, the player she dethroned as the Queen of Golf, Sweden’s Annika Sorenstam finished in a tie for second with Suzann Pettersen. Both runners up shot 68.

Sorenstam, who has won this year, wants a return to the top after a 2007 that was ruined by injury. She was not well over the weekend but managed to seal her fifth straight top-10 finish.

For Ochoa, her best memory will be her jump in the lake, as she said in her post-round interview on the LPGA website:

“I woke up this morning and I was feeling great and I had a good feeling and just trying to not get too uptight and be calm and do my routine. For some reason I couldn’t stop thinking of that jump in the lake. It was something that I’ve been waiting for for a long time and I talked to Dave in the morning and he was feeling great, too.”

Sorenstam, with 10 major titles to her name, was disappointed that illness prevented her from giving 100 per cent, but she was delighted for rival Ochoa. She said:

“You know, Lorena is obviously doing a great job. She has come out as the leader and is staying as the leader; that takes a lot of courage, takes a lot of guts, and it takes a good athlete. I’m just happy to see that because she’s a nice person, and I think she’s really doing well that way.”

In Humble, Texas, Johnson Wagner broke through for his first victory on the US PGA Tour when he lifted the Houston Open over the weekend. The triumph gave him an instant spot in the field for this week’s US Masters at Augusta.

Wagner closed with a one-under-par 71 to finish at 16-under for the tournament, two ahead of Chad Campbell and Geoff Ogilvy. Campbell finished with 72 while Ogilvy managed 68.

Before his victory, Wagner has missed six cuts in nine tournaments and was ranked 193 in the world. He was unrecognisable, in terms of past performances, during the first round by shooting 63 and equaling the course record of 2007 champion, Australia’s Adam Scott.

On the European Tour, Frenchman Gregory Bourdy staged a magnificent fightback to beat Alastair Forsyth and David Howell in a play-off and win the Estoril Open de Portugal.

Bourdy started the last day four strokes ahead but was fading at the turn after dropping three shots. But he recovered his composure, steadily picked up birdies and was able to force Forsyth and Howell into a play-off.

Forsyth was eliminated after the second extra hole, on the 18th, after a bogey. Bourdy and Howell were again equal after another go at the 18th and then moved on to the 17th, where the English failed to par while Bourdy tapped in for victory.

Nicklaus’ Legacy Helps Make Tiger What He Is

With so much talk about Tiger Woods – whether we love him or hate him, whether or not swearing on the fairways is okay because athletes in other sports do it, whether or not he will win the Grand Slam in 2008 – it’s good to sometimes sit back, collect our thoughts and consider why Woods is being talked about.

Woods’ pursuit of records would never be of any interest if there were no records to pursue in the first place. And for this, we thank Jack Nicklaus, for whom the contrast “or hate him” never applies nor the controversy “swearing on the fairways”.

Nicklaus was the epitome of role models, someone who never went out of his way to be a role model but become one anyway through his temperament, attitude and achievements.

So, it was fitting that in the month of the Masters, it was announced that Nicklaus, who still owns the record for major wins at 18, would be receivng a PGA Tour Lifetime Achievement Award.

He will receive the award during The Players Championship at Ponte Vendra Beach, Florida, which he won three times in the 70s.

Jack will be the eighth recipient of the award, which has been handed out since 1996 and created to recognise outstanding contribution to the PGA Tour over an extended period of time, both on and off the golf course.

Other winners are Gene Sarazen, Byron Nelson, Arnold Palmer, Sam Snead, Jack Burke Jnr, Pete Dye and Deane Beman. Nicklaus said on the PGA Tour website:

“Since first picking up a club at age 10, I have loved the game of golf. And whether it is being fortunate to serve as captain of The Presidents Cup, or being active in golf course design in emerging markets all over the world, or lending a hand to the growth of The First Tee and other junior golf programs, I enjoy staying connected to the game. More importantly, I enjoy finding ways to give back to the game that has given my family and me so much.”

Nicklaus has 73 PGA Tour victories under his belt, which is among 118 he has won around the world. He is second behind Sam Snead’s record of 82. He has won a record six Masters titles, four US Opens, three Open titles and five PGA Championships.

While picking up major titles, he completed the Grand Slam cycle three times. One statistic that is rarely mentioned is that Jack finished second in majors 19 times.

That means, throughout his career, he was in contention to win 37 majors, 18 of which he won. That is simply mind-boggling. How many pros would like to be in with a chance of winning just one major?

He didn’t stop winning as a senior either, completing the Grand Slam of major titles on the Seniors Tour as well.

Now 68, Nicklaus is also known for his humility and sportsmanship, with many sporting historians counting his act of goodwill at the 1969 Ryder Cup as one of the great examples of sports sportsmanship.

With the contest neck and neck, Nicklaus conceded a two-foot putt to Tony Jacklin on the 18th. That meant the match finished as a tie, the first in history, though the US retained the Cup as defending champion.

It is reported that the US captain, Snead, and some of Nicklaus’ teammates were not happy. But when someone queried Jack as to what Snead thought of his act, dubbed “The Concession”, he replied: “I don’t know. I never asked him.”

Tiger Woods may go on to break Nicklaus’ record and will deservedly take his place in golfing folklore, if he hasn’t already.

But the fact that Tiger has a record to chase is thanks to Jack, the Golden Bear of golf.