The Golfchick

That chick blabbing about anything golf related.

Author: golfchick (page 21 of 46)

FedEx Cup: Success? Tiger Woods: Sick.

23 under? REALLY? That’s the golf course we want them to play for the finals of the first ever Fedex Cup?

Sure, that was only Tiger, and it’s not like he’s human or something, but the actual men in the field laid waste to the course as well a mere 8 strokes behind that. Yes, mere. Tiger’s ability is just sick, so it’s not fair to compare other golfers to him.

Of course he won the FedEx Cup. And the Tour Championship. And Player of the Year. With authority. It wouldn’t seem right to have any of those titles go to anyone other than the world’s best golfer ever. So in that respect, the FedEx Cup was a success. I know a lot of folks were rooting for Stricker to win so the $10 million bonus would mean something, and at least he earned himself the $3M second place annuity. That’ll be some decent retirement money at any percentage rate. But let’s face it – if Tiger “sat on his laurels” and decided not to win, the Fedex Cup would have been criticized for not delivering the true champion. It would have been weird to have the Tour Championship trophy go to one guy, the Fedex Cup to another and the Player of the Year to yet another. Weird and wrong.

The Fedex Cup will continue to be criticized for its other problems – like the fact that the winner only had to play in 3 out of 4 playoff events (and could have done it in two), and the points system, and the schedule, and the final golf course, to name a few. But if nothing else, at least the right man being won.

Tiger Woods Fedex Cup

Is this a human drinking glass?

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Natalie Gulbis blogs from the Solheim Cup

Want a behind the scenes glimpse into what it’s like for the players of the Solheim Cup? Check out Natalie’s blog.

Natalie Gulbis and her mom at the Solheim Cup

Natalie and her mom. Photo taken by Morgan Pressel.

In addition to discussing the golf course and the play, she talks about fun details like:

  • getting dolled up for the festive events
  • the “cute outfits” they got and what they’re wearing on the course
  • fire alarms
  • jet lag
  • learning a new bunker shot (really?)
  • preparing for cold weather
  • practicing with teammate’s brand of golf balls to get a feel for them (as well as how the pairings might be based on how they play with certain golf balls)
  • the gifts they’re receiving from the captains and players
  • room decorations … and more

It’s a really fun read and so far she has posted every day this week. I hope she continues the pace and keeps us up to speed throughout the competition.

Each player was given a Canon Powershot camera and they’re all taking their own photos, which are being posted on the LPGA website as well as at the Golf Channel site. Here’s a shot of Morgan Pressel’s room:

Morgan Pressel's room at Solheim Cup

Now we can add blogger to the list of all things Natalie. Thanks, Nat!

Stina Sternberg is also on location at the Solheim Cup and is blogging on it over at Golf For Women.

The Solheim Cup coverage doesn’t come on here until 11 PM, but of course I’ll be Tivo-ing it and keeping up with the tournament as well as watching how the Tour Championship/FedEx Cup final plays out.

Thanks to Golfgal for the heads up on Natalie’s blog!

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September 11, 2007

Six years ago, the attacks on September 11, 2001 threw my emotions in a blender and hit frappé.

I was fortunate to have been one degree removed from losing a loved one that day but just as we all felt connected as Americans, I felt connected to all the victims. I felt obligated to ache for their families for months. No smiling, no laughing. No fun. Those privileges were violently stripped from so many people and suddenly I felt that every American was part of my own extended family and I would grieve accordingly. The nightmares of people jumping from the towers, of terrifying plane crashes from a passenger’s perspective, of planes heading for my window, of sickening ash and debris and body parts – those nightmares infected my sleep for too long, fading slowly until they finally ended a little less than two years ago. At least I hope they have ended completely. Yes, that sounds like terror to me but of course I felt other emotions as well.

Anger: Of course I was angry. I wanted to strike back but felt powerless. I thought about changing my career path and getting involved with the CIA or even the armed forces. Obviously I didn’t, but I committed to becoming a “better person,” one more deserving of the precious life I didn’t lose that day. Which brings me to…

Guilt: Those poor people and their families. Why was I so lucky to be spared? I was just a cynical shmoe on a bumbling, unintentional and purposeless path. I have so much to give but I wasn’t. I can do more. I can give my life meaning at the very least by being a more active participant in my existing relationships. Which brings me to…

Love: Everyone who was already important to me became absolutely precious. I was stranded on a business trip that day and all I wanted to do was be home with my loved ones. Ancillary figures in my life grew in meaning to me. Even complete strangers had my attention. We were all connected by the tragedies and where I used to feel indifference toward strangers and figured we probably wouldn’t like each other anyway, now we shared something in common. Which brings me to…

Respect: I remember walking up to a store about a month after the attacks and the door I was aiming at swung open and a woman exited through it. She let it fall closed and as I reached out to stop it, she lunged back, opened and held it for me and gave me a knowing nod. I stood still and looked right into her eyes and we shared a silent moment of respect for each other before I went through the door.

People were more courteous to one another on the roads as well. I remember noticing even on the freeways here in Southern California that people weren’t so self involved with their driving habits. I was cut off less frequently, and we all let each other in and out of lanes and yielded where we should.

Six years later, the anniversary of the attacks falls on a Tuesday for the first time. I expected an eerier feeling this morning than I felt.

What does Never Forget mean?

It seems like people are back to normal. Sure, some things have changed like airport security, civil liberties and political attitudes, but people? We seem to have lost our connection. I had hoped that “never forget” would mean more than hanging a flag and remembering victims and heroes on the date of the anniversary of the attacks. I wish that respectful togetherness would have been more lasting. We’re bickering and divided. Apathy, corruption, hate, intolerance and violence are back. Perhaps with a vengeance. Freeways or life, we’re driving like selfish pricks again.

I’m still committed to being a better person but obviously my cynicism is back. I still cherish my loved ones and I hope I show it enough. Maybe that’s what Never Forget means to me. In addition to remembering the victims, heroic action and the feelings of the time, never forget how precious this short life is and make the moments count. If not to the country, to the people important in my life. Never forget to respect the people around me, even the strangers. Remember that blind, ignorant acceptance is not respectful. Benefit of the doubt is only a starting point. Love, and think.

On a golf note

Golfers have an understanding similar to that connection I mentioned above. As golfers, we get paired up with strangers all the time and there is always a level of respect regardless of any differences that may exist. I have met some wonderful people on the golf course and have made some profound connections. I have met some misogynist pigs as well but we tolerate each other and get through the round. I am so glad I have golf in my life now.

I believe golf is great for one’s mental health. Six years ago, I was not a golfer. When the blender stopped, my psyche was more fragile than I care to admit (yet here I am blogging about it). Had I been a golfer back then, I’m not sure if I would have been able to play in the months following September 11, but I think it would have been great therapy. It is today, and I truly believe it is a stabilizing factor in my life now. Today, I remember. Tomorrow, I remember and play golf.

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Pro Golfers and Callaway raise awareness of Ovarian Cancer

September is National Ovarian Cancer Month. Teal is the official color representing the awareness campaign.

ovarian cancer awareness ribbon

LPGA members will wear ribbons at events in September

The LPGA announced that players have been requested to don the teal ribbons at events during the month of September.

The LPGA Teaching and Club Professional members also get involved. The president of that organization, Patti Benson, is an ovarian cancer survivor herself and is actively involved in raising awareness of the disease. Her past efforts include sending a letter with a ribbon and an ovarian cancer fact card to all of the nearly 1200 members which encouraged the teaching and club pros to share the information with their clients and students.

Callaway continues commitment to cause

Callaway commemorative teal golf bagCallaway golf pros (or their caddies) will be carrying Callaway’s limited edition commemorative teal golf bag at all events in September, including this weekend’s Deutsche Bank Championship at TPC Boston and the State Farm Classic at Panther Creek Country Club in Springfield, Illinois. Look for those cool bags out on the courses. They even have a ribbon on the underside of the bag you can see when they’re being carried or resting on the grass.

Players to watch for a look at the bag in action:

Annika Sorenstam
Phil Mickelson
Morgan Pressel
Rich Beem
Charles Howell III
Julieta Granada
…and more.

Callaway also has a line of special edition products for the public, all in teal, of course. A teal FT-i driver (only 1000 made and individually numbered) along with golf balls, hats and towels will be available starting tomorrow. Callaway will donate 15% of the net sales from these teal products (up to $200,000) to Callaway Golf Foundation Women’s Cancer Initiative through the Entertainment Industry Foundation (EIF). Yes, the same foundation I wrote about here for which Eva Longoria is the spokesperson.

Get your teal on

Learn more, spread the word, support the cause: Ovarian Cancer National Alliance, National Ovarian Cancer Coalition

Update:

I thought I should post the comment from Courtney here:

If you happen to be up and around at 8am eastern this coming Sunday (9/2), pull up www.790thezone.com and listen in to On the Green. We have scheduled Michèle Szynal (pronounced SHIN-all), VP of Public Relations for Callaway to talk about the Women’s Cancer Initiative.

Sorry guys, we couldn’t get Eva.

If you’re out looking for the teal collection of balls – it is the HX Pearl ball.

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Last minute reminder: Patriot Golf Day

Tomorrow is Patriot Golf Day.

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Random Resolution

Golf more, rant less.

Every day starts a new year.

This might be a difficult one (the resolution, not the year). Bear with me.

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Another attack with a golf club

What is it with people using golf clubs as weapons?

This week, there is another story about a kid attacking someone with a golf club. The story says some other kids helped lure the victim to a secluded area where the teen carried out the assault.

I know they have the word club right in the name and I’m sure they make great weapons (especially irons) but golf clubs are actually tools to be used to move a golf ball from one position to another. I point this out because it seems evident that these criminals are not golfers and probably qualify as bona fide morons.

Last time, the moron used a driver. This time, it wasn’t reported which club was chosen (at such close range I would think a wedge or putter was in order) but after the attack he threw the club in a river. I don’t think golfers would treat their clubs with such disrespect but if they did, they’d know which club to use. And throwing it in a river? Splashes like that should be reserved for severely misbehaving golf clubs and the pesky ponds or lakes that always seem to get the better of you.

I bet that kid’s mom (or dad) is going to be as pissed about the missing golf club as she is disappointed and saddened by the idiot she raised.

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How the FedEx do these Playoff points work???

Okay, I haven’t paid that much attention to the FedEx Cup from the start so I’m a little behind, but I can’t be the only one!

I remember hearing or reading that when the FedEx Cup Playoffs began the points would reset. Silly me, I thought that meant to ZERO. Isn’t that a reset? I also remember that there are eliminations in each playoff tournament and only the top however many will advance to the next round. So, when I found out Tiger was skipping the first event, I thought he was essentially shrugging off forfeiting his chance at the FedEx Cup since he wouldn’t earn any points and would be eliminated. It turns out that after the completion of the first event, Tiger is fourth in the standings. How the fedex did that happen?

I just had to look it up, didn’t I?

Until now, I hadn’t taken any time to look any of this up but I always read a lot of golf news and opinions and what I’ve seen on the points system is so bogged down and confusing I tend to just skim over it. I just took a look at the “About the FedEx Cup” page on PGATOUR.com and literally shook my head and made that bleuhhbuhluhbuhluh noise. Of course, the reset wasn’t to zero, but players were seeded based on their performance during the “regular season” and reset with a different point total than what they had. Of course. Why play all season just make it to the playoffs? There has to be seeding. Without it, the top players would have to play in all the playoff events to avoid elimination and I’m sure they didn’t want that.

*Side thought* I wonder – if my Anaheim Angels of Los Angeles Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim win enough games in September, can they skip the Division Series and go straight to the League Championship Series? Ah, the leisure of being a baseball fan: the most difficult thing to figure out is the magic number and home-field advantage. *End side thought*

Still, they got me – I couldn’t resist clicking on the “Fan Guide” link to find out if there was a simple way for me to understand it all. There isn’t.

Watch and learn?

I spent most of my golf watching time this weekend on the Safeway Classic and the US Amateur, but I managed to TiVo my way through some of the Barclays on Sunday to try to get an idea about how the wholefedex cup FedEx Cup playoff thing was working. They had a lot of graphics with projections like “if he makes this par putt, he’ll be at 102nd in the rankings… if he misses it but makes the bogey putt, he’ll be at 116th”… and on and on. Maybe that kind of stuff will get more exciting the further into the playoffs we get, but for now? Yawn. Double yawn for having to rely on behind-the-scenes statisticians figure it out and the production team to air it.

As the field narrows and if the points gap gets wider, it might be easier to predict parts of it ourselves. Something like “For Vijay to have a fedexing chance at winning the cup, he must win at the BMW and the top three guys need to finish at 5th or lower.” It’s easy to get excited about playoffs when they’re easily understood: if team A wins a game here and team B wins a game there, they will face each other in the championship; if Team C gets a touchdown and a safety and Team D scores two field goals, I win the pool. Hey, maybe we need a FedEx Cup pool!

Predictions aside, there’s also the trouble of possibly having two winners at the final – the winner of the tournament (hooray!) and the winner of the Cup, who finishes 10th in the event but has more points than anyone else (polite golf clap).

fucked up cup logo

I want to get excited about the FedEx Cup. I really do! But even the prize is confusing. I’m not a financial analyst and if I won $10 million in the lottery, I would need someone else to manage it for me. I’m one of the dumb-dumbs in the “if I made less money I’d take home more” tax bracket. I don’t understand tax shelters for multi-millionaires or how the FedEx Cup $10M annuity could entice Tiger Woods when he can make that in cash for an appearance fee. Frankly, I really don’t think I want it explained to me, either. Though I usually enjoy rooting for Tiger – or at least don’t mind when he wins -I think I’d rather just root for some obscure player to win the Cup, which might just be possible the way this thing works. Plus, that coincides nicely with the one thing that truly is exciting about this system, at least for those obscure players: Finish in that top 30 in FedEx Cup points and earn exemption for the next season. That’s gotta be less stressful than Q-School!

The PGA TOUR Playoffs for the FedEx Cup will change the way you watch golf and produce a true PGA Tour champion.” That’s their tag line. Will I glaze over and start to drool as I watch golf? Will the true PGA Tour champion be the best golfer on Tour?

The most exciting thing about the FedEx Cup playoffs for me right now is whether or not the FedEx Cup playoffs will get exciting. If not, at least I’ll have a new swear word. Stop. I. Can’t. Stand. The. Giddiness.

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U.S. Solheim Cup team captain’s picks announced

Betsy King, captain of this year’s United States Solheim Cup team, announced her picks and assembled the team for a press conference yesterday.

Here is the team that will be representing the U.S. against Europe at the Solheim Cup in Sweden September 14-16:

2007 U.S. Solheim Cup team

Captain: Betsy King
Assistant captain: Beth Daniel

(The first 10 players qualified for the coveted spots automatically with their accumulation of Solheim Cup points):
1. Paula Creamer 741.00
2. Cristie Kerr 713.50
3. Morgan Pressel 532.50
4. Juli Inkster 512.00
5. Stacy Prammanasudh 483.50
6. Pat Hurst 449.00
7. Natalie Gulbis 412.50
8. Brittany Lincicome 396.50
9. Angela Stanford 372.00
10. Sherri Steinhauer 324.50
Captain’s picks
Nicole Castrale 277.00
Laura Diaz 240.00

History and stats

Beginning in the U.S. in 1990, The Solheim Cup has been played every two years, alternating locations in the U.S. and in Europe. It’s a match play competition with a format similar to the Ryder Cup. The U.S. team has a strong lead in this U.S. vs. Europe competition, having earned victory at 6 out of 9 events. However, only one of those wins came on European soil. Will the team Betsy King has assembled be able to make that 2 this year at the Halmstad Golfklubb in Sweden? Or will we have to wait until the competition comes back to the U.S. (Chicago) in 2009 for the next team to get that Waterford Crystal cup for America again? Trivia tidbit: Did you know The Solheim Cup was named after Karsten Solheim, the founder of of the manufacturing company that makes PING golf equipment?

The big snubs?

Of course, since this competition only includes U.S.- and European-born players, the world’s No. 1 female player will not be competing. Lorena Ochoa – who just captured her 3rd straight win(!) at this weekend’s Safeway Classic – will have to sit back and watch with the rest of us. So will Se Ri Pak, who recently qualified for the LPGA and World Golf Halls of Fame (and will be officially inducted in November). Back when the Solheim Cup began in 1990, Mexico wasn’t really an issue and the Korean explosion hadn’t happened yet. Even Se Ri didn’t hit the scene until 1998. A U.S. vs. Europe event might have seemed nearly all inclusive. While I’d love to see an event that was more of a truly international team match play competition, I don’t have a proposal for how to do it. I mean, Korea would be a force to be reckoned with but any team Mexico could field would essentially be a one-woman show. If we broke it down by North and South America vs. The Rest of the World, where’s the rivalry and National – or Continental – pride?

Christina Kim Solheim Cup

Speaking of National pride, one golfer who did have the chance to make the team but didn’t, is Christina Kim. Christina was part of the winning U.S. team in 2005 and dearly wanted to make the team again this year. In fact, at this weekend’s Safeway Classic, she seemed to be more interested in looking good for Betsy King than in the 2nd place purse she won (tied with 3 other players). She practically said as much in her on-camera interview when she finished on Sunday. Maybe winning that tournament would have caught Betsy’s eye, but Lorena Ochoa ran away with that prize, defeating all the second place winners by 5 strokes.

Still, the first captain’s pick for the team happened to be 11th place in Solheim Cup points and a win yesterday would have knocked Nicole Castrale out of that position. Of course that wouldn’t have guaranteed her a spot – Nicole might have been chosen anyway – but it might have been more difficult to justify. King’s second pick wasn’t about points, because Christina had Laura Diaz beat in that regard. Nothing against Laura here, but it also wasn’t about sponsors and ratings because I think Christina’s charm and enthusiasm would win that hands down. Diaz must have been chosen for her experience in Sweden (and in years) as well as whatever influence King thought Diaz would bring to the team. I’m sure Diaz has passion and team spirit but I’m also sure she won’t express it like Christina Kim does.

Calm and stability won out over buoyancy but that’s not to say that’s how Captain King made her picks. I’m sure she looked at all angles and made the decision she thought would be best for a cohesive team. I just hope it’s a winning team. And I feel for Christina.

Go get ’em, U.S.A.!

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Best wishes to Annika and her new fiancé, Mike McGee

Annika Sorenstam announced on her website today that she got engaged to Mike McGee this morning. McGee manages the Annika brand, so I’m sure he’ll be fine when she doesn’t change her name to Annika McGee.

She said the engagement marked the two year anniversary of the first weekend they spent together. Two years ago today would have been August 25, 2005, which was three days after her divorce from David Esch became final. She filed the papers 6 months earlier so perhaps the weekend was a celebration. Now they have something else to celebrate.

The AP article that’s making the rounds on many golf websites points out that no date has been set for a wedding. Is that such a big deal? I don’t think too many people set the date the same day they get engaged. Give ’em a minute to enjoy it!

Congratulations to Mike on scooping up one of the best golfers in the world and someone who seems like a sincerely sweet person.

Best wishes to Annika for a long and happy life with someone who must be worthy.

annika sorenstam mike mcgee

Photo posted with apologies to Annika, Mike, David, Walter Iooss, Jr. and Sports Illustrated.

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