The Golfchick

That chick blabbing about anything golf related.

Author: golfchick (page 25 of 46)

New home for my second anniversary

new golfchick logo with tee Tomorrow is the two-year anniversary of The Golf Chick blog. I’ve been meaning to move to my new domain for awhile now and figured this was a good time to do it. I’ll start my third year of blogging with a fresh new look and location.

I know I’ll experience some moving pains so you may still see some changes as I tweak things here and there. I have all the content copied over and each post has its own new permalink but all the hard coded links from my old site still need to be changed. All links to my old blogger site – to the homepage there or any individual posts – will be redirected to www.thegolfchick.com. If anyone has any ideas of how to fix that so it automatically redirects to the individual permalinks, I’d be happy to look into it. It’s going to be a tedious process to get all my own links fixed so that my “Golfchick Chronicles” feature will work without just redirecting to my homepage, but I will get it done eventually. I also know the redirect is pretty slow and I’m open to ideas on how to resolve that as well.

Obviously, if you subscribe to my feed, you’ll need to change it to continue getting the latest.

I cleaned out my blogroll and golf sites lists and gave them their own special pages accessible from the nav bar. I drew the cutoff line at around two months, so if you start posting again and want back on the list, let me know. If I have forgotten anyone of if you’d like to exchange links, please email me.

Back in December 2005, Bogey Man created the cute little chick-in-the-golf-ball logoLittle golf chickNew golf chick logo that I’ve been using ever since. I really appreciate it and have enjoyed it so much since then! So to thank him, I’ve completely ripped him off by creating my own version of his idea for my updated look. I still really like his version and will probably use both his and mine at times.

I am leaving tomorrow for a nice long weekend (yes, it will include golf and should result in some interesting posts) so I wanted to get this changeover done today.

If you encounter any problems with the new site (other than the permalink situation), please let me know. I’m kinda winging it here. Chicks do that. I will also welcome any other feedback you care to share.

It has been a great two years and I look forward to writing much more and introducing some new features as the months go on. Thanks for reading!

Next post.

Golfchick sighting on Shakesville

Admittedly, I don’t read too many non-golf blogs. It’s a time issue, mostly. One I do like to read is Shakesville. While its success and readership dwarfs that of this humble blog, I only discovered it recently, thanks to the addition of contributor William K. Wolfrum, the strapping golf blogger I also read over at Worldgolf and on his own site.

Wolfrum recently posted a brief Q&A on Shakesville featuring yours truly. In it, I talk about how I started golfing, blogging and attempt to make my own little contribution toward promoting women’s golf. The Golfchick on Shakesville. I’m honored.

Next post.

Apparently there’s some big golf tournament going on

Sports writers and golf bloggers are covering the U.S. Open and Oakmont Country Club with the same fervor of CNN covering Paris Hilton. No detail left unreported.

Of course the difference is sports writers and golf bloggers are supposed to write about golf. It’s right there in their titles. The Cable News Network is supposed to cover the news. Even if they could somehow win an argument that Paris Hilton is news, that doesn’t excuse them from failing to report on all the real news going on while they spend 24 hours on Shawskank Redemption (thanks, Jon Stewart).

But since this isn’t the Shmaily Shmow, I’ll get back to golf.

There is so much being said about this tournament and the golf course that I really don’t feel I have much to add. Just like I do, you can get all the latest from the fine bloggers in my links list as well as the journalists on the commercial sites. I’ll just watch and root on my favorites like the fan I am. And I’ll be checking in with Brandon Tucker for live bloggerage from the event. Congrats to Worldgolf for getting media credentials for their bloggers at recent events!

Speaking of Worldgolf, they’re conducting a survey and if you complete it, you’re entered into a drawing to win a set of Ping clubs and bag.

Next post.

Another one bites the dust

Well, here is a case of a golf blogger popping up and then quickly disappearing. Usually, I like to wait until a new golf blogger has been around for a little while and looks like they’re going to stay and keep posting before I link to them.

In the case of Elizabeth Jones, I guess I just got so excited to see such a skilled female player joining the fray that I jumped on it right away. That was three weeks ago. Two weeks later, her site was gone… vanished! Email communication ended abruptly.

Was it too good to be true? Could there have been a Liz Jones? A woman with a plus three handicap who was so perfectly adorable that she photographed like a pro right down to the detail of a subtle nipple poking at her cute, pink golf shirt? Perhaps we’ll never know.

Maybe she will pop up again somewhere and we’ll be able to hear more from her.

Until then… bye bye, “Liz Jones.” Good luck selling your instructional golf books.

Next post.

Gotta weigh in on Wie

Exactly what does it mean to be non-competitive? Well, the LPGA has put a number on it: 88.

If a non-member shoots an 88 or higher in an LPGA tournament, she is banned from LPGA events for the rest of the year. Golf writers have been typing until they’re blue in the hands about Michelle Wie’s withdrawal from last week’s Ginn Tribute.

In case you’ve somehow managed to miss the coverage, the gist is that she withdrew from the event after playing 16 holes including five bogeys, a double, a triple and even a quintuple-bogey (!) leaving her just two bogeys short of reaching that dreaded 88. However, she claims she withdrew because her previously injured wrist was bothering her. (Like, I tweaked it, you know?)

Would they have allowed her to withdraw if the reason was avoiding the 88 rule? No? So if that was the reason, she had to lie. What? Dishonesty is frowned upon in golf? It shows a lack of respect for the game, its rules, and your fellow players? Like, whatever. I guess it’s the truth, then.

There have been implications of a conspiracy involving LPGA officials and agents that warned Wie to drop out despite the rules on giving and receiving advice except from a caddie. Speaking of advice, there was a questionable situation in that same round in which she might have received those dreaded two strokes in the form of a penalty because her father gave her advice on that triple-bogey hole (they didn’t assess the penalty because she didn’t ask for the advice – though I agree with Beth Ann Baldry that perhaps the “didn’t ask” clause isn’t meant to include parents or coaches).

Yet another rule she gets away with not breaking – this time because she’s a non-member and it doesn’t apply – is that she played the golf course the week before the tournament, something members are barred from doing.

Learning how to avoid these types of mistakes (and learning that they are mistakes) can be done by players as they work their way up the ranks, playing in events in which they can compete and getting accustomed to the rules, etiquette and decorum expected of a professional golfer. This isn’t to say that Wie can’t be competitive in LPGA events. Of course she can, but her camp of marketers has launched her into a spotlight where every misstep is highlighted and must be defended.

The controversy surrounding her, plus her lack of experience leading to many of the blunders (like needing advice from a parent in the first place), plus her entire camp’s superstar attitude as if golf should be a laissez-faire system (but only for her) just eats away at my brain like the buzz of a casino when I get back to my hotel room. I think it leaves a bad taste in the mouths of anyone who cares about the rules of golf.

So what do we have here…

  • Possible dishonest withdrawal
  • Receiving advice
  • Pre-playing the course

All this in one tournament – no, one ROUND – on an LPGA Tour event. Funny thing is, sponsors are going to be chomping at the bit to give her more and more exemptions to LPGA and PGA Tour events because of all this. Just look at all the attention it generates.

So what about PGA Tour Events?

After conducting exhaustive research a quick google, I was unable to find any specific score associated with non-competitiveness on the PGA Tour. I guess that rule is a little more subjective over there. And Michelle Wie, Inc. excels at exploiting subjective rules.

I’m currently reading John Feinstein’s book Tales from Q School, from which I learned that in that tournament (the qualifying tournament for the PGA Tour and Nationwide Tour), players will be deemed non-competitive if they don’t “come close to breaking 80” in four rounds. The PGA doesn’t just ban these players for a year, they maintain a list of non-competitive players and make them prove that they can compete, essentially qualifying to qualify. The idea is that it’s not fair for players to be distracted by non-competitive players in a tournament that can make or break their careers. Q-School is grueling and a rite of passage that most players on the PGA Tour have had to endure, many of them several times. To go through all that just to be distracted from a PGA Tour event by a non-competitive player (or even sideshow) when they know they’ll have to go back to Q-School if they don’t produce… well, that certainly can’t be fair.

Remember Casey Martin, the golfer with the degenerative disease in his leg that took the PGA Tour all the way to the Supreme Court for the right to play in a cart and won? All the attention from that case made him into something of a sideshow as well, but he had the respect for the game not to exploit the system with his star power. Martin went back to Q-School year after year and played on the developmental tours in between, trying to work his way up to the PGA Tour. He did not use his stardom to apply for exemptions and try to make some cuts and maybe win enough money to stay. According to Tales from Q School, Martin “thought it pointless to take a spot in the field from someone else when he was likely to miss the cut.” I guess that’s because he knows how hard it is for those guys to earn their way there. No matter where you stand on the cart/no cart issue, you have to respect him for that.

Some people may blame the sponsors for giving Wie exemptions in the first place. I’m sure she doesn’t even have to apply for them, they’re just thrown in her lap. But that doesn’t mean she has to accept them. Some poor schmuck is going to have to go back to Q-School because some non-competitive player took up a coveted spot in the field in one too many tournaments. Of course, there is no way for a female player to earn her way to the PGA Tour. Not officially, at least. But maybe the next time she plays on an exemption and doesn’t “come close to breaking 80″(the standard for Q-School), maybe she should get a letter of non-competitiveness and be kept on file. Would they let her attempt Q-School? Even if she qualified to qualify? I doubt she’d dare if they did.

Oh, and… pssst…. Ms. Bivens… over here. How about a golf blogger’s exemption? I’ve been known to break 88 and who knows, I could string together a couple of miracle rounds and possibly make a cut. Okay, probably not, but think of the publicity we could generate!

Next post.

Ron Mon’s playing 100 for charity


Golf may not be reserved for the elite like it once was but let’s face it – it can still be an expensive hobby and we’re privileged enough if we have the luxury to play. That’s why I love it when people use golf to give back.

Long time travelgolf blogger, Ron Montesano (wasn’t he killed off in the Sopranos?) is playing 100 holes of golf on June 18 and seeking sponsors to benefit the Roswell Park Alliance Foundation and its fight against cancer on behalf of “Carly’s Club.”


Please visit this site and contribute what you can for this great cause.

Next post.

Women’s golf week June 2 – June 9

I wrote about Women’s Golf Week in my Worldgolf column this month. Also, check out the Play Golf America site for more information.

I suppose that’s a better name than Golf chick’s week, but either way, let’s get out there and play.

Honorable mention: it seems the photo Worldgolf used for my column was taken by “Christ” Baldwin. Has Baldy’s ego reached new heights or does it just mean I’ve been blessed?

Update: The photo credit has been edited to read “Chris” instead of “Christ.” Just to prove I’m not insane, here is a snapshot of it before the adjustment. I may still be insane, but this won’t be the proof. Unless I’m crazy to prolong this but that’s another story.

Next post.

There’s a new golf chick on the scene…

… and she means business!

Her name is Elizabeth Jones, and she’s a +3 handicap. That’s right – PLUS 3! I’m only a plus ONE… in my dreams.

As a recent college grad, she’s struggling to make ends meet while working two jobs and fitting in practice time so she can work towards her ultimate goal of playing on the LPGA Tour.

She started a new blog where she writes about golf stuff like many of us do, but her site also promotes her products that are instructional books to help people improve their golf games. She’s just trying to earn enough money to help her pay for the tests she needs to become a pro and start her golf career. She recently wrote about some pink golf shoes she got, and as an Imelda myself, I can appreciate that. I think I’m gonna like this girl.

Not only is she adorable, but she can really play golf!

It’s always nice to welcome another female golf blogger to the scene, but it’s a rare treat to have one who plays so well – I guess the same can be said for the guys, right? Check her out and let’s hope she sticks around awhile (where have you gone, Megan?).

Update: broken links removed.

Next post.

I am a Birdie Girl – with a minor in Ogio

I’m also giving new meaning to the term “bag lady.” I guess when a girl obsessed with handbags develops an obsession with golf, it’s only natural that she will start to collect golf bags.

Awhile back, I posted about Birdie Girl’s great looking bags and especially lusted for the orange stand bag. It was still in production so I had to wait but in the mean time I got my hands on the pink and white tour bag. Because I was still traveling for work quite a bit, I also got their travel bag. I don’t think these two items were meant to go together, but I’ll get to that later.

The tour bag is gorgeous and adds a powerful, feminine touch to any golf course. (No, guys, that’s not an oxymoron.) But it is a tour bag and is meant to be carried, not carted. It’s a touch too bulky and the pockets aren’t the most accessible from a cart position. Much to my chagrin, I’m not on any tour, don’t have a caddie and wouldn’t dream of carrying this baby myself. The bag lady in me just thought it would be cool to have a tour bag.


Here it is pictured in action – providing some much needed brightness at a miserable 5 1/2 hour round at the rock hard Knollwood Country Club in Granada Hills, CA where it was a wrist-breaking risk to try to take a divot on approach. Ugh – but at least my Birdie Girl bag made me smile. You can see the beautiful detail work in the close up shot. The side view shot was at Black Gold Golf Club in Yorba Linda, CA. This golf course certainly didn’t need any dressing up but the bag still stood out – far more than my performance in that tournament.

Throwing some Ogio in the mix

Since the tour bag is a bit unwieldy and much of my golf is played on courses that aren’t too walker-friendly, I knew I needed to revert back to an actual cart bag. I love my chocolate Ogio and think Ogio makes the most tricked out bags designed from a planning perspective based on what golfers need. From what I’ve seen, some other bag manufacturers are catching on, but Ogio innovates and the others seem to follow. I decided to upgrade from my chocolate bag to the latest and greatest.


I chose this cool bag, the Atlas, in the indigo color scheme. Ogio thinks of everything but my enjoyment of the handy pockets, ball dispenser, individual club dividers, and sleek look only lasted for a short while. Why? Because Greg liked it just as much as I did and it turned out that indigo would have been his color selection as well. He doesn’t lust for products too much, so I took the opportunity to make a sneaky trade along with a friendly couple’s wager (the details of which shall remain private) and he is now the proud owner of this bag. We both ended up winners in this deal.

Back to Birdie Girl

Then the long awaited orange stand bag was off the Birdie Girl production lines and on my doorstep. I was giddy. It’s even better looking up close and personal – and with my stuff in it! The attention to detail of the designers isn’t evident in the photos of this bag on the Birdie Girl website.

When I first opened the package and saw the tiny pink and white polka dots on the stand’s legs, I thought “whaaa?” Then I set it down on its stand and noticed how the white mesh on the orange side pockets almost looks like pink polka dots and it all made sense. It’s even hard to tell with the lights and shadows in this photo, but trust me, this is such a cool touch!

If you zoom in on this photo, you’ll see the neat splashes of other colors in the detail work on the logo and handle. I never would have thought of the polka dots or putting all these colors together, but I love the way they work together! Kudos to the Birdie Girl designers.

Here it is on the course and on the cart. Again, I love the brightness!
Here it is with Greg’s new Ogio bag. What a cool looking pair!

Yes, I’m using it as a cart bag. My chocolate Ogio just looks so dull after having my Birdie Girl bags out there. Oh yeah, something else after which to lust. I guess now I need this powder/chocolate Luxe Cart bag for my collection! We play walking rounds with our friends Lou and Leslie on Friday afternoons in the spring and summer so my orange bag could still see some action. Well, I play other walking rounds but I use my push cart for those so I can strap on either kind of bag and I’ll be able to mix it up.

Now to the travel bag

My one complaint with Birdie Girl is about their travel bag. It looks smart and is easy to spot on the luggage carousel – I’ll give it that, but then I’d expect that from Birdie Girl. It’s the size that bothers me. Of course I never expected the tour bag to fit in there, but I did expect it to accommodate my golf clubs in any other golf bag with ease. No go. I understand that it is designed with women in mind but even if I had shorter golf clubs, that’s only another inch or so of room. After taking off the club head covers, it was a really tight squeeze to get my golf clubs in this travel bag. I worried that when TSA searched it and tried to repack they might damage my stuff. And I worried that such a tight fit might cause a snap with a rough throw. Thankfully neither happened and my clubs made the trip unscathed, but I won’t risk it again. How about just a couple more inches of leeway in the length, Birdie Girl? Maybe it would be good for a junior set of clubs.

Accessories

The club head covers I got with the orange stand bag are nice, but not for me. First, they’re too big. I don’t like it when club head covers are too tight and difficult to take off and put on, but I also don’t like them to be too baggy and loose. I know, I’m hard to please size-wise. Many women are. They’re also orange and black instead of orange and white, which, unlike their other color surprises doesn’t work for me. Besides, though it might not be hard to displace my Ruger and Taylor Made headcovers on my 3- and 5- woods, nothing’s going to take the place of the Goose on my driver.

My accessories of choice by Birdie Girl are these snazzy umbrellas!


Yes, I am a Birdie Girl

So what if I miss a lot of birdie putts? So what if the most birdies I’ve had in a round is a whopping 2? I’m a Birdie Girl – my bags say so! Birdie Girl makes the cutest stuff and keeps me stylin’ on the golf course whether I’m making birdies or not.

Next post.

Ask the Goose – question from David

I’m channeling Kess today so I went into her inbox and found this old question that she never got the chance to answer. So, in her first column since her passing, the ghost of the Goose takes this question from David Joseph:

Dear Goose,

I have been golfing for a long time. I have been living for a long time too. As I get older I am getting faster. I need to get where I am going before I go croak. As golf gets older it is getting slower. This incredibly slow play is driving my friends away from the game.

I would like to know if there are any rules governing pace of play at public golf courses. I (and my quickly disappearing friends) need to be able to play a round of golf in less time than is currently possible. Can you help us out here?

David Joseph


Dear David,

If you haven’t already, I recommend going ahead and “croaking.” The golf courses are wide open and you can reunite with all your friends and play at whatever pace you like on any course you choose.

If you’re still circling the drain, try going to your favorite local muni on a weekday when the non-retired people are too busy in their offices to be on the golf course. Also try the more expensive courses where you can enjoy the senior rates and the faster pace of play (because the greens fees are too high for the young whippersnappers).

Maybe even join a senior league so you can share your common concerns like creaky hips and slower swing speeds. Stepping up to the forward tees might also speed up play for you and your friends. Make sure you all watch each other’s tee shots for a better chance at finding them with all those old eyes. Spread the word so that others do the same (especially the groups in front of you).

Good luck and I’ll see you soon,

The Goose

Next post.

Older posts Newer posts

© 2026 The Golfchick

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑