Scottish Golf View
Editor: Colin Farquharson
Webmaster: Gillian Kirkwood

Friday, February 26, 2010

Kenny's "sideways look" at last year's four majors

FROM KEITH LIDDLE
Secretary of the Edinburgh & East of Scotland Golfers' Alliance
As a few of you know, EESGA member Kenny Reid has written a book about attending the four majors last year. It's part user-manual, part travelogue, part recount of the sights and sounds of each championship.
John Huggan described it as "A splendidly idiosyncratic and in-depth, sideways look at golf's Grand Slam."
It's due for publication in June, but can be pre-ordered on Amazon from now at http://www.amazon.co.uk/Major-Obsession-Fans-Note-Majors/dp/1841588598/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1259077344&sr=1-1
Once published, signed copies will be available from Kenny, and feel free to contact him on kennethrreid@hotmail.com


Kind regards.


Keith Liddle
Secretary
EESGA

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Friday, January 08, 2010


Robin Wilson's picture shows (left to right) Jim Fallon (sitting), who put the book together and donor of the Centenary Cup, next to him the cup winner,Mike Tate, then club captain Stuart Macdonald and vice-captain James Cameron. The picture was taken at the Centenary presentation of prizes in the Carnegie Hall.

Tarbat Golf Club: The first 100 years at Portmahomack

Club captain Stuart Macdonald and members of Tarbat Golf Club travelled back in time on Friday, November 6 to celebrate their Centenary Prizegiving occasion in Portmahomack's Carnegie Hall where, on a November night in 1908, the first steps were taken by their ancestors to establish a golf club for the village.
Eighty-eight members of all ages attended and while wining, dining, dancing and reminiscing they also raised funds to ensure the future of their club by way of raffles and auctions of donated gifts. In attendance was Jim Fallon, a club member and local historian who, for the previous 18 months, had painstakingly researched and published an attractive booklet recalling the first one hundred years of the Tarbat Golf Club, situated above the Easter Ross seaboard village of Portmahomack.
Scottishgolfview.com's North correspondent, Robin Wilson, received a copy of the Centenary Book and has taken a look back over the 100-year highlights of “The Port,” the name by which the golf course has become affectionately known by the locals, and where he has often played.
His first visit to Portmahomack was as a young boy on the Rosskeen Parish Church of Scotland (Alness) Sunday School Picnic, and very likely on a Dods Mackay bus!
His second a Sunday afternoon visit with parents to the prominent feature on the Tarbat Peninsula, Tarbatness Lighthouse. When golf became a prominent part of his life in Brora so to did the lighthouse - it is the line taken from Brora's 17th tee, the hole even given the name “Tarbatness.”
The lighthouse was built in 1830 by Robert Stevenson, its warning tower the third tallest in Scotland and distinguished by its two broad red bands, the lighthouse adopted as the Tarbat Club emblem, despite it being not visible from any hole on the course.
Many years after the visit to the beach and the lighthouse the Brora golfer, now accustomed to links golf in Sutherland and Ross-shire's Fortrose and Tain courses, went to play his first competition at Tarbat, forgetting that he had skirted past the golf course on his boyhood visit to the lighthouse.
Keeping an eye out for a course on the seaward side of the approach road to the village from Tain it was not until the harbour was arrived at he was directed uphill past the Castle Hotel to come upon the clubhouse and first tee. In all years since, it has been a mystery to him why Portmahomack's golf course was not built on the lower links.
The answer was discovered in the copy of the Tarbat Golf Club Centenary Book and to an even bigger surprise the person responsible for turning the village golfers away from the links was no other than the eminent John Sutherland of Dornoch, regarded during his 50-year reign as secretary of Royal Dornoch Golf Club as the North's expert in the field of course design, advice and all other matters relating to golf administration.
But Jim Fallon had to look back a further 15 years to find the beginnings of golf in Portmahomack. From the pages of the Ross-shire Journal and North Star, the historian read of an opening round on a new golf course in Portmahomack, played on December 15, 1894 on a “Common” area of land beside the school overlooking the village and harbour.
Seven holes had been created over this bit of ground where play of a fashion continued un-administered until 1908 when, in September of that year, the gentlemen golfers of the village who played on the Common met in the Carnegie Hall to consider organising themselves into a club with a view to calling themselves Tarbat Golf Club.
The village's two ministers, Church of Scotland and Free Church, the local doctor and surrounding tenant farmers were in attendance and Dr Pyle was elected to chair a sub-committee charged with finding a piece of land to build a proper golf course upon.
The sub-committee made their report to a second public meeting on February 26, 1909, suggesting a site west of the village along the Dornoch Firth shoreline and on the same evening Tarbat Golf Club was formally constituted with Free Church minister, the Rev. George Murray appointed the first president, George Philip of Edinburgh the captain and Dr Pyle accepting the duties of secretary and treasurer.
One of the first acts of the new Tarbat Golf Club committee was to seek the advice of John Sutherland of Dornoch, already credited with creating golf courses in the Sutherland villages of Brora, Berriedale, Lairg and the Skibo residence of Andrew Carnegie, the philanthropist who had already provided Portmahomack with its village hall and library.
But Sutherland's report on the chosen beach site was a scathing one, branding it "unfavourable and with little character." However, when he turned to the raised links of Seafield above the village where the existing few holes had been played he remarked, “this slice of sunny links would provide a capital course providing a genuine attraction for both local and summer visiting golfers.”
The committee accepted Sutherland's recommendation, maybe influenced by the fact that the elected vice-president, George Douglas, was tenant of the Glebe Land and Seafield (adjacent to the old church) and was willing to give the new club free use of both areas for two years.
With the outline of the original holes from 1894 still visible, the new club was able to begin play soon afterwards and the opening of the newly established Tarbat golf course took place on Thursday, June 17, 1909.
The first ball was struck by Mr Gilroy of Edinburgh, a patron and regular summer visitor of many years, followed by a match over seven holes against invited visiting golfers from Tain and Nigg golf clubs.
As with every new venture, finance is always an early struggle but with a first year subscription of 7/6d for gentlemen and 3/6d for ladies and juniors the first year income amounted to £52 and one shilling.
Expenditure was £34 1s 3d, the main item being course wages (£5 15s) and purchase of mower (£5 19s 3d).
The resulting first year closing balance of £17 19s 9d encouraged the club to forge ahead and within two years John Sutherland was invited back to set out new holes when more bits of land became available from tenant owners, most of them already smitten by the game and eager to see the club flourish.
As the years rolled by the course became as we know it today, the last bit of ground, where sit the current third, fourth and fifth holes, purchased in 1990, this an area of Bindal Farm previously rented from the Gordon family.
Concentrating all their efforts on the golf course, it took the Tarbat committee a long time to turn their attention to clubhouse facilities. For the first 45 years, the Caledonian or Castle Hotels were used if catering or a refreshment was required and a humble shepherd's shed sometimes pressed into service as a shelter.
Even after World War II, when the course had to be knocked back into shape by volunteer labour with the help of a loan of a mechanical mower from the RAF aerodrome at Fearn, it was not until 1955 that the first custom-built clubhouse was erected and opened by Dr Jack Pyle, a descendant of the club's first secretary/treasurer, accompanied by the well known local golfer and bus company operator, Donald “Dods” Mackay.
Assisted by grant monies from the Ross & Cromarty Council, the present clubhouse was built and opened in 1989. It now serves the needs of both members and visiting golfers but also as a tearoom for passing trade to the lighthouse.
Many of the local members are also members of Tain Golf Club but their swings were fashioned over the short but testing Seafield links. The aforementioned Dods Mackay was the player after World War II who let his clubs do the talking outwith Portmahomack, especially at Tain where in 1952 he won the club championship for the first time and went on to triumph another four times in the years to 1971.
Dods always considered Tarbat as home and his life-long service to the club has been commemorated by a seat outside the clubhouse. He had two sons, Colin and David, who were also excellent golfers.
Before rising to the position of club captain in 2002 David set the first post-war course-record score, a 61 in 1961, playing the second nine holes in 29 blows. Colin was taken on as an assistant professional at Royal Troon in 1960 by Willie John Henderson of Brora, then moved on to become a successful player based in Holland. In 1983 he gained a European Tour card at La Manga.
After lengthening and alterations from 4,090yd in 1961 to the present course length of 4657yd, there have been two rounds of 67 recorded by Muir of Ord's Derek Gitsham and local Bindal farmer James Gordon.
The current course record was set at 64, four under par, by Jason Innes when playing in the Vice Captain's Prize competition on July 21, 2001.
For such a small club, to have such a wealth of excellent players in addition to Colin Mackay to have two others linked to the professional game is an enviable achievement. Now reinstated as an amateur, Bruce Fraser was just a teenager when he won the Port Open with a score of 66 in 1961 before setting out to train as a clubmaker with the renowned Scottish clubmakers, John Letters, and then assisting Dornoch-born professional Denis Bethune when at Haggs Castle.
On his reinstatement to amateur Bruce became a prominent player at Tain, winning four club championships and several Ross-shire open events, notably at Fortrose & Rosemarkie where the course is similar in design to Tarbat.
Much of the success of the Tarbat Golf Club over the past 100 years has been due to the members themselves and their time given freely to keep their golf course in trim. One such person was Don Barnard who, in recognition of his volunteer service, got the fifth hole, “Don's View,” named after him. How proud Old Don would have been if he had lived to see the Centenary Day celebrations with his grandson Mark Barnard (24) invited to raise the Centenary Flag and then join the members in the birthday competition.
Mark's summers were spent with his Portmahomack grandparents on the golf course where his swing was grounded into shape for him to become an asistant professional at Inchmarlo Golf Centre, Banchory.
The next 100 years for Tarbat Golf Club will no doubt bring more changes but for the last 100 years they are to be congratulated and admired for the enduring efforts and pleasure they have brought to this small Ross -shire village.
It's £5 well spent on a very good read:“Tarbat Golf Club – The First 100 Years.” A copy can be purchased in the local Portmahomack shop or from any committee member or contact
jgordon352@hotmail.com

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Monday, November 30, 2009

'Best golf instruction book I have ever read'

FROM THE GOLF.WEEK WEBSITE
Says James Achenbach
MIAMI, Florida – The new book from teacher Jim McLean – “The Slot Swing” (John Wiley & Sons, $25.95) – is the best golf instruction book I have ever read.
Not only is it the best, but it also is the most honest.
Why is it the best?
Because anybody can understand it. Very little mumbo jumbo here.
Because it clearly defines the notion of a “slot” on the downswing and offers three different methods for achieving it.
In short, the slot is a path to the ball, or a position just befoAdd Imagere impact in which the golfer feels the downswing plane flattening out and the club working from the inside.
Why is the book so honest?
Because McLean repeatedly admits the difficulties of teaching the golf swing. In the process, he does a masterful job of simplifying the concepts in this book.
McLean is most straightforward, though, when he attempts to clarify his celebrated theory of the X-Factor (the lower body should resist the turning action of the upper body).
Here is part of what he writes: “ ... resistance can be overdone, and most amateurs don’t have the flexibility to coil their upper bodies tightly against their lower bodies. I recommend that you turn your hips between 40 and 60 degrees in your backswing.”
Holy cow! I interpret this as repudiation – at least for ordinary golfers – of the X-Factor. I applaud McLean for this observation.
I am convinced McLean’s book can help many players hit the ball more solidly and perhaps add distance. This is not some pie-in-the-sky swing that can be achieved only by elite golfers. McLean’s slot swing makes sense in a real world composed of real golfers.
Here is the nucleus of his message: The slot swing accommodates many different types of backswings. On the downswing, just drop the club into the slot. This is ideal for hitting a draw, but McLean also explains the slot fade.
There are plenty of examples of well-known players who defy standard backswing principles – from Miller Barber to Jim Furyk to Sergio Garcia to Bruce Leitzke – and all are united by their ability to find the slot on the downswing.
In essence, “The Slot Swing” is a book for golfers who have had their fill of analysing the backswing. Plain and simple, they would rather concentrate on hitting the ball.
The reader receives plenty of visual assistance in this book, thanks to gifted illustrator Phil Franke. If you ask me, these are the best and most helpful illustrations since Ben Hogan’s famous “Five Lessons,” which first appeared in 1957.
Bravo for this entire project. McLean spent the last 18 months designing the new Jim McLean Signature Course here at Doral Golf Resort, & Spa, but somehow also managed to finish his 10th golf book.
I believe it is by far his best.
+Booknote from the Editor of Scottishgolfview.com: I have no idea if and when this book will be on sale on this side of the Atlantic. Ask your local book shop - or get someone who is going on holiday to the States to buy one for you over there!

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Friday, April 17, 2009

GOLF BOOK

A hacker's quest to break par

within 12 months .... Dream

On is John Richardson's story

Take a hacker who can't break 100 and make him break par on a championship course - all within a year? Dream On
Meet John Richardson, a regular bloke with a wife, daughter and demanding full-time job, who enjoys a round of golf in his spare time. That is until he decides to see whether he can make a "random fantasy" a reality by taking a whopping 33 strokes off his handicap and shooting a level par round or better WITHIN A YEAR.
With no natural golf talent, precious little time and no fitness level to speak of, can he pull it off while keeping those at home and at work happy?
"Dream on," suggests Sam Torrance. Try three years, not one, proposes Darren Clarke. They are sentiments shared by, well, pretty much everyone!
However, not one to throw in the clubs before he 's started, Richardson remains resolute and so begins an exhausting but exhilarating year of living, breathing, eating and sleeping golf.
From one-to-one coaching to late nights in golfing chat-rooms, from learning the mental game to reading 60 golf books and practically every golfing magazine available, from spending too much money on another set of "guaranteed to improve your game" clubs to more than 1,000 hours practising on the range, Richardson tries it all in his quest for success.
Does he play the game of his life and break par at the end of it?
To find out you will have to read the book .
A roller-coaster ride from beginning to end, Dream On is a story of disbelief and determiniation, trauma and triumph. Well-written, funny and inspirational, it is a must for any golfer who dreams of improving his or her game.
The author.
John Richards worked for more than 15 years in the coffee bar and restaurant industry, at one time running the largest sandwich business in Ireland. He used this experience to write The Coffee Boys' Step-by-Step Gude to Setting up and Managing your own Coffee Bar.
A keen golfer, he lives with his wife and daughter in Bangor, Northern Ireland.
Dream On - One Hacker's Challenge to Break Par in a Year (by John Richardson) will be published on May 28 (paperback £9.99) by Blackstaff Press, one of Ireland's foremost publishers.

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Wednesday, March 25, 2009


You can buy the Murcar Links

Centenary Book for £20

direct from the golf club

Copies of Dr Alastair McLeish's new book - "Murcar Links Golf Club: The First Hundred Years" - are available direct from Murcar Links Golf Club as well as Waterstone's Booksellers in Union Street, Aberdeen.
The price is £20 per hard back copy.
Scroll down a few days to read Colin Farquharson's review of the book.

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Sunday, March 22, 2009


Murcar Links Centenary


Book is a good read -


for non-members too!

By COLIN FARQUHARSON
Writing a golf club history takes a lot of dedication, a lot of research and much patience – which is why I have never done one! I think it is almost a prerequisite that the author has to be a member of the club in question – and Dr Alastair McLeish, a member of Murcar Links Golf Club for more than 20 years, fitted the bill on that score.
He obviously had all the aforementioned attributes because “Murcar Links Golf Club: The First Hundred Years” (Waverley Press, Aberdeen) is a good read, not only for Murcar members, but for all those with an interest in North-east golf.
History books can be boring if the author is only using words to link up landmark dates but Alastair’s enjoyment of tackling the subject shines through as he brings back memories of those who have been part of the rich fabric of club golf in the area during my life-time and the earlier years.
Dr McLeish has also done well to condense into 140 or so pages the history of a golf club that has been a busy one down through the years. It took him three years and I’ll bet many rewrites of chapters until he felt happy with them. He can be proud of his work. The book is on sale at Waterstone’s Booksellers Ltd at 269-271Union Street in Aberdeen.
For golfers of my vintage, it was always Murcar Golf Club and will probably remain so. Even the Scottish PGA, for one, has difficulty in getting up todate with its “new” name – Murcar LINKS Golf Club – in their pro-am draws, etc.
Two or three years ago, the members voted to restore the title Murcar Links which the club held from its origin in 1909 - in March of that year, club captain Robert Littlejohn used his casting vote in favour of the name Murcar Links in preference to Seaton Links and Blackdog Golf Club. The fourth choice was Berryhill Golf Club.
And Murcar Links Golf club it was from 1909 until it came back into play as plain and simple Murcar Golf Club at the end of World War I in 1918.
To have “links” as part of club’s name has become very fashionable over the last 10 or so years – the tourism people say that the American visitor is apparently attracted by the word links – and, spurred on by dynamic Derek Mortimer during his recent club captaincy, the members voted to change back to “Murcar Links Golf Club.”
During Derek’s captaincy, a complete internal reconstruction of the Murcar clubhouse was undertaken; also the first toughening-up of this links test by former local junior champion Graham Webster since Royal Aberdeen professional Archie Simpson designed it in 1909 and James Braid tweaked things a little later … and a upgrade of the practice facilities which are ideally placed next to the clubhouse and are among the best in Scotland if not farther afield.
Local businessman and Murcar Links member Graham Thom was the man who financed the modernisation of the practice facilities, which are essential if the club/course is to stage as many big events, professional and amateur, in future as it has done so often in the past.
As Alastair McLeish reveals to non-members in his book, the revamp of the links were not to every member’s liking and eventually the voted to put a stop to the “new look” which had included “the uprooting of great chunks of gorse in an attempt to restore the original look of the course.”
And yet the late Jimmy (J J M) Thomson once told me that in his younger days, Murcar was a much more difficult course to play, i.e. you had to be a straight driver/hitter of the ball because the fairways were narrower due to the growth of gorse bushes.
Even before Dr Beeching axed so many lines in the country, Murcar Golf Club must have been one of the few, if any who had its own railway, more than two miles of it running out from the Seaton Brick & Tile Company, over the River Don, up the side of Royal Aberdeen Golf Club’s Balgownie links, past the Murcar clubhouse to the brickworks factory at Blackdog.
The Seaton B&T Company, which laid the line in 1899, agreed to carry golfers until the golf club had its own railcars which it eventually purchased and so the petrol-driven “Murcar Buggy” became a boon for the members.
It prospered in the days when privately owned motor cars were a rarity – 1921 was its peak year with some 31,746 passengers at fourpence (old money) each way and sixpence on Sundays. The train ran for the last time on June 30, 1950.
Other things have changed irrevocably down through the years. Dr McLeish records that in 1911 George Duncan (who would go on to win the Open in 1920) and James Sherlock began the first round of an 36-hole exhibition match at Murcar at 1.30pm. They duly completed 18 holes, had lunch in the clubhouse – and were back on the first tee to start the second round at 4.30pm.
Another notable date from the Murcar history is January 1910 when Murcar Links Council voted by 10-2 in favour of Sunday golf “in defiance of Calvinist tradition.”
“At that time,” writes Dr McLeish, “ Sunday golf was banned at all of Abedeen’s public and private courses.”
Murcar Links centenary celebrations official begin on March 29, 2009 with a flag-raising ceremony. There are plans to bury a stainless steel time capsule which will be filled with golf memorabilia and will probably be dug up for the club’s bicentenary in 2109.
During 2009, there will be centenary competitions for all Murcar members. A team of eight will travel to Pitlochry to take part in a match against other Scottish golf clubs celebrating a 23009 centenary
Some of the Murcar Links best players – and they have had many exceptional golfers as members down through the decades – will compete in the Scottish Golf Union’s Scottish men’s amateur stroke play-championship over the Murcar Links from May 29 to 31.
Incidentally, the defending champion will be Wallace Booth from Comrie, a nephew of Sandy Booth, one of Murcar’s leading players in the 1960s
The highlight of the year will be the black-tie Centenary Dinner on Saturday, June 6 at the Aberdeen Exhibition and Conference Centre where an array of guest speakers is line up. The significance of the choice of date is that it will be 100 years to the day since the course was opened.
Two days earlier, on Thursday, June 4, Murcar Links will host a Scottish PGA-organised pro-am.
Murcar Links Golf Club captain during its Centenary Year is Hugh Stuart, an admirable choice. Forres-born Hugh played for Great Britain & Ireland in the Walker Cup matches of 1971, 1973 and 1975.

Hugh played for Scotland at international level since 1967 to 1975. He was Scottish amateur champion at Prestwick in 1972 when he beat Hazlehead’s Sandy Pirie in the final and beaten finalist, by Gordon Murray, in 1976.
Hugh was also Aberdeen Links champion in 1961 and 1965.

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Friday, February 27, 2009

Can you help Lindy track down Peter Robinson,

author of an article about Balnagask Golf Club?

By COLIN FARQUHARSON
Lindy Cheyne, Editor of The Leopard Magazine which circulates in the North-east (perhaps farther afield than that), has asked for my help in tracking down a gentleman by the name of Peter Robinson.
I have never heard of him but perhaps you know someone who does. If you can help, E-mail me at Colin@scottishgolfview.com
Here is Lindy's plea for help:

"A man called Peter Robinson contacted me quite some time ago, having written an article on the Balnagask Golf Club, which I'd like to use (in The Leopard Magazine).
"Now I'm trying to contact him, but his E-mail address is no longer current and I have no phone number.
"He wrote a book called 'Balnagask Headland and the Bay of Nigg,' but I can't contact him through the book site either.
"You are the only person I can think of who might know him. If you do, I'd be grateful for his contact number.
"I look forward to hearing from you,"
Lindy

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Saturday, December 20, 2008

ESPN.com contributor Bob Smiley tailed Tiger Woods for the entire 2008 season, chronicling Tiger's triumphs inside the ropes and his own adventures outside them. The following is an excerpt from "Follow the Roar," Smiley's new book, which is available in US bookstores but may not have made it to Waterstones and other British bookshops yet.

Things you might not
know about Tiger -
He swears a lot
on the golf course

At first glance, the par Tiger Woods made on the par-4 15th hole at Torrey Pines' North Course might seem pedestrian by any standard. But if you happened to watch exactly how the world's No. 1 player made his par, it was nothing short of miraculous.
Buick Invitational, Round 2 -- Torrey Pines North -- January 25, 2008
11:20 a.m. -- Tiger played his first five holes on Torrey Pines North 1-under par. Not bad, but not exactly lighting it up. The North is by far the easier course of the two, and players tend to go low here and hang on for dear life on the South course. It looks as if Tiger is doing the opposite.
His group started on the back nine, and his one problem, as it was yesterday, is his driver. He missed left on 10 and right on 11, the dreaded two-way miss off the tee that has always appeared to frustrate Tiger more than any other part of his game.
The "two-way miss" is a good golfer's way of describing a bad golfer's problem, that essentially he has no idea which way his ball's going. Walking down the 15th, a simple, downhill 394-yard par-4, I don't know which way it's going either, but I guess right. Give me five spins on the roulette wheel and I'll be wrong five times. But this call is perfect. And since the 15th green is about the farthest point away from civilization on the already vacant North Course, only thirty or forty fans are gathered around his ball. As expected, Tiger is in no mood to socialize.
When Tiger arrives, he's still holding his driver and fuming, his jawbones sticking out from his cheeks. He takes one look at his ball and the eucalyptus tree that is blocking his next shot and says, loud enough for us to hear, "Stupid f-----."
Tiger's propensity for swearing on the course is not something of which he is proud and may be the only flaw he routinely fails to keep under wraps. This can mean only that bad language is either the one thing in life Tiger Woods can't beat or he's not really trying to control it at all.
His dad, Earl, said that early on he tried to teach Tiger to bottle up his emotions on the course, but in time Tiger proved that his outbursts could spur him on to better results. It's a theory that completely goes against the conventional wisdom of most every sports psychologist.
Bob Rotella, golf's most famous guru, goes so far as to make not getting angry one of his ten commandments of mental golf, drilling home the mantra that "nothing will bother or upset you on the golf course, and you will be in a great state of mind on every shot."
And even though the tee box is now more than 300 yards behind him, Tiger is still swinging his driver - another Rotella no-no. "The only shot you think about is the one at hand!" is the rule.
He finally stuffs his driver back in the bag, but he doesn't pull out another club yet; rather, he stands behind the ball and places his hands behind his back. And then he closes his eyes.
Call it meditating, exorcising demons, I don't know. But the séance lasts a good five or six seconds as some of us in the crowd shoot one another a quick glance to ask, "Um, what's going on?" When Tiger opens his eyes, his mood is different. Lighter. He shakes out both hands and says, "Okay."
Stevie [Williams], his caddy, has been waiting patiently, as if this happens a lot. And this is when Tiger casually asks, "How far?"
"Eighty-seven hole, eighty-two front," he shoots back.
Tiger nods, then grabs a wedge and punches it under the tree. It comes out hotter than he expected, hops the green, and then disappears back down the other side. Tiger doesn't swear about this one but reacts as if it went exactly where he wanted it to and starts walking.
I run the 87-plus-10 yards to the ball, wondering if perhaps he had painted such a positive mental picture of the shot that he was physically unable to see what really happened. Before he was in trouble, but now he's in jail. His third shot has to go under some pine trees, then up a steep bank of thick rough, then back downhill to a pin that is cut close to the back of the green.
Tiger looks at the shot, unconcerned and clearly still feeling residual warm fuzzies from his astral planing, and pitches the ball up the hill. It appears perfect from our point of view, but once on top we see it never made it to the green, getting snagged by the rough. A bogey would be a gift at this point. Meanwhile, his playing partners George McNeill and Jim Furyk just stand there, putters under their arms, for once waiting for a hack named Tiger Woods.
Tiger gets up to the ball, takes a brief look at the hole, and then, calmly, chips it in for par. I'm now feeling liberated enough myself to express what I'm really feeling. I open my mouth and out comes two words I almost never use: "Holy s***."
Tiger picks the ball out of the cup and moves off to the side of the green, where he coolly starts to reapply some lip balm. He's a monster. Or at least a monster with lips that dry out easily.
We're still cheering, but he doesn't appear to hear us. Stevie's laughing, but Tiger doesn't notice him. He's still somewhere else. Furyk putts out for a conventional par, then sidles over to Tiger, shaking his head and smirking. Finally, Tiger snaps awake and laughs.
It is the deepest and scariest focus I've ever seen.

Editor's note: Woods went on to win the Buick Invitational

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Tuesday, December 02, 2008

bunkered and Editor Martin Dempster
honoured in industry awards

bunkered, Scotland’s top-selling golf magazine, has bolstered its reputation by winning two top industry awards.
In the 2008 Scottish Magazine of the Year Awards, Martin Dempster won ‘Consumer Magazine Editor of the Year’ while bunkered also won the award for ‘Best Brand Development’.
The annual awards ceremony was hosted by the Scottish arm of the Periodical Publishers Association and attracted
a total of 143 entries from 35 different companies.
“To win two of these prestigious awards is a tremendous achievement,” said Paul Grant, publisher of PSP Publishing
Ltd. “We are delighted that Martin has been recognised for his hard work for the company while it is equally pleasing that the bunkered brand has been honoured in such a way.”
Dempster, who has been at the helm of bunkered for five-and-a-half years, beat stiff competition to land his award, the other names on the shortlist of candidates being Nadine Hawkins (No.1), Paul McNamee (The Big Issue Scotland), Simon Harper (Clash), Cameron McNeish (The Great Outdoors (TGO)) and Devon Walshe (The Journal).
“Under his editorship, bunkered was voted ‘Consumer Magazine of the Year’ in 2004 and this latest award further underlines the professionalism that Martin displays in every aspect of his job,” added Grant.
In a massive coup for the magazine, bunkered recently signed up Colin Montgomerie as its new star columnist, the eight-times European No.1 joining the likes of former Ryder Cup captain Bernard Gallacher and the highly-respected Arthur Montford.
In addition to bunkered, Dempster is also editor of Glasgow-based PSP Publishing’s hugely-successful series of golf newspapers – Scottish Club Golfer, English Club Golfer and Welsh Club Golfer.
“Martin is one of the most respected golf journalists in the United Kingdom and this award is well deserved for his excellent work across all our titles,” commented Grant, who launched bunkered 12 years ago in tandem with his two business partners, Tom Lovering and Stephen McCann.
Since then, they have established bunkered as one of the top golfing brands in Scotland and the magazine beat No.1 (PSP Publishing), Bratz (D C Thomson), Clash (Clash Music Group) and The Skinny (Radge Media) to land the PPA award.
In addition to bunkered itself, the magazine’s brand has become iconic in Scottish golf through the bunkered Green Fee Savers, bunkered Golfers’ Club, bunkered Diary, bunkered Wallplanner, bunkered Holiday Golf Guides and, more recently, the bunkered Matchplay Challenge, a Ryder Cup-style event between Scotland’s top amateurs and the
leading home-based professionals.
“We had a vision for bunkered from the outset and this award underlines the fact that the brand is very much to the fore in the Scottish magazine industry,” concluded Grant.
The PPA ceremony was held at the Radisson Hotel, Glasgow, where 400 people were entertained by comedian Craig Hill.

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Wednesday, May 07, 2008

Book Review


Many top golfers have turned to psychology in their quest to improve, but mental skills are not just the preserve of the game's elite - you too can benefit from improved thinking on and off the course.
"Mental Toughness for Golf" is a refreshingly different golf psychology book, granting you privileged access to the minds of professionals, elite amateurs and others involved in top-level golf as they reflect on rounds, tournament or phases in which mental resilience helped them get the results they wanted.
Rather than an instruction manual, it is a story book whose powerful, engaging tales highlight the human element that makes golf so mentally challenging.
Learn how Nick Faldo reeled in Greg Norman in the 1996 Masters; how Colin Montgomerie coped with a hostile Ryder Cup crowd; how Justin Rose dealt with an endless stream of missed cuts; how Gary Wolstenholme conquered Tiger Woods in the Walker Cup - and much, much more.
Written by Dr Brian Hemmings, Dr Hugh Mantle OBE and Jeremy Ellwood, with a foreword by Colin Montgomerie OBE, "Mental Toughness for Golf" is published by Jules Gammond and Vanessa Gardner with an RRP of £16.99.

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Sunday, April 20, 2008


A GOLFING BOOK AT BEDTIME ABOUT

A CLUB, A COURSE AND A VILLAGE

By COLIN FARQUHARSON
It's not something I'm proud of but the older I get the less I read books. Editing "Scottishgolfview.com" takes up a lot of my time and "... there are miles to go and promises to keep, ere I sleep."
What golf books I do read, are at my bedside. A chapter and I'm ready to sleep.
"Golf at the Back of Beyond" is to me a perfect book for bedtime. I can pick it up and cherrypick which chapter I'm going to read, because the sequence in which you read them does not matter.
Hugh Baillie deserves much credit for putting down on paper, before the memories are lost forever, a treasure trove of anecdotes and historical facts about a golf club that was founded in 1891.
Peter Thomson's foreword gets the book off to a cracking drive from the first tee. Not many forewords get you hooked on a book, but this one does.
Aside from the golf, I did not know that Brora was once known as "The Electric City." Power was first generated in Brora in 1903 and, 10 years later, the village became the first in the north of Scotland to have street lighting.
The electricity was harnessed to power the Sutherland Woollen Mills, the Brora coal mine and brickwords and Clynelish Distillery. The first three have gone ... but Brora and its golf club will go on for ever.
A great read ... even if, as I am, you do it with a chapter (or maybe more) a night before you put the light out.

Note from Brora Golf Club professional Brian Anderson:

The book is available via mail order from

Brian Anderson
PGA Professional
Brora Golf Club
Golf Road
Brora
KW96QS

The book sells at £20 plus p&p £5 UK, p&p £9 EUROPE & and Rest of World.

Orders can be placed by email at broragolfpro@tiscali.co.uk
Telephone 01408 621 473
Or by post
Payment can be made either by cheque or credit card

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Thursday, February 28, 2008


THE TIGER WOODS OF THE GOLF
BOOK MARKET FOR ONLY £25

Every golf club should have one .... every golfer should also have one ... at £25 the R&A Golfer's Handbook is the "Tiger Woods" of the golf book market in that it's a winner every year.
As the "Daily Telegraph" says, it's "A treasure trove of golfing information."
It is simply the ultimate reference book for golfers, edited by legendary Scottish-born golf writer and TV commentator, Renton Laidlaw, and packed with up-to-date information and all the old archive records as well.
The Rules of Golf are included in its 944 pages as well as comprehensive listings and addresses for over 5,000 golf clubs and courses in the UK and Europe.
There's also a golfing Who's Who and Who Was Who.
The 2008 issue of the R&A Golfer's Handbook is in the bookshops now.
If you have someone whose birthday is coming up, look no further for a present. This is the one.
COLIN FARQUHARSON
(who has not missed a copy for more than 50 years!)

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Monday, January 07, 2008

Press Release

GolfStats Guide to the 2008 US PGA Tour Season

For all lovers of Fantasy Golf and fans interested in the US PGA Tour, GolfObserver.com announces the publication of the “GolfStats Guide to the 2008 PGA Tour Season”
For those looking for that perfect publication that will help them know how well a player does on certain courses, certain conditions and in certain months, this guide is perfect. It’s designed to give all the information a fantasy golf player could dream of or any avid follower of the US PGA Tour could want to know in order to more fully appreciate players and tournaments. The information in this electronic book can not be found anywhere else and is based on an extensive data base of results and statistics from Tour events.
The heart and soul of this electronic book is the way you can link to the Internet on Golfstats. With 173 pages of information plus more than 7,500 links to Golfstats, we let you explore the stats that you want to find out about and can help you better understand where players do well and not so well. So the key is not just the book itself but the way it lets you communicate with Golfstats.com in finding out everything that you need to know.
The Electronic Book in broken up into two sections on tournaments and players. Each section consists of year-by-year breakdown of their recent finishes and their overall stats including scoring average and money won at tournaments. The tournament section gives an overview of the course, gives short recaps of the last three years and key to victory for the player who won. We also give our picks for the 2008 event.
PLAYER SECTION
The Player section breaks down the performance of 105 selected players into more categories than you can imagine. The electronic book gives their results in each and every tournament from 2000 through 2007 and highlights their best events. It gives their PGA Tour box scores (driving distance, fairways hit, etc.) for the last three years, but again through Golfstats.com you can look at all of their box scores going back to 1997. And in order to show when and where each player shines and where he struggles, there is a chart in the electronic book breaking down performance by month and breaking out how they do in various categories: major championships; hard, medium, and easy courses; desert courses; TPC courses; courses with Bermuda greens; and more. This information is truly unique and gives unprecedented insight into the players and their tendencies
2008 MAJORS PREVIEWED
There is more than just numbers. We’ve also enlisted some top golf writers to guide you. Leonard Shapiro previews the 2008 majors, Bob Harig profiles the Q-School graduates, David Barrett looks at the Nationwide Tour grads, Gary Trask predicts five players who will surprise and five who will slide, and British betting columnist Jeremy Chapman gives his tips on how to pick players.

The cost of this publication is $12.95. It's 173 pages in length and is a PDF file that can be download off PayPal. For more details on this go to:

http://www.golfobserver.com/features/Sal/Salblog08.php

With this publication, you will ready to start impressing your friends with your knowledge and facts, winning major championship pools, cleaning up in fantasy golf, and gaining a greater understanding of the players that will enhance your golf viewing experiences.

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Friday, December 07, 2007

DUBLIN MAGAZINE MUST PAY TIGER'S
WIFE $183,250 FOR UNTRUE AND
OFFENSIVE ARTICLE

Tiger Woods' wife Eilin won $183,250 and a grovelling apology today in a Dublin court from an Irish magazine that published an abusive article and a faked nude photo of her during the Ryder Cup match in September 2006.
Trevor White, publisher of "The Dubliner" magazine, conceded that the article "was cheap, tasteless, and deliberately offensive. It was also completely untrue."
"The false and deeply offensive article in 'The Dubliner' magazine, with the accompanying photograph of another woman wrongly claimed to be me, caused great personal distress to me and my family," said Mrs Woods.
She would donate the money to a cancer charity in honour of Heather Clarke, the wife of Northern Ireland golfer Darren Clarke who died of cancer before the Ryder Cup tournament.
As part of the settlement accepted by a Dublin court, "The Dubliner" must publish its lengthy apology in a variety of venues, including in its next issue. If the magazine fails to meet the conditions the award will be increased to $366,500 and the publishers will have to pay Nordegren Woods' legal costs.

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Thursday, December 06, 2007

Press Release


European Tour Yearbook: A Must
for every Golfing Library

Padraig Harrington’s memorable triumph in The 136th Open Championship at Carnoustie and Angel Cabrera’s stunning victory in the US Open Championship at Oakmont Country Club are two of the many highlights in the 20th Anniversary Edition of The European Tour Yearbook (RRP £25.00) which goes on sale today.
The Yearbook has been an integral part of The European Tour for the past two decades and the 20th edition once again captures all the excitement and emotion of a momentous and historic year as well as celebrating the phenomenal growth of the Tour since 1988.
As well as Harrington and Cabrera’s achievements – the first time in history this double Major Championship success has been accomplished in the same summer by two European Tour Members – the 20th Anniversary Edition of the Yearbook also highlights Justin Rose’s triumph in winning the season-ending Volvo Masters which helped him secure the Harry Vardon Trophy as European No. 1 for the first time.
Rose became the seventh multiple winner on The 2007 European Tour International Schedule – following Ernie Els, Padraig Harrington, Mikko Ilonen, Henrik Stenson, Lee Westwood and Tiger Woods – and all their victories are chronicled within the 352 pages which feature entertaining essays by leading golf correspondents, their words lavishly illustrated by superb photography by Getty Images.
Also featured are chapters outlining a record-breaking season on the European Seniors Tour for England’s Carl Mason, how Frenchman Michael Lorenzo-Vera emerged as the No. 1 on the 2007 Challenge Tour Rankings and who won the season’s Golfer of the Month and Shot of the Month Awards.
Finally, looking ahead to the 2008 season, there is a chapter devoted to The Ryder Cup at Valhalla Golf Club in Kentucky, featuring an in-depth look at the history of the Louisville venue, a guide to the golf course itself, and profiles of the men who will captain Europe and the United States respectively; Nick Faldo and Paul Azinger.
With this Official Publication you will have a wonderful addition to your golfing library, and we hope you and your friends will enjoy the many fascinating stories highlighted, of course, by the Major Championship victories of Harrington and Cabrera who feature on the cover with their respective trophies.
You can order the 352 page full colour European Tour Yearbook NOW as a visitor to http://www.europeantour.com/ for only £14.00 (excluding postage and packaging) through http://www.europeantourshop.net/

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Saturday, July 21, 2007


DAVID LEADBETTER'S QUICK
TIPS CAN BENEFIT ANY
CLASS OF GOLFER

David Leadbetter is one of the superstars of golf coaching, credited with helping Nick Faldo to several Major tournament wins and continuing to coach the world’s best players such as Ernie Els and Michelle Wie.
“LEADBETTER’S QUICK TIPS is a superbly accessible collection of mini-lessons that anyonhe can benefit from, whatever their golfing standard.
Derived from Leadbetter’s column in the US Golf Digest Magazine, it is lavishly illustrated with colour photographs and graphics.
The tips include:
*Longer and straighter drives.
*Consistency from the fairway.
*More accurate iron play.
*Better bunker shots.
*Making more putts.
David Leadbetter’s other books include the best-selling “The Golf Swing,” “100% Golf” and “Lessons from the Golf Greats.”
++“Leadbetter’s Quick Tips” will be published in hardback by Aurum Press on July 30, priced £12.99

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Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Aberdonian who became America's most prolific golf course creator


Click on the image to increase its size and also the words so that you can read them.

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