Thursday, August 18, 2005

It's getting hot in here, so take off all your......

Introducing another of our transatlantic GolfPunks, it is my pleasure to introduce to you Brynne Ashton. This time reporting from Baltusrol Golf Club, Springfield NJ. They had some golf match there the other day. First I've heard about it!

Well, what more can I say about my week at the PGA Championship in New Jersey other than “Thank God that’s over. I need a drink!”

It took me two days to recuperate after spending seven full days at the tournament, but my feet still aren’t happy .

I thrive on this stuff. I love being in on the action. I love the fact that you can walk alongside the players, and I love being outside, but this week was brutal. The heat index on the course reached 115 degrees Fahrenheit, and it was so humid. Luckily, I know how to dress to beat the heat however, the same could not be said for 99% of the crowd. Countless men were so sweaty that they looked as if they had jumped into the pond on the fourth, not to mention the handful of people who passed out and had to be taken away in an ambulance. When anchormen from the Golf Channel start contemplating skinny-dipping you know it’s hot!


Levet's so hot right now!

Even the players could not escape the heat - Tiger and Vijay were dripping before they teed off. The people who I felt sorry were the police officers who followed Tiger, Vijay, and Phil. These poor guys walked 18 holes in full uniform in the dead heat. Talk about devotion to the job. To be able to survive this week took a hardcore golf fan, and I am proud to say that I stuck it out like a true GolfPunk.

Words and Pictures Brynne Ashton

8/18/2005 3:08:36 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 

  Tuesday, August 16, 2005

Scrap of the Month?

Don’t know if you’ve heard about this but it has created mammoth-sized debates at GolfPunk Towers.
Jason Gore, a 31-year-old American pro, won on the Nationwide Tour, with a phenomenal score. But that’s enough of the poet’s corner.
He actually did win on the second play-off hole after finishing tied on 23-under par. That included a brave 63 in the final round and an astonishing- only seven people have ever done this in the universe na-ne-na-ne-nah – 59 in Friday’s second round.
This was mentioned in our spurious discussions but it was not the main point. (We were the other six who shot 59. Did it on the Megadrive when we were 12.) What we were more fascinated with was Gore’s promotion to the main PGA Tour.
Because he’s won three events on the Nationwide Tour – actually he’s won the last three on the bounce- he gains what is known in the States as a ‘battlefield promotion’. This gives him a chance to play on the main tour, have a good week, make a million dollars, win the grand slam next year and retire to Hawaii, which he has just bought. It’s a golfing version of the American Dream.
On the whole we agree with them. What a great idea to promote players but, have they fully exploited this idea? Could there be a relegation battle?
Imagine: At the end of each month the bottom 20 performing players get relegated to the Challenge Tour to be replaced by the Top 20 performing Challenge Tour players. (Or insert similar dramatic style finales here.)
We’ve all seen the exciting finales when it comes to retaining your card at the end of the season, or in that last desperate struggle to make the Ryder Cup teams – Ian Poulter’s 8-under par back nine, in Germany, for example.
What if this was repeated on a month-by-month basis? Could we make the most enthralling game on the planet even more exciting? Could this ruin the sport for hard-working pros?
Let us know what you think.

Words by Shaun McGuckian

8/16/2005 5:09:18 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 

  Monday, August 15, 2005

Practice Makes... Well Just Practice

Practice makes perfect, or so we’re told, and never is the adage more widely used than in golf. This is why the practice grounds of golf clubs worldwide are at any time of the day a microcosm of the golf club community (a sweeping statement made solely by my experiences of my own club). A grim menagerie of characters battling with their own demons, all the while secretly hoping the club pro saw that last shot they just ripped down the middle, and missed the series of whiffed drives that preceded it. Whether you are the 18-handicap dentist trying to put 30 lessons worth of tuition into practice, a newcomer haplessly ingraining swing faults, or the one anomalous player who is peppering the 250-yard marker in the distance with an irritating consistency, a strange mood of camaraderie inevitably exists among the assembled crowd. A mutual appreciation of the travails that befall every person who call themselves golfers create a feeling of kinship among us avid practicers, united in the knowledge that each person carries their own burden of mental scarring inflicted by the game. This comradeship transcends each individual’s attempts to gain the attention of the golfing gods. It’s enough to turn you spiritual. Whether to be released from the curse of the duck-hook or to be blessed with a solid short game, us Saturday hackers will continue to serve our penance among the sand-filled divots of the practice ground, praying for absolution.

Amen to that.

Words by Giles Cornwall

8/15/2005 7:23:27 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 

  Friday, August 12, 2005

Liam Gallagher wearing J Lindeburg golf shirt

Liam Gallagher wearing J Lindeburg golf shirt

Spotted taking a walk on a street somewhere. Liam Gallagher. Once upon a time everybody looked to this Rock n’ Roll star for fashion, elocution lessons and swagger. It seems, as he takes a stroll kitted out in J Lindeberg, that he’s been taking a few fashion tips from us…or maybe he’s a closet golfer.

Still pretty cool though.

For more info on J. Lindeberg Clothing go to www.jlindeberg.com

Liam Gallagher wearing J Lindeburg golf shirt  


8/12/2005 5:19:47 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 

  Thursday, August 11, 2005

On the Dance Floor, the Last Dance.

In the final part of the Golf Girl trilogy we learn amongst other things that it is possible to open a bottle with a putter. Funny what you can pick up at a golf festival! Check out the blog from 07.07.05 for Part 1 and the blog from 05.08.05 for Part two of this tale of one womens impression of life on the inside of a tournament.



Mannie was all business at this point. It was not an easy task to pry the cap off with a putter and we practiced carefully as there was only the one beer. The YES! man got to do the shaking and wastefully sprayed beer everywhere. What a story! Mannie interviewed the YES! man about the technology behind the putters. Intrepid reporter that I am, I didn’t really listen, instead determining whether I wanted to dine with a second tier caddy or head back to Baltimore that night for more martinis on the road.



"...and then pivot the blade under the cap and really commit to it" Putting advice by the Pros

Second story done, Mannie and I were ebullient. What a team. The sun was hoisting the yardarm and I casually mentioned that perhaps there was one more story if only we could find him…


I explained that there was a man I used to know (bibilicaly)… who never would golf with me and I reckoned he would be playing in the Pro-Am this very day. I was trying to sense where in the fields and dales he was, while Mannie referred to the schedule, cleverly. As if by fate my man was just finishing on the 9th green, 50 yards away.


We watched him putt. He had an extremely young cute female caddie with him. Future bunker babe I mused. He one putted and looked happy. He strode off the green to a smattering of applause. Bystanders whispered his name as he passed and as he wandered towards me I made myself plainly obvious.


He saw me with my press pass and my cameraman and actually stopped in his tracks, his mouth open. “What are you doing here?” he asked with wonder. “I’m with GolfPunk. This is my cameraman. Can we have a picture?” He automatically went into pose mode and so a beautiful picture was borne. You’d swear we were daughter and dad, happy. He was whisked off by autograph seekers and I sighed. I had made it to Congressional on my own. I was with the press corps. And I had finally got my man!


The most important lesson I learned at the Booz-Allen Classic Tournament, was the fluency behind really keeping your eyes on the ball. Watching these golf gods close up the stare and pause go together as part of the rhythm of the swing, a note in the song, a step that anticipates the pendulum swinging down, moving back up. I realized the extent of the pause, time almost stands still, then go! You don’t get that inspiration, that momentum for discipline, from watching a video or replay. The next week, back in my civvy golf life, I added yardage and took off strokes. I smiled while at the muni and daydreamed about new golf quests. I stopped and thought, “GolfPunk, GolfPunk, GolfPunk!”



Words and Pictures Dr Morgenthaler

8/11/2005 7:29:46 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 

  Wednesday, August 10, 2005

Taking the Michael!

In what will not become one of the biggest sporting sagas of the summer GP are going to join the race to land Michael Owen.  We’re not that well versed in the transfer market, in fact the last transfer any of the team got involved with were the ones given away in packets of Frosted Shreddies.  However, we feel that an offer of three sets of Lindeburg sweat bands, a dozen Srixon soft feels and a six month subscription to the magazine may just turn a few influential heads at the Bernabeu.

It may not seem like the obvious choice for Owen, but the baby faced goal machine is a golf nut of some repute and where better to cultivate your love of expensive swing aids than in the storeroom at GolfPunk towers?  Our roving reporter also knows his way around the GP McManus ProAM where the who’s who of golf and the “who’s he?” of the celebrity world get together to do their bit for charity.   We’ve heard that Micky’s an inquisitive little blighter, quick off the mark and always on his toes asking leading and difficult questions.  After all, one of the best attributes of a hard hitting journalist is that they are a little forward.

Punned by Sifaeli Tesha



8/10/2005 7:28:11 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 

  Tuesday, August 09, 2005

Golf Girl Got Back

We know the BA Classic was ages ago but the story is timeless, so hail the return of Golf Girl. Check out the 07.07.05 Blog for Part1



First tournament moment: Erne Els, towering over me, signing my GP. First quote, “I’ll sign between her legs, how’s that?” Oh, Ernie.


But the interviews were fairly dull. Everyone’s knocking on the door, no one’s breaking through. Blah blah blah. I wandered about in the sun, having fairly forgotten that there was a major golf course outside. I hung at the practice range, admiring Jesper’s tourquoise pants and Ian’s burnt orange slacks and golden arm hair. Enough for day one, my news buddies told me tomorrow was the day to chat everyone up.
The next noon I staggered in late and hungover. What kind of journalist was I? Absolutely zero work ethic! Or… was I being a good golf punk? My night out worked in my favour, I had a ruffled look. Manny from Golf Weekly asked how my morning went. “I woke up in Baltimore, I blame it on the martini’s,” I responded and we were friends for life. “Oh, you must hang with us,” he said. “You’re fun. You’re golf punk!”
We had our first story. We hit the fairways in search of Frank Lickliter II’s Bag.
Frank Lickliter II is what they call a journeyman, always on the tour, not often a national champion, and cute for days. He walked up to me and gave me a “HI!” worthy of GG herself. I was smitten. And thought, but there’s nothing to do. He’s playing and then he’s gone. I’d have to ask the golf groupies how they handled that.



The golf groupies had already been sighted, in fact during the practice days they were in full blown come-get-some regalia. Short tight black dresses, high stacked heels and wedgies in the hot hot sun. I was in awe. It didn’t occur to me at first to approach them. I missed some key opportunities to delve into their brains.

Frank was collecting patches from each of four tournaments he was currently in and then he was going to auction the bag on E-Bay and donate the money to wounded warriors. We scampered down the fairway and found him, his blue eyes, and his bag. We got an interview for CNN, we got pictures for my scrapbook. And we felt very patriotic, helping Frank in his quest to sell his bag. I found out later it went for a quarter million, go Frank II.

Flush with success, we headed back to the putting green. This tended to be the action spot. Famous people lolled about, the groupies were a-plenty, and every old duffer looked like Coach. I wandered about with Mannie and his camera. We came upon a beautiful display of bright yellow state of the art YES! putters. “Let’s get some gear,” said Mannie and thus a bite-size quest was born. “Let’s offer him a GP article,” I suggested. And this became my first very own golf tournament story. For these were not just any putters -- these putters had the strength and technology to open a beer bottle!

A caddy from New York informed me of this fact. I had shown him a picture of a Bunker Babe wearing white booties and he was transformed. He immediately invited me to dinner, as though I too owned white booties. I was dubious about waking up with sand in my knickers. For Frank, maybe. But, better to focus on finding a beer and a photo worthy of GP.

I had to secure a beer quickly, before the YES! man to changed his mind. I hopped into the first golf cart I saw and directed the 100-year old driver to find me a beer stand. He happily zipped us about but to no avail, all the beer was gone for the day! This couldn’t be. A random man sitting near the clubhouse said, “Can I drive with you?” I said, “You can find me a beer.” He said, “Okay!” and led me into a room full of young men – the caddies’ locker room! He flagged the oldest one, obviously in charge, who looked at me suspiciously. Obviously, I must have a problem and he was tired. “My problem is I need a beer!” “Seriously?” he asked. “Yep! Got a putter that needs a beer to open!” They all stared, then acted. A cooler miraculously appeared with one fine English lager left in it. Yummy. I now had a trail of men following me back to the dance floor. An old geezer with a cart, a random helpful man, a tired senior caddy, and a strew of young caddies. Indeed, it was a grand day.



Words and Pictures by Dr Morgenthaler


Check out the 07.07.05 Blog for Part1

8/9/2005 9:21:47 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 

  Friday, August 05, 2005

Inside the R&A Dressing Room.

“Am I allowed in wearing jeans and trainers?” I asked. While this scene is played out every weekend between shaven-headed bouncers and hopeful punters, I was trying to gain entry to a different kind of VIP lounge: the players changing room inside the R&A Clubhouse, and I didn’t fancy my chances. Ok, so I had a press pass, and a golfer to interview, but I had also been wearing the same jeans for three days. If you take into account that I had on a GolfPunk hat, a pair of stinking trainers and was accompanied by an attractive young lady in a rather low-cut top, then you see my point. Just as I was going to tell Nick Flanagan to meet me in the car park, a Scottish brogue filled the air: “Aye, no problem laddie, straight down the stairs and turn left.”
Was this real? Were those tinned mushrooms I had for breakfast more magic than tragic? Had I really just been granted entry into the most revered enclave in golf? Rather than wait for reality to bite, I used my experience gained by running away from angry doormen and hotfooted down the stairs. ‘Holy Walter Hagen,’ I muttered as I rounded the corner wide-eyed and almost flattened a caddie. You see, dressing rooms at Open venues are usually pretty special. The changing room at Royal Birkdale is a lavish affair, full of glossy wood and gold fittings, but this was different. It was like opulence and history had bumped into each other at the word disco, hit it off in a jiffy and coupled to produce an offspring that made both parents happy.
When I listened to my interview the day after, I sounded like a gushing idiot. God knows what Nick Flanagan thought as I babbled on about how nice the lockers looked. I don’t think his girlfriend realised the plain ridiculousness of the situation, but I couldn’t stop thinking or talking about it. It may seem strange to get so worked up about a room where people shower, but this was the confine Jack and Tiger shared as the baton of greatness was finally handed over. This was the room where Faldo sat down exhausted in 1990, where Daly celebrated in 1995 and where Tiger hung his hat after shooting 19 under in 2000. I may never break 80, hit a drive 350 yards or make a hole in one, but I have sat in front of the locker Jack Nickalus used for his final Major Championship, and I’ll never forget it.



OB, excited by lavatories

Words by Owen Blackhurst
Pictures by Ian Moore

8/5/2005 5:08:10 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]