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Tiger Needs a Player or Watson or Trevino
Saturday, March 22, 2008, 04:37 PM EST
[General]
It's that time of year again. Time to shake off the cobwebs of winter , pull out the big stick and head for the course. That means it's also time to renew the sad commentary about the pitiful competition Tiger Woods faces each year on the PGA tour. Until someone, ANYONE can rise to the challenge I'll keep posting this each April.
There are many things people agree upon regarding the phenomenal career of Tiger Woods: his dominance in golf, his high "Q" rating for TV and especially his work ethic. However, the claim he's "the best golfer ever" always begs the question: Is he that good, or is his competition that weak? Golf legend Jack Nicklaus, always gracious in his comments about Tiger, said, "Somebody is going to dust my records. It might as well be Tiger, because he's such a great kid." However, when Tiger broke Jack's 1965 Masters record by a mere one stroke in 1997 he did it using all the new fangled high tech equipment Nicklaus couldn't even dream of in his day. Also, something few people realize, the Augusta National course was longer when Jack set the mark than when Tiger broke it. But more to the point, if Tiger is today's Nicklaus, then who is today's Gary Player (9 majors); Tom Watson (8); Lee Trevino (6); Seve Ballesteros (5) Ray Floyd (4)? They all fearlessly stalked Nicklaus throughout his career. How many of Jack's incredible 19 second place finishes in the majors would have been firsts if they were not around? Take Tom Watson. Tom beat Jack in a classic head-to-head British Open duel at Turnberry in 1977, only sealing the win with a must make birdie putt on the final hole. Watson beat him again winning the 1982 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach when he chipped in for birdie on the 17th hole in the final round. Consider at the height of Nicklaus' dominance in 1971 Lee Trevino won the U.S. Open, Canadian Open and British Open championships in a four-week span. At that U.S. Open Trevino defeated Nicklaus in an 18-hole playoff and was named Sports Illustrated "Sportsman of the Year". Who compares to Trevino, the "Merry Mex", on today's PGA tour? Now you have Phil Mickelson, with 3 majors, Ernie Els with 3 and Vijay Singh with 3. And the only players to push Woods in a major have been Bob May and Chris DiMarco. Anyone seen those two lately? Gary Player, a regular Nicklaus nemesis, has more major tournament wins than Phil Mickelson, Ernie Els, Sergio Garcia, Jim Furyk and Davis Love III combined. Yet they were considered at one point or another serious competition for Woods. Now their careers are winding down without ever mounting a serious challenge. With todays seemingly uninspired competitors it's very possible that Tiger will win 25 or 30 major tournaments before he's done. Unfortunately he will have won them against a cast of Lilliputians unable to challenge him like the talented players of the past challenged Nicklaus. It's a shame for the game really and certainly no fault of Tiger's. Many of today's golfers can shoot low scores on Thursday, but when they collapse on Sunday, they blame it on Tiger's game, and not their own. Tags:
Changing The Rules, Or The Game?
Wednesday, September 5, 2007, 10:25 AM EST
[General]
When the powers that be change the rules of the game, are they in fact creating a new game? Many a pugilistic endeavor at the local pub began from a perceived knowledge of a game at a certain point in time and the memory (or lack thereof) of participants in that game at that particular point in time establishing marks of achievement. Most home runs, most points, most goals, most touchdowns and the like are quintessential examples of marks of achievement for those games. In the vast universe of knowledge these are some of the easiest things to know. Just add them up. But what happens when the rules for that game, those
ironclad definitions of what is acceptable and what is not during the
competition, change? Should that close
the books on records for that sport, if players from here on out no longer play
by the same rules? To be fair to one set of players before, and the next
generation of players after a significant rule change, should there not be a
clear demarcation of the great divide between the two? In 1978 a basketball player at Baylor could make 10 shots from the floor and record 20 points. Today that same player could record 30 for the same number of shots. It's a different game today. Should there be a different set of records? Used to be you had to play a position in the field to bat in the major leagues. Not any more. In the American League there is now a Designated Hitter, someone who does not play except to hit. When looking at all the records prior to that monumental shift in rules does one not see the galactic inequity of comparing the before's with the after's? What if horse racing allowed cheetahs to run with a gibbon strapped to it's back? Provided you could keep the cat from eating the monkey on it's back (pun intended), I dare say we would see fewer and fewer horses and more and more felidae at the track. Maybe make the field goal in football worth 10 points. Any doubt there would be a scrum over signing English soccer players to the NFL and attempts from 70 yards commonplace? Scoring records? Sky's the limit. Of course there is the mewling of those who have not lived under the dramatic shifts in the game as the rules have changed. But at some point rule changes have had such a dramatic affect on the sport, that it may not actually be the same sport anymore.
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Waiter, There's A Fly On My Turd
Tuesday, August 7, 2007, 10:24 PM EST
[General]
So tonight barry bonds hit the "historic" home run many have been waiting for. Waiting for the record to be set, waiting for the complaints to be over, waiting to continue ignoring MLB. Tonight we got our wish. I did not see it, don't care about it, and for the most part will amble on my merry way ignoring the game I used to so love. Thanks Sammy, Raffy, Marky and Barry. You've returned a generous portion of my life that I would have frivolously spent at the ball park. Now I'll spend those hours at another sort of park; the kind that prohibits the likes of you smashing a ball about. Many may want to speak only of the bonds dilemma. But the fish stinks ffrom the head down. Start with Selig and work your way all the way down the tight spiral forming at the base of the loo. Hasta la vista b!tch...
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Pitching to the Babe
Monday, July 23, 2007, 10:41 AM EST
[MLB]
As anyone can clearly tell from my avatar, I kinda like the legacy of one George Herman Ruth. Sometimes little tidbits pop up that make me smile and wish for just one afternoon in the sun watching the Babe belt them out. Since that's not possible, I satisfy myself by vicariously living through the eyes of others who got the chance. Below is an AP report today about the death of Rollie Stiles, RIP Rollie, and I'll let the article do the "talking". Stiles died in his sleep Sunday morning at Bethesda Southgate nursing home in St. Louis County, a spokesman for the nursing home said Monday. A cause of death was not given. Born Nov. 17, 1906, in Ratcliff, Ark., Stiles pitched for the Browns in 1930, 1931 and 1933, compiling a 9-14 record with a 5.92 ERA. Babe Ruth was among the hitters he faced. "I had a great game against him," Stiles recalled in a 2006 interview with the St. Louis Post-Dispatch... "I held him to three hits." - You just can't make this stuff up...... Tags:
PGA: Is this All There Is?
Sunday, July 22, 2007, 11:47 PM EST
[General]
With the 136th Open Championship, known in the United States as the "British Open" , ending in a playoff between the three day leader Sergio Garcia and final round challenger Padrig Harrington, it has become apparent to most of the golf world that the comet known as "Woods", who miraculously streaked across the sky for the better part of 10 years, has dimmed and the era of the random wanderer is coming to fruition. Certainly Sergio and Padrig played as well as any casual observer could hope to do, but once again we were witness to a rather severe bout of hack as the curtain came tumbling down. Padrig took the Claret Jug for his first major victory simply because he puked less than Sergio. Besides the painful stumbling down the stretch by the eventual winner, this tournament included near misses from an Argentinean named Romero, a resurgent American named Striker, and a still resolute South African named Els. Today the world was treated to yet another exciting but futile stab at the heart of the Nicklaus legacy by the Greek tragedy known as the Royal and Ancient, or with a more full throat, the 18th at Carnustie. Time and again sports writers wax poetic about the skill and savvy of the current crop of pretenders to the throne as they jump into the limelight for a day, only to evaporate like so much haze in the mid-July sun of whatever stop the PGA tour resides. Thursday's 65 by most of the tour players is likely to be followed by a 78 on Friday, with very little difference in the conditions of the turf, fairway, rough or green. Certainly today's field can go low, but when you need to go four in a row, they generally got no. For most of past 50 years we have been blessed to see men take the game by the "Spauldings" and choke the best out of it. Players like Nelson, Hogan, Snead, Palmer, Player, Trevino, Ballesteros, Watson and Faldo all stood against the wind week after week as they amassed multiple Major victories. The wind they stood against was Jack. Unlike the past, no player has been able to consistently shoot the scores needed to compete with Woods at the championship level. At Carnustie, as the world's best player receded into the background, the rest of the golf world applauded the determination of Padrig Harrington and wept for the continued frustration of Sergio Garcia. Sergio may yet have his day, but collapses like today and the effect it surely will have on his psyche will prevent him from ever being the equal to his compatriot Seve Ballesteros. As for the rest of the PGA tour, we can only hope that there may someday soon be a player with the skill to do today, and tomorrow, and the day after, what he is capable of doing next week and the week after that. Not for a day, or a tournament, but for a career. Tiger is doing it. Is there someone else?
Don't bet on it. Tags:
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