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GOLF
TEACHING PRO MAGAZINE®
HISTORICALLY SPEAKING
My 19thCenturyAdventure in 21st Century Golf
By Mike Stevens
USGTF Level III Member, Tampa, Florida
It
was a spectacular morning as contestants lined the practice tee in
preparation for the United States and World Golf Teachers Cups in
Boulder City, Nevada. To steal a line from P.G. Wodehouse, “a day
when all of nature cried fore.”
As I settled in to
work out the aches from a long day’s journey, there were metallic
cannons to the left of me. “Tink, tink, tink.” Little white orbs
launched into the stratosphere. Harder than steel bazookas to the
right. “Klink, klink, klink,” more spheres soaring into oblivion.
Then I’m up, a well-timed swing and “thwack,” the red-circled
two-piece floats gracefully out 200 yards into the rolling meadow.
When I was a young
lad, one of my second homes besides the golf course was Pynchon
Park, a residence of the Triple-A Springfield Giants. I loved to get
there early and watch batting practice. One of the sweetest sounds
in sports is the crack of a baseball jumping off a well-timed wooden
bat in motion. Each hitter warming up, reproducing that sound like a
steady drum beat, was music to my ears. Golf used to be like that.
The sound of persimmon striking a wound balata was special. It was
elegant and polished. It was refined. And sadly, it is virtually
gone.
As I continued
swinging with my hickory-shafted Louisville Golf persimmon head
driver and watching ball after ball airmail my best offerings, I
wondered if there was any chance of not finishing dead last in the
field of 193 golf teachers. But, this is how I play. Ten clubs, all
hickory, a commitment I made because of all the equipment I’ve
tried, and I’ve tried it all; they give me the most pleasure. It
also goes without saying that I have a deep feeling for the game’s
history and all that has come before.
There are no words
that I can use to describe the enjoyment I get from my clubs. You
have to experience it for yourself, but I would encourage anyone to
get just one club and hang on to it. Hit some balls with it now and
then and imagine walking with Jones or Hagen at Brookline or Merion.
Or, having to lay a niblick stone dead to win the Open at Fresh
Meadow. But I digress, back to the present.
This year’s gathering
of golf teachers from all over the world occurred at the Boulder
Creek Golf Club and the Boulder City municipal course just east of
Las Vegas. If you are a member of our fine organization and have not
participated in a U.S. or World Cup, you are missing something truly
remarkable. I have been making the annual journey since 1996, and
have witnessed a steady increase in the quality and depth of our
membership. Several scoring records were set, and my congratulations
to the winners in each division. I guess one could even say that I
established a record in shooting the lowest score using 1900
equipment in a modern tournament.
We played both
courses twice over the four days of competition. The style of play
required on each course certainly highlights the difference in golf
today and that of years ago. Boulder Creek is an exquisitely
maintained resort facility with nary a blade of grass out of place.
The holes are long, mostly straight, with large rolling greens. It
pretty much forces you to play one way, high shots with lots of spin
to hold the firm putting surfaces. Oh, and their nachos aren’t bad
either.
Boulder City, on the
other hand, is pure municipal, not the most pristine, but offering
an infinite variety of shots while navigating your way from tee to
green. I loved it. I would have been happy to play it everyday.
There was community there and regulars, many of them oldtimers, but
I saw the gleam in their eyes as I approached in my
plus-fours, shirt, tie and clubs in tow. A little smile, from which
I surmised they were recalling some memory of their own golfing past
as they complimented me on my wardrobe.
As for my play, I
submitted scores of 84, 76, 82, and 79. Rounds that would have won
the first U.S. Open played over 72 holes in 1898. All in all, I held
my own. Even averaging about 210 off the tee, it was not my long
game that let me down. My putting was atrocious. My day-to-day
average is 29 putts per round. In the desert it was 34, 34, 36, and
38. Sure, there is more pressure, but a four-putt and 10 three-putts
are inexcusable. Just averaging 30 putts a round would have placed
me in the top ten in the U.S. Senior and 4th in World Cup Senior. I
certainly know what I have to work on if I want to get back to the
winner’s circle as I did in 2004.
And back I‘ll be, God
willing, same clubs and a few new outfits. Until we next meet, good
teaching, and I surely hope you hit them far and sure.
Mike Stevens is a
member of the USGTF and golf pro at MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa,
Florida. He was the 2004 U.S Golf Teachers Senior Champion and the
2005 National Hickory Champion. For information on obtaining hickory
golf clubs, go to
www.tadmooregolf.com or
www.louisvillegolf.com. To find out about hickory golf
tournaments around the globe, go to
www.hickorygolfers.com.
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