2012 Hooked On Golf Blog Turkey Of The Year Awards

Written by: Tony Korologos | Monday, December 3rd, 2012
Categories: BoneheadsMiscellaneousSite News

Wow I can’t believe it is December 3rd.  Before I award the 2012 Turkeys of the Year I should give myself one for posting this late.  I typically like to post the TOY awards on Thanksgiving.  Needless to say my schedule has completely changed with the birth of my new son, baby Seve.  Not much sleep around here lately.

For those who may be new to HOG, I’ve been awarding the Turkey of the Year awards now since clear back in 2005!  Previous winners include John Daly, Sergio Garcia, Tiger Woods…

And now, the 2012 HOG Turkey Awards.  The envelope please…

#10: Facebalk

Many golfers and golf companies use Facebook to interact with their fans.  I do too.  To date HOG has built up a little over 1400 fans.  For a small while I paid Facebook to advertise the HOG Facebook page and gain more traction and fans.  But recent changes in Facebook’s algorithm have me turned off.  Those changes in the last few months mean that companies (like mine) who post status updates will only see a small fraction of their fans reading them. They admit to 15%, but that is a high number in my experience.  I’ve found that posts with outgoing links have even less exposure.  I worked hard to gain fans and even paid to advertise and gain likes, but I can’t reach them now?  To the contrary.  I can reach them if I PAY to promote them.  This could be the beginning of the death of Facebook.

#9: Mashed Potatoes

“Get in the hole!” “You’re the man!” “Mashed potatoes!”  If you yell this in a PGA Tour event, you are an idiot.  Idiot hecklers like this get a TOY award.  I especially hate it when some idiot yells “get in the hole” when Tiger Woods tees off on a par-5…  Boneheads.  Do us all a favor and SHUT UP.  It stopped being funny about a million years ago.

#8: PGA Tour / Host Venues

The PGA Tour and its host venues receive a Turkey award for not removing the above mentioned “get in the hole” boneheads.

#7: Chicken Man

I know he was pretending to be a chicken, but the guy who danced in front of the Ryder Cup ceremony is a turkey.  And I’m not posting his photo here.  Too much press for this bonehead already.

#6: Phil Mickelson

Phil Mickelson was looking good at the 2012 Masters at -8 in the beginning of the final round, until he arrived at the 4th hole.  Phil chose to hack an errant shot from the shrubbery right handed (he is left handed).  Phil ended up carding a triple-bogey, finishing TWO shots behind eventual winner Bubba Watson.  Do the math.

#5: John Daly

I’m so used to putting John Daly in the Turkey of the Year awards I’m doing it this time out of habit.  Aside from a putter toss, JD has been a relatively good boy this year.  He has even played some good golf.

#4: I.K. Kim

The LPGA’s I.K. Kim had a 12″ putt to win the first major of the year, the Kraft Nabisco.  Instead, she blocked the putt right and entered a playoff with Sun Young Yoo.  Yoo won the playoff.

#3: Adam Scott

Adam Scott looked invincible for 68 holes at the 2012 British Open.  Then he recorded four straight bogeys to finish, leaving him one shot behind Ernie Els.  This was the best shot at winning a major Scott has ever had, and may ever have.  For all the talk about the anchored putter and the “advantage” a player has with one, it didn’t seem to help Adam down the stretch.

#2: Jim Furyk

What a year for Jim Furyk.  Jim’s nerves got the best of him when he hooked his tee shot on the par-5 16th in the U.S. Open.  The player who looked like a lock to win his second Open limped home, dropping the victory in the lap of Webb Simpson, who had finished earlier.  It was tempting to give the TV coverage a turkey in this event too.  If they covered any shot Webb hit in the final round, I must have been in the bathroom for it.

And the TURKEY OF THE YEAR award goes to… drumroll…

Ryder Cup 2012 Medinah#1: USA Ryder Cup Team – Meltdown at Medinah

This year’s #1 Turkey of the Year is the USA Ryder Cup team.  Blowing a huge 10-6 lead in front of their home crowd almost seemed impossible, but that’s why they play the game.  Europe wins

HONORABLE MENTION: Lance Armstrong

I reserve the Turkey of the Year awards for the golf world. This year I have to give an honorable mention award to Lance Armstrong, who was stripped of his billion Tour De France titles because of performance enhancing drug (PED) use.

 


Happy St. Andrews Day

Written by: Tony Korologos | Friday, November 30th, 2012
Categories: Golf LifeLifeMiscellaneous

St. Andrews Road Hole BunkerMost HOG readers know I have a big place in my heart for the “Auld Grey Toon,” the home of golf, St. Andrews.  St. Andrews is one of the coolest towns in the world, if not THE coolest.  The whole place is about golf.  I’ve made one trip there so far, back in 2011 with three great pals.  We are pictured right in the Road Hole bunker.  At the time we had planned on saving up our dough and going back in 2014.  Having experienced the town and the golf in St. Andrews I vetoed the proposition of coming back three years later to do it again.  That was way too long to wait.  The guys agreed and we will be back there in July of 2013 again.  We have our first tee time on the Old Course at 1:40 p.m., July 3rd.

St. Andrews Day

Today is St. Andrews Day.  Happy St. Andrews day to HOG friends and patrons.

What is St. Andrews Day?  From Wikipedia:

St. Andrew’s Day is the feast day of Saint Andrew. It is celebrated on the 30th of November in Scotland.

Saint Andrew is the patron saint of Scotland, and St. Andrew’s Day (Scots: Saunt Andra’s Day, Scottish Gaelic: Latha Naomh Anndra) is Scotland’s official national day. In 2006, the Scottish Parliament designated St Andrew’s Day as an officialbank holiday.

Although most commonly associated with Scotland, at least in the English-speaking world, Saint Andrew is also the patron saint of Greece, Romania, Russia, Ukraine and the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople.[1]

In Germany, the feast day is celebrated as Andreasnacht (“St Andrew’s Night”), in Austria with the custom of Andreasgebet (“St Andrew’s Prayer”), and in Poland as Andrzejki (“Little Andrews”–diminutive).

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Andrew’s_Day


Golf On TV This Week

Written by: Tony Korologos | Thursday, November 29th, 2012
Categories: European TourPGA TourPro GolfTiger Woods

World Challenge presented by Northwestern Mutual
Dates: Nov. 29-Dec. 2
Venue: Sherwood Country Club, Thousand Oaks, Calif.

Golf Channel Airtimes (Eastern):
Thursday 3-6 p.m. (Live) / 8:30-11:30 p.m. (Replay)
Friday 3-6 p.m. (Live) / 8:30-11:30 p.m. (Replay)
Saturday 1-3 p.m. (Live) / 8:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. (Replay)
Sunday 1-3 p.m. (Live) / 8:30 p.m.-1:30 a.m. (Replay)

NBC Airtimes
Saturday 3-6 p.m. (Live)
Sunday 3-6 p.m. (Live)

Field

Tiger Woods, Bubba Watson, Nick Watney, Brandt Snedeker, Ian Poulter, Graeme McDowell, Dustin Johnson, Jim Furyk, Rickie Fowler, Jason Dufner, Keegan Bradley, Jason Day, Zach Johnson, Matt Kuchar, Hunter Mahan, Webb Simpson, Steve Stricker and Bo Van Pelt.

European Tour

Nedbank Golf Challenge

Dates: Nov. 29-Dec. 2
Venue: Gary Player Country Club, Sun City, South Africa

Golf Channel Airtimes (Eastern):
Thursday 9:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. (Tape Delay)
Friday 9:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m. (Tape Delay)
Saturday 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m. (Tape Delay)
Sunday 7:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. (Tape Delay)

Field

Notables in the field include Lee Westwood, Nicolas Colsaerts, Peter Hanson, Paul Lawrie, Garth Mulroy, Carl Pettersson, Charl Schwartzel, Bill Hass, Martin Kaymer, Francesco Molinari, Louis Oosthuizen and Justin Rose.


Golf’s Governing Bodies Drop Anchor On Long Putters

Written by: Tony Korologos | Wednesday, November 28th, 2012
Categories: (British) Open ChampionshipChampions TourEuropean TourGolfLPGA TourPGA ChampionshipPGA TourPro GolfTiger WoodsU.S. OPENUSGAWeb.com Tour

The governing bodies (USGA & R&A) have proposed a rule on anchoring clubs to the body, to be effective in January of 2016.  Just as I predicted in my post a few weeks ago, they did not ban any equipment or make any equipment rulings.  The act of anchoring a club to any part of one’s body is what will be become illegal.  You can keep your belly putter, so long as it isn’t anchored against your belly or any part of your body.

“As the governing body we are doing what we think is best for the game of golf, and this is our responsibility.”

You can keep your belly putter, so long as it isn’t anchored against your belly or any part of your body.

Below is the official press release from the USGA & R&A:

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Changes at St. Andrews’ Old Course Spark Heated Debates

Written by: Tony Korologos | Monday, November 26th, 2012
Categories: Golf CoursesMiscellaneous
Old Course Changes

17th Road Hole Changes Underway – click to see more

I keep close tabs on happenings at the Home of Golf, the Old Course in St. Andrews, Scotland.  Having gone there in 2011, I feel I have a close tie to the course and the town of St. Andrews.  I’ve got a couple of friends there, including my good friend John Boyne who is a caddie there as well as a St. Andrews tour operator with his company Caddie Golf Tours, helping folks just like me arrange their dream golf trip of a lifetime.

John has provided HOG readers with fantastic photographs of the Old Course, now undergoing some changes this winter as part of  “improving” the course in preparation for the 2015 (British) Open Championship.  I’ve quoted the news release text from the Open Championship website below.  Click read more link below to see it.

In a nutshell, the plan is to “enhance the challenge for elite players without unduly affecting club and visiting golfers while remaining true to the special character of the Old Course.”  Changes are detailed below, with the most debate regarding the 11th hole, where the green is to be altered to add a new pin position.

What’s your take?

As would be expected, there’s a large debate between those who think the course is sacred ground and should not be changed, and those who think that it is fine for the course to change over time to accommodate changes in technology.  That argument is one which has been going around for a long time now, still with no resolution.  They’re not going to “roll the ball back.”

I’d like to hear your opinions on this.  There’s a fairly heated discussion going on over on Geoff Shackelford’s blog.  I have a few questions to start it up:

Is tweaking the Old Course “repainting the Mona Lisa” as some have said?

Can we really expect golfers and golf manufacturers to buy into rolling back equipment, thus “saving” classic courses?

Do courses really need to make these tweaks to challenge pros who play there four days a year or in the case of the Old Course every five years?

The vibe I gathered when in St. Andrews is that the locals don’t like it when low scores are dropped on the Old.  Is the R&A Championship committee doing this to keep the Old Course respectable and prevent it from giving up low scores, 59’s or even 58’s?  If so, why care if the best in the world shoot super low scores?  Why does the course have to be changed because of that? In talks on Twitter with Robert Thompson, I liked his quote, “Or we can just stop worrying about some guy shooting 60. Why the need to protect par at the expense of courses?”

And perhaps the best question to ask is, “what would Old Tom Morris do?”

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