Golf Blogger’s Square Table Discusion – 2014 Masters (Video)

Written by: Tony Korologos | Tuesday, April 15th, 2014
Categories: Golf MediaGolf VideosPGA TourPro GolfRory McIloryThe MastersTiger Woods

Last night was the second edition of the Golf Blogger’s Square Table Discussion, a live Google Hangout on air.  This is a new thing I’ve been putting together in the hopes of producing some new, interesting content.  Last night’s discussion was regarding the 2014 Masters Tournament, with a bit of 2014 U.S. Open thrown in.  Participants in the chat were Doug Farrick from Golf Dash, Jay Flemma from Cybergolf and his own website, Rob Hayashida from Sandbox8 and myself.

Check it out:

I plan to do these at relevant times during the golf season, such as before and after all major championships.  We may also talk equipment, apparel, the game, instruction, and other subjects at random times during the year so stay tuned.

I’m also using the hangouts for interviews, which is quite fun.  Watch for more interviews coming soon.


2014 Masters Commentary

Written by: Tony Korologos | Monday, April 14th, 2014
Categories: European TourPGA TourPro GolfRory McIloryThe Masters

The Masters never disappoints. Never.

This year’s Masters had quite a different feel to it, not because Tiger Woods was missing or because the 17th was missing the Eisenhower pine. The conditions seemed ripe for scoring, but the greens were so fantastically speedy and difficult it made low numbers and low scores tough to come by. The winning score by Bubba Watson, was -8.

Player Comments

Bubba Watson

Bubba Watson

One might have been able to say that Bubba Watson’s first Masters win was fluke, luck, or somesuch thing. That same person might argue we would not hear much from him again, or that he’d never win another major. Now that Mr. Watson (as Jordan Spieth called him) has two green jackets, one must call that a trend and not a fluke.

Bubba is obviously a freak player with perhaps the highest level of raw golf talent I’ve seen squeezed into one human body. Some guys are long. I know plenty of locals who can hit it as far or farther than Bubba does. Some guys (like me) can only putt. Some guys can only curve the ball, or can only curve it one way. Some guys can only perform well in the short game area. Bubba has it all: length, ability to curve the ball any direction, short game touch, creativity, great putting. He has the whole package. It doesn’t look all that great during the swing, but the results are indisputable. Perhaps the fact that he doesn’t have a swing coach and had little to no formal training, is what makes him able to even consider trying shots the average tour pro would not.

Jordan SpiethJordan Spieth

Choo choo! Join me on the Jordan Spieth bandwagon! How do you not like a 20 year old kid who nearly wins the Masters? He had a two-stroke lead with 11 holes to play. The hype is not hype. This kid is real and he will do some damage to the tour in the wins and the majors columns. Book it.

This week we a great learning experience for Spieth.

Jonas Blixt

I’ll admit not knowing much about Jonas Blixt, until this week. I’m a fan now. He will be a force on tour. Book it.

Matt Kuchar

On his 3rd hole Matt Kuchar shared the lead with Spieth. I started imagining him in a green jacket and I liked the look. Of all the players this past week, Kuchar impressed me most with his short game. His putting though, especially on the 4th hole where he four putted, had some issues. The four-putt was too much to overcome.

Miguel Angel Jimenez

Guess who shot the lowest round of the tournament, by TWO shots? Yup, the most interesting golfer in the world, Miguel Angel Jimenez. Miguel was close to the lead for most the tournament and boy what a cool story that would have been if he managed to win at 50 years old.

Some day I hope to sit down with Miguel and have a glass of red wine and smoke a cigar with him. That would be one of life’s coolest experiences.

And how about those aviator sunglasses?  No Oakley style wrap-arounds for this guy.

Rickie Fowler

I gained a little more respect for Rickie Fowler this week. He showed quite a bit of grit and ended up tied for 5th on a course which I didn’t think really suited his game. And I was glad he didn’t go full-on traffic cone orange in the final round. The plaid pants were great.

Someone kill me now.  I just commented on a player’s apparel selection.  No really…kill me.

Rory McIloryRory McIlory

Rory McIlory was the favorite coming into the week. He barely made the cut, on the number. We haven’t seen his game at its best for quite a while now, back to around 2012 and the PGA Championship perhaps.

McIlory was “first out” on Saturday morning, not where a player wants to be. First out means last on the leaderboard. Since he was essentially a single as the field was whiddled down to an odd number, Rory had to play with a marker. The marker was a member of Augusta National Golf Club. McIlroy himself was humored, as was I, that the marker beat him by one shot with a 70.

When his game is at its best there is nobody in the world who can beat McIlory.  When his game is not at its best, amateurs can beat him apparently.

Fred Couples

Fred Couples had himself in contention most of the week, keeping the fans very happy. It seems to be a yearly thing now.  Freddy’s length, even in his mid 50’s, is amazing. I don’t expect his back or his body to last all 72 holes, and he did end up out of the running when he knocked his 2nd shot in the water on the par-4 11th in the final round.

Cut

What an amazing group of players this year who missed the cut:

Sergio Garcia, Luke Donald, Jason Dufner, Graeme McDowell, Angel Cabrera, Keegan Bradley, Dustin Johnson.

None of those missed cuts were as surprising as Phil Mickelson. Phil struggled with rounds of 76 and 73 Thursday and Friday. He mentioned that he might stay and watch the action as his “punishment.”  I’d like to be punished by having to watch the Masters on Saturday and Sunday too.  How can we make that happen?

Masters Augusta

The Course

Knowing Augusta like I do, having been there several times, makes watching from the comfort of the couch much more entertaining. It is as beautiful as everyone says, if not more. It is more hilly than anyone might imagine, and every blade of grass is perfectly cut. There is not a weed in 360 acres.

Watching the best players in the world deal with the amazing greens at Augusta National was a four day long treat. I gained great respect for the short games of the likes of Jonas Blixt, Bubba Watson, and especially Matt Kuchar. Kuchar hit a shot from the back of the par-5 15th on Saturday which was truly amazing. Though I’m a 2-handicap, I think I could have thrown a bucket of balls down back there and never gotten a shot that close.

Conclusion

The final round was a bit different, most of the excitement coming on the front nine this year, as opposed to the back nine. “The Masters doesn’t start until the FRONT nine on Sunday,” I suppose.

This tournament was free of idiots yelling “mashed potatoes” and free of the Back9Networks of the world posting their TMZ style pictures of hot tour wives.  Now back to our regularly scheduled trash.

One positive, ending thought: Only 360 days until the 2015 Masters.

Can’t wait.


2014 Masters Tournament Final Leader Board

Written by: Tony Korologos | Sunday, April 13th, 2014
Categories: Champions TourEuropean TourPGA TourPro GolfRory McIloryThe Masters
POS Player To Par R1 R2 R3 R4 Total
1 Bubba Watson -8 69 68 74 69 280
T2 Jonas Blixt -5 70 71 71 71 283
T2 Jordan Spieth -5 71 70 70 72 283
4 Miguel Angel Jimenez -4 71 76 66 71 284
T5 Rickie Fowler -2 71 75 67 73 286
T5 Matt Kuchar -2 73 71 68 74 286
7 Lee Westwood -1 73 71 70 73 287
T8 Bernhard Langer E 72 74 73 69 288
T8 Rory McIlroy E 71 77 71 69 288
T8 Jimmy Walker E 70 72 76 70 288
T8 John Senden E 72 68 75 73 288
T8 Kevin Stadler E 70 73 72 73 288
T8 Thomas Bjorn E 73 68 73 74 288
T14 Stewart Cink 1 73 72 76 68 289
T14 Jamie Donaldson 1 73 70 76 70 289
T14 Henrik Stenson 1 73 72 74 70 289
T14 Adam Scott 1 69 72 76 72 289
T14 Justin Rose 1 76 70 69 74 289
T14 Jim Furyk 1 74 68 72 75 289
T20 Bill Haas 2 68 78 74 70 290
T20 Jason Day 2 75 73 70 72 290
T20 Chris Kirk 2 75 72 71 72 290
T20 Ian Poulter 2 76 70 70 74 290
T20 Fred Couples 2 71 71 73 75 290
25 Louis Oosthuizen 3 69 75 75 72 291
T26 Joost Luiten 4 75 73 77 67 292
T26 Steven Bowditch 4 74 72 74 72 292
T26 Hunter Mahan 4 74 72 74 72 292
T26 Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano 4 75 69 74 74 292
T26 Gary Woodland 4 70 77 69 76 292
T31 Martin Kaymer 5 75 72 73 73 293
T31 Russell Henley 5 73 70 75 75 293
T31 Steve Stricker 5 72 73 73 75 293
T34 Stephen Gallacher 6 71 72 81 70 294
T34 K.J. Choi 6 70 75 78 71 294
T34 Jose Maria Olazabal 6 74 74 73 73 294
T37 Brandt Snedeker 7 70 74 80 71 295
T37 Billy Horschel 7 75 72 75 73 295
T37 Thongchai Jaidee 7 73 74 75 73 295
T37 Brendon de Jonge 7 74 72 76 73 295
T37 Vijay Singh 7 75 71 74 75 295
T42 Lucas Glover 8 75 69 77 75 296
T42 Kevin Streelman 8 72 71 74 79 296
T44 Sandy Lyle 9 76 72 76 73 297
T44 Mike Weir 9 73 72 79 73 297
T44 Nick Watney 9 72 75 76 74 297
T44 Thorbjorn Olesen 9 74 72 76 75 297
T44 Darren Clarke 9 74 74 73 76 297
49 Oliver Goss 10 76 71 76 75 298
50 Francesco Molinari 11 71 76 76 76 299
51 Larry Mize 16 74 72 79 79 304

McIlory Steals My Sunday Apparel Script

Written by: Tony Korologos | Sunday, April 13th, 2014
Categories: Golf ApparelGolf GearPro GolfRory McIloryThe Masters

I decided to vary slightly on my Masters apparel script for this week. After three straight days the socks and underwear were getting just about as crusty as the Sunday greens will be at Augusta National Golf Club.

I decided to put a fresh shirt in play today, the new Nike Lightweight Innovation Color Men’s Golf Polo. Today is my first look at it.  The fabric on this polo is amazing. Very soft and silky.  The trim of the shirt and the detail areas are crafted with high precision.

My Sunday Masters apparel script shirt… click to see more

I noticed in early online broadcasts of Sunday’s final round of the 2014 Masters that Rory McIlory is wearing the SAME exact shirt.  Rory obviously reads HOG and was so impressed with the sharp looks of this polo that he decided he’d wear the same one.  Nice play Rory.

Here’s a link to more pictures of this polo and other 2014 Masters apparel from Nike.

From Nike here’s a list of the features and benefits:

BENEFITS
Dri-FIT fabric to wick away sweat and help keep you dry and comfortable
Fold-over collar and button placket for classic polo styling
Contrast sleeves and collar for style
Laser-cut chest pocket for storage and a streamlined look

PRODUCT DETAILS
Fabric: Dri-FIT 100% recycled polyester
Machine wash
Imported

FEATURED DRI-FIT TECHNOLOGY
This high-performance, microfiber, polyester fabric wicks sweat away from the body and moves it to the fabric surface, where it evaporates. As a result, Dri-FIT fabric helps you stay dry and comfortable.


Gone But Not Forgotten – Masters Apparel Scripts Which Met An Early Death

Written by: Tony Korologos | Sunday, April 13th, 2014
Categories: BoneheadsPro GolfThe Masters

With sadness in my heart I’ve pondered where the poor sad golf apparel scripts of players who missed the Masters cut go. After some research, I found out.

Dead 2014 Masters Apparel Scripts

Sniff sniff… So much creativity and hard work (and billable client PR time) has gone to waste. Gone before their time. Gone, but not forgotten.


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