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sixcat

 
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Posts posted by sixcat

  1. 14 hours ago, revkev said:

    Did anyone catch the story about Xander’s dad? I would reiterate that I don’t think it’s fair that people are making 100’s of millions of dollars for this event and the players get nothing. I’m all in on covering the expenses (which means reasonable salaries for organizers) and give the rest to mutually agreed upon charities. Then we’d have an event that was truly for the love of the game.

    Any bets on that happening? 

    Don't Ryder Cup participants currently get $200k donated in their name to the charity of their choice, all involved travel, room and board, clothing, and a team chef, ? What more do they want? Perform in the Ryder Cup and the ancillary benefits will be quite rewarding. You don't see Max Homa whining because he isn't being paid for every golf ball he hits. Xander and Cantlay (and Stephon) need to go away, in my opinion.

    What Xander is asking for is a bridge too far for me. He demanded a portion of the Netflix proceeds and refused to sign a waiver to appear on camera during filming. Which nearly led to him being removed from the team before he acquiesced.

    Several articles have been written suggesting Jamie Weir's reporting on Cantlay was dead-on with the exception of Presidents Cup players being paid. But since Weir got that one aspect wrong, Cantlay (and Team USA) tried to make everyone believe the whole thing was inaccurate. Kevin Van Valkenburg's piece on No Laying Up is the best of those pieces, in my opinion. https://nolayingup.com/blog/sunday-scenes-from-the-2023-ryder-cup

    Outside of Max Homa, the US Team is largely unlikable for me and have been for quite some time. Just my opinion. 

    Money, it's gonna ruin sports! ~OB Keeler~

  2. 49 minutes ago, RickyBobby_PR said:

    I would expect that most fitters during the busy season are doing 6-10 fittings a day over the course of 8-10 hour work day.

    I doubt my head pro/GM is doing 10 fittings all summer. Small club, small shop, only serves members. Membership is capped at 400. 80% of which would never get fit because they don’t play often enough or think they play well enough to see benefit. 
     

    Mill River pricing plays a huge role as well. Everything in the shop is 10% over wholesale, straight from the OEM. 

  3. 2 hours ago, Hook DeLoft said:

    My idea of a good fitting for irons would include hitting at least 3 different lofts

    My last fitting mentioned above with my head professional, I hit everything from 3-iron down to 9-iron plus 5 or 6 different lofted wedges in several different shaft options. The fitting pretty much took all day but was loads of fun. I learned a lot about gapping (as it pertains to my game) through the process.

    As @RickyBobby_PRsaid, it probably costs a bit more and I'm not certain that added cost would be worth the end result from a brick-and-mortar location but I'm probably jaded by my experience 25 years ago. Admittedly, I'm fortunate enough to be a member of a club where these services are offered to the membership and it certainly has its benefits. We're also fortunate to have a head pro / GM that enjoys doing it and is very good at it. With that said, we only have select brands available to us, although they have pretty much every corner of the market covered in Ping, Titleist, TaylorMade and Callaway. 

    If memory serves, I paid a little over $2,000 and in return, got PING i210 (4-PW), PING Glide 3.0 wedges (50*, 54* & 58*), Titleist TSi2 with HZRDUS Smoke Black RDX shaft. I'm sure it would have been a lot more in a brick-and-mortar location. It probably helps cut cost that the head pro / GM is ordering directly from his OEM reps, which eliminates rack-rate mark-ups. Another benefit of membership in a "mill river" stock/equity club. 

  4. My first fitting was in a small "mom and pop" golf shop in Roanoke Virginia probably 25 years ago. I didn't have any preconceived notions going in. Fitting wasn't nearly as big a thing in those days. Looking back on that experience now, I'm reasonably certain the "fitter" fit me into what he had in stock thinking he had a guaranteed sale. I think I kept the driver 2-months. The irons had the shortest life span of any I've ever owned. I got rid of the entire set by the end of that first summer. Based on this experience, I balked anytime anyone mentioned fitting.

    I wasn't fit again until April 2021. Completely different experience. I was fit by the head professional / GM of my home club, where I've been a member for 17 years. I'll not do it any other way going forward. Just an absolutely delightful experience. Still have the entire set in play.

  5. My kids gave me my first pair of True's for Christmas in 2021. Everything else I own has been sitting in my garage (New Balance and FJ Pro SL). I track rounds on a spreadsheet I have set up in my office. I average about 135 rounds a year since my kids have gotten older and self sufficient.

    Based on that, I'm guessing I have more than 200 rounds on those True's. I am currently about to buy a new pair. It's doubtful I try anything else for the foreseeable future. I love the fit, feel, comfort and durability of the True's.

  6. 5 minutes ago, RickyBobby_PR said:

    Right he switched to the latest model because the old one was too hot. The new model wasn’t working out for him so he switched back to the previous model with a new head so that it passed the test 

    Still not accurate. 

    https://www.golfmonthly.com/news/report-rory-mcilroy-drove-beautifully-on-augusta-national-visit-after-equipment-change

     

    First paragraph excerpt!

    "Per The Golf Channel’s Todd Lewis, McIlroy is said to have driven the ball “beautifully” during the two rounds last week following the reported change where he apparently used a shorter driver shaft while retaining his TaylorMade Stealth 2 head."

     

    Collin Morikawa went to a previous TM driver. Rory has been trying to find a TM Stealth 2 head that is similar in performance to the one he used for the past year. Which he felt was getting to the point of not passing COR testing by the PGA Tour. Not because of lost distance but lost accuracy. 

    Excerpt from the first article I linked.

    “These driver heads are so finicky, it’s hard to get one exactly the same. I’m obviously trying my best, trying to get something that’s as close to what I had last year. I have just struggled a little bit off the tee the last couple weeks.”

  7. 56 minutes ago, RickyBobby_PR said:

    he just switched to an older model driver because it has a hotter face and better distance 

    Well, this just isn't even remotely true!!!

    https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2023/mar/09/rory-mcilroy-laments-change-of-driver-golf-poor-start-at-players-championship

     

    Excerpt from the linked article. 

    McIlroy said: “I went to that new driver in Riviera, and it’s just not … look, I wish I could use my driver from last year but I can’t just because if you use a driver for so long, basically it just wouldn’t pass the test. The more a club is used, the more it’s hit, the more springy the face becomes. These driver heads are so finicky, it’s hard to get one exactly the same. I’m obviously trying my best, trying to get something that’s as close to what I had last year. I have just struggled a little bit off the tee the last couple weeks.”

     

    Understanding his old driver would likely fail the COR test done by the PGA Tour, he started trying to find a replacement and hasn't been able to find anything that suits him.

  8. 16 minutes ago, RickyBobby_PR said:

    This would make the usga look like the elite douches everyone thinks they are.

    I also don’t think they would go that route over a MLR. But again if they did they would look bad.

    The PGA tour could then turnaround and say that the FedEx cup points for the US Open will ne reduced and that the tour will no longer recognize the us open as a major. 

    The PGA Tour doesn’t dictate or decide what defines a major. Which is why they don’t have one!

  9. I see a lot of people using other sports to justify anger toward the USGA. Here's a few thoughts.

    "Is the NBA going to raise the rim to 11 feet?" - Golf courses have been lengthening for two decades thus, "raising the rim" in a golf sense. The NBA has moved the 3-point line four times, widened the lane twice, governed the way defense can be played, and shortened the shot clock in the past 30 years. The NBA, college basketball and high school basketball all use a different 3-point line and high school uses a narrower lane. 

    "Are we going to lengthen the mile because runners are running it faster." - Again, golf courses have lengthened for two decades so, in a sense, yes, golf is lengthening the mile for the players at the highest levels of the game. To use a more apt running analogy, limits in the design of track shoes were imposed in 2001 for elite amateur and professional competitions, effectively creating a bifurcated set of rules for track and field. 

    The PGA Tour will vote against this policy and will play by our own rules." - That's certainly the PGA Tour's prerogative. The USGA will simple remove automatic qualifications extended to PGA Tour players for all USGA Championships. PGA Tour players will then be forced to go through qualifying to play in the US Open.

    The issue with this situation, as I see it, is the USGA should have done this 20 years ago before things got out of hand! 

     

  10. Please take a moment to read the article published by The Firepit Collective and Ryan French (MondayQInfo). This is my hometown. My home golf club. My daughters high school. I reached out to Ryan on Twitter a few weeks ago to help spread the word to raise funds to get these kids to the PGA of America National Invitational in July at the new PGA of America headquarters in Frisco, TX. Ryan did more that that. He wrote this article, started a GoFundMe, and donated a large sum of money out of his own pocket. 

    Thank you,

  11. 5 hours ago, berkeleybob said:

    I’m only on episode 3, and I’m going to speculate—pro golfers do not fly commercial for the sake of their clubs.

    Ian Poulter lit a bunch of money on fire flying private from Florida to London to Florida to Tulsa to Florida to..........in episode 3. I lost count of all the private flights he took in that episode. No wonder he signed with LIV. It was either that or sell some of his car collection. 

  12. 1 hour ago, Clay5477 said:

    Watched the first five episodes last night. I thought it was absolutely great!!

    Local note: I live in the small town area that Joel Dahmen and his caddie Geno Benalli are from. I know Geno personally. Just to let you know what an absolute stick he is, he has the course record at the local club I used to belong to: 61. Sixty-one!!!

    And Joel has the course record where I now belong: 61!!

    Guess which episode is my favorite so far! Watching the rest today, before Tiger tees off.

    My favorite episode as well.

    Joel on Sunday of the US Open: “I told my dad that we’re pregnant this morning.”

    Geno: “Awww, happy Father’s Day. What did he say?”

    Joel: “A rather subtle, your life’s about to get so much harder.”

  13. 1 hour ago, GolfSpy_SAM said:

    Holy hell! You're an action star!

      Also, this quote legit made me laugh out loud, as I've never seen a more stereotypical-Southern thing in print:  "``I looked up at it and, `Shew!' A shiny piece of metal flew off. It looked like the wing. And he just flew straight up, and I saw this big huge fire come off the top of the jet,'' Taylor said."

      "Shew!" is going to be my word of the day. 

    I wouldn't say I'm an action star. Maybe an inaction star. I didn't do anything but witness this stuff. The county the plane crashed in is two counties over from where I live and one county over from where I was playing that day. For reference, it's the same county the events leading to the movie "Lawless" came from.

    It's common for the military to fly training missions all over the mountains of southwest Virginia. Some of the ridge-lines can be several hundred feet high, as is the case with the beginning section of the back side of my home club. Planes coming over the top of that ridge-line will scare the hell out of you. You cannot hear them coming. They come over the mountain right overhead, and you feel like the world is caving in around you.

  14. On 12/30/2022 at 10:22 AM, Kenny B said:

    I'm not really a "tailored" kind of golfer since I don't play country clubs.  I also hate the look of some of the pants that I see on the DP World Tour events from some European pros.  I don't think the tapered lags look good on them, and I know they wouldn't look good on me!! 🤣  tweedledee & treedledum

    TWeedle01cap-954917457.jpeg.8acaf914679311c9ed14a20ecc2516a9.jpeg

     

    Don’t read too much into the term “tailored” in general. I don’t like the “skinny jeans” look myself. It’s just a little more involved than chopping off and inch and giving it a hem. 
     

    I can’t stand the short rise in modern pants so I buy a size bigger waist and have them “tailored” to fit in the legs. I’m generally right in between a 32 and 34 inseam (33 is almost impossible to find) so the inseam gets adjusted to match. The lady that does it for me is a magician. I find them to fit, feel and look better and it generally costs me $10 a pair for the “tailored” look.

  15. 16 hours ago, tony@CIC said:

    I've done it in the past - golf pants generally taper towards the bottom and the y never seem to look right after being tailored. . 

    If that's your experience, your pants aren't being tailored. They are being cut and hemmed. Very big difference. 

    I have watched mine get tailored on occasion. For every half-inch they take off in length, they take an equal amount off in taper beginning in the crotch area and tapering down to the leg opening. To be honest, the end result looks better than the factory issued pants. It's a cleaner, more tailored look. The fascinating thing is, it hasn't cost me that much more than having them cut and hemmed. 

  16. 3 hours ago, AzRoger said:

    My experiment using New Balance trail running shoes while golfing didn't work out like I had hoped. I have wide feet and have trouble finding wide golf shoes that fit good, even the wide Footjoys seem too narrow in the toe box. I always walk when playing my home course and the NB TR shoes were very comfortable to walk in, and gave good traction while swinging, but they just weren't built for the stresses that are placed on a shoe when golfing. The outside side seams on the left shoe (right handed golfer) where it meets the sole started ripping after a couple months.

    I had the same experience with two pair of Adidas Ultraboost. Outstanding to walk in. Good grip and stability considering it's a running shoe. But I destroyed two pair in 6-month. The outside of the left shoe and inside of the right shoe were completely detached in 3-months. At $180 a pair, I can't afford to do that again. 

    A good friend has strongly recommended Ecco Biom C4 and H4. I think I will try a pair of those this spring. I have a couple old pair of golf shoes I can get through the winter with. 

  17. My daughter and I attended a few LPGA events in person this year including the US Women's Open at Pine Needles. Attending events in person really showcases how the women do a significantly better job of engaging and interacting with fans than the men do. Maybe that's partly out of necessity. Maybe it's the fact that women are just better at engaging as a whole than men. Regardless of the reasons, it was noticed and appreciated. 

    As a result, I found myself watching the LPGA much more than I ever have in the past. 

  18. 24 minutes ago, LICC said:

    What did Palmer put his name on that was so much more successful than Jack, other than the drink? I never saw Arnold Palmer clothing or clubs as any big brand. Jack's course design business has been far bigger and more lucrative than Arnie's was. Arnie had a good course operations and management firm, but nothing tremendous. Arnie did great with endorsement deals, about as good as any golfer (and most any professional athlete).

    Come on man, read a book sometime. You might learn something. From a business perspective, Nicklaus has more in common with Gary Player than Arnold Palmer. 

    Several Nicklaus companies executives were convicted of securities fraud in 2003. His personal construction firm (Paragon) was dissolved for numerous acts of fraud. You think they are falsifying records and hiding Golden Bear loses for themselves? Why do you think the company is no longer called Golden Bear Enterprises?

    sources: https://www.espn.com/golf/story?id=1525954  https://www.golfchannel.com/article/golf-channel-newsroom/golf-exec-sentenced-fraud

     

    His real estate and course design dealings left him bankrupt in the 1980's and kept him designing to pay off old debts well into the new century. 

    sources: https://www.referenceforbusiness.com/history2/66/Nicklaus-Companies.html  https://www.independent.ie/world-news/heavy-losses-blow-jack-nicklaus-businesses-off-course-26182170.html

     

    Arnold Palmer Enterprises will be financially secure based solely on the creation of IMG for decades to come. The umbrella is everywhere from clothing to shoes to luggage to snacks to drinks, etc. 

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