EDITORâS NOTEBOOK: Wedging in some respect for golf
Maybe I owe my friend Brian Robin an apology.
For probably a year when we worked the Sunday shift at one of the Inland Valley papers for the Times, we used to have the âIs golf really a sport?â argument. We both share a deep love of sports, but when it came to golf the discussion usually devolved into smack-talking.
âHow can golf be a sport if a fat guy like John Daly is a champion athlete? I mean, youâd think all that walking around the golf course would help him shed some pounds. Oh wait, they donât actually walk. They use those little motor scooters.â
This would usually be enough to work BR, as most of his friends like to call him, up into a mouth-frothing rant about the intricacy of a golf swing and how so many golfers are now workout fiends.
âYeah, yeah, yeah,â Iâd say. âLetâs face it. Itâs basically pool with a club and a lot of grass. Footballâs a real sport. Guys put on body armor and slam into each other at full speed. You could die playing football. I guess you could die playing golf, too, if youâre out of shape and you get heat stroke strolling through the park...â
And on it went.
So when I called Brian recently because heâs handling some of the media for the Toshiba Classic tournament this week, we both thought it would be amusing if I asked Newport Beach Country Club golf pro Paul Hahn for a lesson. Hahn, being such a good sport, squeezed me in Wednesday.
âThis is basically a fish-out-of-water thing,â I explained to him. âCan you take a city boy who has never played golf and show him a few things? Itâs all supposed to be tongue-in-cheek.â
Trust me, the closest I ever got to the links is miniature golf. It wasnât exactly on the agenda ever with my group of friends in the neighborhood. We spent hours, sometimes from sun up to sundown on the weekends, playing sandlot football, baseball, basketball, soccer and even field hockey.
But Iâm the city editor for the Pilot, Toshiba is one of the most significant events we cover, and I figured I ought to take a closer look at the game, er, uh, sport.
Thatâs right. Iâm willing to capitulate now that I may have been too harsh.
First of all, Hahn is an excellent teacher. Youâd do well to sign up for one of his lessons. He charges $60 for a half-hour tutorial.
Hahn took me out to a practice spot to learn a little about chipping. He teaches golf âfrom the inside out,â meaning he wants his students to learn the short game first. Then you can learn how to whack it as far as possible. If you arenât successful at chipping on to the green or putting it will never matter how far you can club it from the tee, he said.
I really didnât understand how much actually went into each swing. Stand up straight, but bend the knees a little. Put your butt out like youâre resting on a stool, but not sitting on it. Keep the left arm straight to the ball, pull it back a little, but keep the wrist straight. Work your right elbow like a hinge. Then bring the club through, but chip the ground before hitting the ball.
Man, I thought, thatâs a lot to remember. He kept telling me to get closer to the ball. When I was just practice swinging I did it pretty much right, but then when I had to hit the ball â a different story. I drove one of the first balls too far, drawing some chuckles from the other golfers. That bummed me out. OK, so it started out tongue-in-cheek, but I canât help it when it comes to sports â Iâm really competitive, and my worst nightmare is embarrassing myself. So I tried to focus more and hit a few of them OK. The main problem is trying to remember that complex sequence of instructions to hit it right.
I tried not to waste much more of Hahnâs time with the chipping, although I was starting to enjoy it, so I continued with the interview.
âTell it to me straight. For someone who never golfed before, was I that bad?â
âOh no,â he said, shaking his head and then adding with a chuckle. âIâve definitely seen worse. I think a few of them were on my Pro-Am team on Monday.â
âWhat would it take for me to get decent enough to go golfing with company executives or something?â
Three months of weekly half-hour lessons and practice three times a week would probably do it, Hahn said.
Sounds tempting, I thought. But Iâve been bowling a lot lately, too, and since Iâve been averaging about 150 and racking up some 200-plus games Iâd like to join a league. Iâd never have enough time for both. Well, Iâll think about it.
In fact, golf really is like any other sport. The key being a lot of practice to develop that muscle memory. A golf swing is a lot like a baseball swing. The important thing is to learn the fundamentals from great teachers like Hahn and then you can expand on it, making it your own swing. In other words, whatever works. But donât try something new until youâve learned the basics.
One of the pitfalls of teaching, Hahn said, is some students will either not put in the practice time or theyâll start taking advice from other golfers.
âThen itâs just too many cooks in the kitchen,â he said.
As for that apology, yep, I called Brian after I got back in the office.
âYouâve finally come to your senses,â he said.
We compared notes about how tough it is to consistently hit a golf ball. He still thinks itâs the hardest thing to do in sports, but I donât know â hitting a major-league curveball has always seemed much more difficult.
âLook, just to give you an idea how tough it is, weâve got two players in our field, Ben Crenshaw and Nick Price, who combined have won five major tournaments on the PGA. And neither of them have won the champions tour yet,â Robin said. âOh wait, and you can add Mark OâMeara, who has two major championships.â
It may be a senior tour, âbut these guys are still brutally competitive out here,â Robin said.
Brian won once on âJeopardy.â Iâd do well to just nod my head more often that not, but what can I say? Iâm a reporter. I like to argue.
City Editor PAUL ANDERSON may be reached at (714) 966-4633 or at [email protected]. You can read more on this story here.
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