T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1609.1 | ....yawn....... | AIMHI::CORRIGAN | | Wed Dec 02 1992 19:09 | 12 |
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IMO.....
booooorrrriiiinnnnggggg...........Just doesn't have the name appeal
anymore.
Gimme Jack any day!!
Joe
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1609.2 | Recap | BTOVT::WILLIAMS_S_M | | Thu Dec 03 1992 08:13 | 19 |
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Payne Stewart won again 220,000
Fred Couples 210,000
Greg Norman 110,000
Tom Kite 0
The only real great moments took place on the par 3 17th.
Couples hit a big slicing snake that rolled to within 2 feet of the
hole, then Kite took it straight over the pin and backed it up to
within inches outside of Couples.
Then on the 1st playoff hole (The 17th again) they Stewart, Couples,
and Norman were all within 3 feet, and Kite was 8 feet away. Kite
missed, Norman missed, then Couples' putt bounced out of the hole, and
Stewart sank his for the win.
Shane
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1609.3 | yep, a snoozer | NHASAD::BLAISDELL | Rick, dtn 264-5414 | Thu Dec 03 1992 11:53 | 12 |
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The real star of this one was the course (The Bighorn). Goofy
golf at it's best. The undulating greens and breathtaking
views, which made the course unique was lost on the little
screen, however.
As for the players, you need contrasting personalities to make
a tournament such as this appealing and interesting. This year
they found four guys cut from the same mold (easy-going, steady,
methodical,quiet) and as Joe said, 'boooooorrrrrinnng'.
-rick
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1609.4 | | CPDW::LACAIRE | | Thu Dec 03 1992 12:16 | 3 |
| I appreciated the fine play of Payne, Freddie and Norman. The distances
they hit the ball was awesome. TK wasn't playing well or having any
fun at all.
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1609.5 | why I don't play skins anymore.... | NHASAD::BLAISDELL | Rick, dtn 264-5414 | Thu Dec 03 1992 12:44 | 8 |
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Kite shot 35 (1 under) on the front side, hit every green and
didn't win one skin. Stewart on the other hand, was in trouble
on almost every hole, must have shot a 50 on the front and
ended up winning one skin, and eventually the whole thing on
the back nine. No wonder Kite wasn't enjoying himself!
-rick
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1609.6 | gossip - sorry | USPMLO::DESROCHERS | | Thu Dec 03 1992 13:32 | 5 |
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Speaking of Fred, his wife is suing him for divorce. Says
he has refused any attempts to work on their marriage.
They sure seemed like opposites.
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1609.7 | Who Would Put UP With This Homebody? | MRKTNG::VARLEY | | Thu Dec 03 1992 14:14 | 5 |
| Gee, what a rat ! Guess he didn't like hangin' around with the jet set
in Palm Beach, or underwriting her hobby - playin' polo for the BMW
polo team. Hey, it's never easy...
__Jack (expecting some heat...)
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1609.8 | skins not for Kite's style/game..!! | TRLIAN::GORDON | | Fri Dec 04 1992 13:23 | 13 |
| re: .5
One of the commentators mentioned that Kite's game wasn't really
suited to that format and I think anyone that has followed him
over the years agrees, his game is consistant/no gamble/take what
the course gives me type of golf....good for a lot of money BUT...
ta gota let it out once in a while and go for broke...
even though I don't care for him Ken Green or a Lanny Watkins would
have been better for that format...they hold nothing back and are
always going at the stick...IMHO
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1609.9 | Gimme the Sr Skins' | BUMP::MMARLAND | | Fri Dec 04 1992 15:25 | 10 |
| Pretty, boring stuff this time around , except for some nice shots on
17. Scully wears on me real fast, with that song and dance and story
line approach with every comment. True this is not a Tom Kite venue,
bring in some personality. Payne's got some but his ego is larger
than the back nine. Bring back Jack and Lee.
The Seniors is better viewing, they have some fun at it.
Mike
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1609.10 | | OAXCEL::SOMERS | | Fri Dec 04 1992 16:15 | 11 |
| I agree with the last reply. The four pros picked for this event
should not be based on whether they are the best golfers over the past
year, or the biggest money winners, but the best "characters". For
example, how exciting do you think it would be watching Corey Pavin,
John Cook, Steve Elkington and Paul Azinger, vs. Daley, Norman, Mark
O'Meara, and Peter Jacobson? Give me the golfers who will have fun, go
at it with wild abandon, and laugh it up with each other. In fact, I
wouldn't mind seeing Fuzzy back in the competition just to lighten
things up.
Gary
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1609.11 | | NEWPRT::JOHNSON_DO | | Mon Dec 07 1992 15:20 | 6 |
| re:Jack and the Couples story
Sorry if it is true...but it is predictable. Wait till the guy earns
3-4 million in two years before you file. Timing is everything.
SCD
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1609.12 | Format Sucks! | SIERAS::MCCLUSKY | | Mon Dec 07 1992 17:35 | 10 |
| re: last several - the reason it is boring is the format - reward for
a lucky shot, not good consistant play. Heck I get to see a birdie and
lots of those bogies, double-bogies every week-end. I want to see guys
that get par, par, par, birdie, eagle, par par,par, par, par, etc. -
not just a great hole every once in a while, with luck from the other
guys missing. If it can only be interesting because of the
personalities, then why not just have a talk show with good
personalities? How about some match play?
Big Mac
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1609.13 | Sommething different once in a while is good | TOLKIN::LWARE | | Tue Dec 08 1992 09:58 | 7 |
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I like watching the skins format. You only see it twice a year.
Maybe next year more flamboyant players will make it to the top of the
money list (and maybe the tv coverage can skip all those flash backs).
lk
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1609.14 | | DPDMAI::VENEZIO | Perfect Practice Makes Perfect | Tue Dec 08 1992 12:23 | 7 |
| One thing you can be sure of, Payne will be back as the defending
champ. Thats how he got in this year.
Give me Daly, Floyd, Lanny, and anyone else that has the guts to put
the driver in their hands on a 340yd par 4.
Ken
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1609.15 | | NEWPRT::JOHNSON_DO | | Tue Dec 08 1992 13:41 | 17 |
| The reason it was boring was you had two chance taker (Norman for sure
and maybe Couples) and two boring players (Kite and Stewart). Looks
like the boring players win again. Although it would be tough to be
Freddy Couples and be called a "loser" as you walk away with 210K.
In January theyare having a made for TV event here in my backyard.
Daly, Jacobsen, Zoeller and Wadkins. They each get a pot of money to
start and play medal play the first day (9 holes). Along with points
for pars etc. and score, they get points for closest to, first on,
first in (bingo-bango-bongo). The second day they play 9 holes and use
the points they won the first day to make wagers on longest drive,
closest to, etc. So they play with their own money (to a degree) and
can bet just like we do on the course.
SCD
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1609.16 | fire away Norman lovers... | DEVMKO::BLAISDELL | Rick, dtn 264-5414 | Thu Dec 10 1992 12:32 | 6 |
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Norman is a boring player. His preshot routine is painful to
watch. He fidgets and widgets, waits, fidgets some more, reminds
me of Joe Inman.
-rick
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1609.17 | | OAXCEL::SOMERS | | Mon Dec 21 1992 08:39 | 14 |
| re. -.1
Is Norman's preshot routine long and tedious? Yes. But does that
equate to a boring player? In my oponion, no! I look at it more as
intenseness, similar to Nicklaus. Just look at this past weekend's
Johnny Walker tournament. You can tell that on just about every shot
he's going for the pin instead of the middle of the green, or he's
going for the green on two instead of laying up. At times this may be
poor course management, but boring? Not to me. In fact even if he never
wins another sudden death, I'd rather watch Norman put on the charge to
get in position than watching most other players (even if they play
fast).
Gary
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1609.18 | | STAR::DANIELE | | Mon Dec 21 1992 11:45 | 39 |
| This distinction between "boring, conservative" players and "attacking,
exciting" players always fascinates me.
Consider the recently completed Johny Walker tournament in Jamaica.
Norman (attacking) and Faldo (Mr Conservative) fought out a truly exciting
back nine together, that was more-or-less match play, since they were within
a few strokes of eachother and 8 or 9 ahead of everyone else.
The common perception of this, I'm sure, is "The shark attacked, closed from
5 back to tie, but Mr Boring managed to hang on."
I doubt anyone ralizes that in over the last 6 holes, when they were within 1
stroke of eachother, every one of Faldo's approach shots was INSIDE of Norman's,
with the exception of 18. Faldo stuck it about 10-12 feet from 165, Norman
stuck it 3 feet from 130.
Tell me again that Faldo was aiming for the fat of the green, he's boring,
and plays conservatively. I don't buy it.
(For those of you who missed 18, Faldo made it, Norman missed, and Faldo won
on the first playoff hole, when the Tuna cranked a wedge over the green,
then skulled his chip 10 feet past the hole and made bogey.)
Another totally wrong perception is that of Tom Kite. Tom is actually
very aggressive. I've seen him take out the fairway wood several times
on a par 5, leading the tournament, and lace it into very dangerous greens.
His play at the 92 Open was VERY aggressive. He even said once in an interview
he plays and thinks aggressively all the time, just doesn't have the length
for Joe Average Viewer to think he's aggressive.
My own personal opinion of Norman is that he is too 'agressive', for want
of a better term. I can think of a tournament he blew a few years ago
where he had a 1 stroke lead on the last hole, took out his driver and reached
a 6 foot deep pot bunker 300 yards away, took 2 to get out, and lost.
That's not aggression, that's extremely poor course management, and a tad of
stupidity.
My 2 cents,
Mike
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1609.19 | always add 20+ yards for adrenaline | DEVMKO::BLAISDELL | Rick, dtn 264-5414 | Mon Dec 21 1992 12:07 | 6 |
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That was the British Open Mike. I think he reached the bunker because
he didn't factor in the adrenaline supercharge of playing a final
hole in a major with a chance to win.
-rick
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1609.20 | Unlucky or foolish..? | BUSSTP::DSMITH | ONE THOMAS BROLIN... | Tue Dec 22 1992 04:57 | 23 |
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re last 2
That was at the British Open at Troon a few years ago. Norman was
level with Calcavecchia playing the last of a 4-hole play off along
with Wayne Grady of Australia who was 1 behind. Norman cracked a drive
further than even he expected and landed in the bunker. If it had
missed the bunker it would have rolled another 20 - 30 yards and left
Norman with a pitch to the green.
Calcavecchia on the other hand got very lucky. He pushed his drive
well to the right and was heading for the OOB before it hit a fence
landed in play. He even got a good lie and then played a great 7-iron
to 4 feet and holed out to take the championship.
In this instance, some would say Norman was foolish, others would say
he was unlucky. As I said, Calc. got lucky with his tee shot and found
the green with his second. Norman had no option but to go for the
green with his second from sand. He left it in then put his 3rd
through the back, leaving Calc. with the trophy.
Danny.
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1609.21 | Me gamble.....never!!!! | AIMHI::CORRIGAN | | Tue Dec 22 1992 10:05 | 10 |
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re. -1
>> -< Unlucky or foolish..? >-
foolish!! Norman was just as unlucky as Calc was lucky. Play
the percentages.
Mr. Conservative
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