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- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sdd.hp.com!network.ucsd.edu!guppy!kim
- From: kim@guppy.uucp (Isaac Kim)
- Newsgroups: rec.sport.golf
- Subject: Re: golf shoes
- Date: 26 Dec 1992 03:42:51 GMT
- Organization: UC San Diego
- Lines: 320
- Message-ID: <1hgkbrINNl72@network.ucsd.edu>
- References: <2934359673.1.p00168@psilink.com>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: guppy.ucsd.edu
-
- Jim,
-
- Before I reply, I would also like to apologize for the heavily
- sarcastic and sometimes rude nature of my posts. I was also writing
- these late at night and got upset at what I thought were comments
- from a "judgmental" rich guy who thought golf should only be
- for the well off. I was wrong about you. Sorry. It is always good
- to hear about someone else who is so concerned about keeping golf
- courses in good condition. I applaud your effort in educating the
- masses about proper golf course etiquette. I try to do my best at
- this as well, but sometimes there are just too many new golfers out
- there. But, this is not a reason to give up.
-
- Have a happy new year, and maybe your handicap continue to spiral
- downwards in 1993,
-
- Isaac
-
- In article <2934359673.1.p00168@psilink.com> "James F. Tims" <p00168@psilink.com> writes:>> Isaac Kim <kim@guppy.uucp>
-
- >Can most players do better with golf shoes? I think they can,
- >and you think that they are not worth the bother. So be it.
-
- Agreed. I am sure I am in the minority when it comes to evaluating
- the importance of golf shoes to one's golf game. Most of the good
- players I know play with golf shoes. A few, like my self, play in
- tennis shoes. I am very lucky to be playing in San Diego where the
- golf courses are generally bone-dry so I can wear tennis shoes all
- of the time. If I lived in Vancouver or Seattle, I might think
- differently.
-
- If you think golf shoes will help your game, by all means wear them.
- The game is tough enough without one more thing to worry about.
-
- >>Again, if you want to wear golf shoes, go ahead. I don't care. Just
- >
- >You seem not only to care, but have decided that golf shoes are at the
- >core of bad golf..
-
- I just mentioned one possible swing flaw which could be masked by
- wearing golf shoes. I don't think they are at the "core of bad golf."
- What's at the "core of bad golf" is an improper weight shift.
- Too much sway (possibly aided by golf shoes) is much better than
- not enough weight shift which is still better than the dreaded
- reverse weight shift. All of these, of course, need to be corrected
- for someone to hit it well consistently.
-
- >Shortly, I intend to start a 5-part post on golf etiquette.
- >One of the sections will deal with
- >respect for the course. As you may have noticed in the side posts to this
- >thread, it has been at least suggested (I have partially confirmed, but the
- >issue is not yet decided) that spikeless shoes do more damage (for a variety
- >of reasons) than spiked. It has also been claimed in reverse. We need
- >more input. As also has been noted, the caddies on the tour do not wear golf
- >shoes, so I would say you are probably right in your assessment of the
- >damage caused by your shoes. I probably do more damage with spikes.
-
- Great idea about the golf course etiquette posts. I wish I could help
- you with this, but the old thesis takes priority. One thing I remember
- is that the USGA did a study of the effect of spikeless golf shoes
- at the Industry Hill golf course in Los Angeles a few years ago.
- I am pretty sure that their conclusions were that spikeless golf shoes
- do much more damage than golf shoes with spikes. I don't think they
- tested tennis shoes.
-
- I would also be interested in your opinion of the standard "waving
- groups up on par 3's" part of golf etiquette. I personally don't think
- it speeds up the game any, and in some cases it can actually slow
- thing down. At one time, on the Torrey Pines golf course scorecard,
- they requested that you do *not* wave groups up on par 3's. This was
- the first time I have ever read that on a card. I asked someone who
- works in the pro shop about it and he said that it was there to protect
- the City of San Diego from any lawsuits if someone by the green got hit
- after they waved the group on the tee up.
-
- >
- >>I think a better definition of sandbagging is someone shooting a 69,
- >>claiming to be a 5.
- >>
- >
- >It took me down to a 3 and I wasn't playing for stakes or in a tournament.
- >I turn in every score I shoot, and I always shoot the best score I can.
- >I apologize for the insult. Besides, nobody would let me actually play
- >to a 5, anyhow, not for money. I've been around here too long.
-
- I guess if a legitimate 8 can shoot a 72, a legitimate 5 can shoot a 69.
- I also apologize for calling you a sandbagger. (Geez, I haven't apologized
- this much in a long time. Maybe you can also get me to stop throwing my
- clubs (just kidding .... about the club throwing)
-
- >>
- >>DO YOU REALLY BELIEVE THAT IF SOMEONE DOES NOT LOOK LIKE A GOLFER
- >>HE OR SHE WILL NOT BEHAVE LIKE A GOLFER. Wow! There is a word
- >>for people who judge someone just on their appearence. It escapes
- >>me right now.
- >
- >Sometimes I am pleasantly surprised, but normally they do not. Sorry.
- >Of course there is no guarantee that a well-dressed golfer will be any
- >more than a complete asshole and a basket case to boot, but that's usually
- >not the case. Personally, I play much more with total beginners and high
- >handicappers than with low handicappers. At least 90% of my rounds
- >have at least one female, usually two, in the group. I used to play with
- >my mother a dozen times for every once I played with my father, too.
-
- Jim, you should be careful with your statements because someone might think
- that you correlate "total beginners and high handicappers" with "women".
-
- I only thought you didn't play with beginners because you stated that
- your prefered golf partner was someone who already knew all of the
- proper golf etiquette.
-
- On the subject of women golfer, it amazes me how little respect women
- get from men on the golf course. I once was playing with this pretty
- decent women golfer (probably a 12). We got to a par 3 and the group
- on the tee waved us up. The three men hit first. When the group on
- the green saw that a women was going to hit next, they when right to
- their balls and started to putt. This really pissed off our women golfer.
- She calmed teed up her ball and fired it into the heart of the
- green. She waited to the last second to yell fore. Boy, did they scatter
- quickly off of the green and ran to the next tee just to avoid facing her.
- I also play every once in a while with a women named Christy Erb who
- played on the UCLA golf team (She finished second in the NCAA's a few year
- ago and I think will turn pro next year). She is smallish (5'4" 125 lbs),
- but can hit the ball a long ways. She also looks very young for her age.
- (She also wears golf shoes, much to my chagrin). We were paired with
- there these two guys who had the PGA Tour pro look and must have thought
- they were as good as they looked. They looked at us and thought they
- were stuck with playing with some kids. The first drive Christy takes
- a nice easy swing at it and sends it up the middle. One of the other
- guys also manages to hit in up the middle with this brutal leash of
- a swing. As we walk up the fairway there are two balls, one about 5 yards
- in front the other. The PGA look-a-like walks past the first ball, assuming
- that he of course has at least out driven little girl. He then takes a
- look at the farther ball, realizes that it is infact Christy's ball,
- and then has to take what is the longest five yard walk back to his ball.
- It was hilarious.
-
- >>
- > [Stuff about natty wardrope deleted]
- >I am considered a joke at the course (they don't
- >laugh at the way I hit a golf ball, however) the way I dress.
-
- You sound alot like my self except for the dress shirts. How can you
- get any kind of shoulder turn without ripping out the seams undreneath
- the sleeves? Put on a tie and you might be confused with Booby Jones
- or Walter Hagen.
-
- >>
- >>Maybe you have grown in the sheltered life of a country club.
- >
- >Never been a member of private club. I have played on a handful of
- >private courses in my life, mostly in tournaments, viz.
-
- >>Again, if you are rich, go ahead and buy what ever you want. I
-
- Again, I apologize for those cheapshots.
-
- >Actually, I like to play with novice golfers, because I get as much out of
- >teaching the game as playing it. I also like to play for stakes,
- >but that's pretty much limited to tournaments and scrambles (team
- >side bets), these days. I frequently am turned down as a fourth
- >because "You're too good. We'd just slow you down. You'd make us nervous."
- >I always feel really bad when that happens, but they never give it thought.
- >I never say no to anybody, period. And, no, I don't give advice of any
- >kind unless asked, and usually even then, I wait until the round is over
- >and I can go to the range or talk about it over a few beers.
-
- Sounds like you would be a prime candidate to run a good junior
- program at your course, with etiquette and instruction seminars.
-
- >
- >Well, Isaac, in the spirit of the season, I have tried to be very pleasant
- >this time. I hope you can forgive me for flying off the handle. A
- >man my age should know better. Perhaps you would have more sympathy for
- >my position if you knew where I'm coming from, here.
- >
- >I learned at Savannah Muny during the late '50s. Juniors were not allowed
- >on the course before 3 PM unless they were with an "approved" adult
- >player, i.e. somebody who was known to be player. We were taught the
- >etiquette of the game. Those of us who caddied were allowed to play on
- >Tuesday all day for free if we caddied during the previous week.
- >We learned the etiquette of golf from the caddymaster, an old black guy.
- >Everyone knew the niceties of etiquette. Golf was a civilized game, even
- >among the riff-raff, like us. That is no longer the case, hence my
- >body-shirt analogy. Most of the players at my club do not repair ball
- >marks, they take practice divots out of the fairways and tees, they
- >tear up the cups, they scream back and forth across the fairways, they
- >seem to be unable to hit a shot without the entire foursome in attendance,
- >they add their scores while standing on the green, they are INFURIATING.
- >They are ignorant or indifferent, being mostly low life peasants like me,
- >but the difference is that they have never played with anyone who has
- >learned golf etiquette. They have no conception of what golf really is,
- >according to the old-fashioned values that I have for how it should be
- >played. By that I do not mean technically -- I mean knowing where to
- >stand, step, and when to keep still and how to keep moving. When I
- >was young, virtually everyone knew these things, but now almost no one
- >does. Golfers learn in the leagues or among themselves, and if anyone even
- >suggests they might be doing something rude golfing-wise, they puff up
- >into the American Ideal that no behavior, no matter how offensive, can
- >be questioned because I'm an American with rights and golf is just a
- >stupid game anyhow, and what makes you so hoity-toity, and I ought to
- >punch you in the mouth, I can talk all the time because my name is John
- >Wayne and I like football better because it isn't loaded down with pansy
- >asses like you. So I just keep my mouth shut on the course, even when
- >they're digging large chunks out of the green with their putters in fits
- >of rage.
-
- Boy, I hope your course membership is the exception and not the rule.
- I have obviously not been playing as long as you have, but I have not
- noticed this decline in the civilized behaviour of your average golfer.
- Of course, you will always come across idiots on the golf course who
- really should be shot on site for their destructive behaviour. I
- learned my etiquette gradually when I played as a youngster. Everybody
- I normally play with behaves very well on the course and is very
- knowledgable about the proper etiquette. If we ever get a new person
- in the group and he does sometime stupid, we tell him right there that
- that kind of behaviour is unacceptable in golf. They learn real quick.
- I think alot of the problem comes from the fact that golf is a very
- fast growing sport, so you end up playing with more beginners now than
- you used to. Just tell them what they should do and not do and usually
- they listen. It's great that you don't offer instructional advice on
- the course. One of the worse things is to get stuck with some loudmouth
- who starts spouting off unsolicitied golf instruction theory.
- Don't give up hope on what you see as the destruction of this wonderful
- game of golf. We just need more etiquette-intelligent people like
- yourself to spread the word.
-
- >
- >Am I a prude about this? Yes, I guess I am. I see the game
- >now passed to a "fun" crowd, who do not care if they improve, who do
- >not care about disturbing the other players, who feel that since they
- >have payed their greens fees they have a right to stay on one hole for
- >an hour if they feel like it, the rest of the people waiting behind them
- >be damned. When they finish the round, they watch the baseball or
- >basketball games on TV, not the golf tournaments. What they really
- >want to do at the golf course is drink beer and ride the carts. Golf
- >is secondary, and the idiots who think decorum belongs on the golf course
- >are from another time zone, and indeed, that is true.
-
- I see this "fun crowd" element at the golf course as well. But I
- find them in the minority. I do not think that they dominate the play,
- or that the game is is being taken over by these golfing morons.
- I thnk that the majority of new golfers are serious about the game.
- They might not have the passion that both you and I have for the game,
- but I think they want to learn how to play properly, kindly, and
- courtiously. You can never completely avoid the golfing morons, so
- just deal with them as politely as you can, and move on.
-
- >Those who take
- >golf seriously are just old tightasses who can't enjoy themselves. By not
- >looking like a golfer, one makes the statement that the traditions of the
- >game are no more than a pale history of lesser times, or worse, the mark
- >of the imperious capitalist usurpers of the underclass.
-
- Jim, I hope you are not serious. You yourself have said that you
- don't look like a golfer most of the time, but I have a feeling that
- you really care about the game. You are not alone. I know many golfers
- who do not look like golfers (for various reasons from financial to they
- just don't like to comform to stupid dress codes), but they respect
- the game just as much as you do. Who would you consider has more
- feelings about the traditions of the game:
-
- (Golfer A) wears T-shirt, shorts and tennis shoes, but carries his
- clubs, plays forged irons amd persimmon woods with steel shafts.
-
- (Golfer B) wears Pringle golf sweater, Izod golf shirt, Hagger slacks,
- Footjoy golf shoes, but always takes a power cart and plays Ping Zings
- and Big Bertha metal woods with graphite shafts.
-
- There is a whole crowd of us slobs who love to play the game the way
- it is suppose to play, trust me.
-
- >BTW, I carry my own bag, and will continue to do so until I can't walk
- >any more. I think carts should be banned except for invalids.
-
- Agree with 100% Unfortunately, the golfing powers who make so much
- money from power cart usage, disagree. And guess who is going to win.
- You should see the looks I get from people when I play a course
- where the cart fee is automatically added into the green fees
- (Banff Springs, Carlton Oaks), but I still end up walking.
-
- >I think your way of thinking has won the day, at least at my course.
-
- Jim, PLEASE do not associate the golfing morons with MY WAY.
- I would help you shoot or ban all of them if it was legal.
-
- >Golf is not very special any more.
-
- Jim, Golf is still very special. Don't worry. It will not be
- taken over the golfing moron crowd.
-
- >As has been noted on the sidebar
- >of this thread, I have also overstated my case (as usual) with regard
- >to who is polite and takes care of the course as a function of golf shoes.
- >Let me restate it: the most courteous, considerate players of whom I
- >am aware, all wear golf shoes, but then they all have very low or
- >non-existent handicaps. They know the game backward and forward. Golf
- >shoes have absolutely nothing to do with it.
-
- Thank you. Very well stated. Although I know of many high handicap
- players who are also very courteous and considerate (didn't notice what
- they had on their feet though).
-
- >
- > ,...,.,,
- > /666; ', jim tims
- >////; _~ - p00168@psilink.com
- >(/@/----0-~-0
- > ;' . `` ~ \'
- > , ` ' , >
- >;;|\..(( -C---->> I yield to youth, Isaac. Golf shoes are passe.
- >;;| >- `.__),;; I apologize to all. Sometimes at 4 AM I'm not quite sane.
-
- Never yield to youth. They need older guys like you to tell them how
- to play the game. Golf shoes are not passe. They are only
- passe to me.
-
- Happy holidays,
-
- Isaac (kim@bull.ucsd.edu)
-