a sample - Blitz Publications
Transcription
a sample - Blitz Publications
Play the World’s Longest Course swing your way across the nullabor p.70 australia’s premium GOlF puBliCatiON M A G A Z I N E ExCLusIVE INtErVIEW hunter Mahan 6 ‘‘i Would Die For the Chance to Do it again’’ Mahan on that ryder cup MoMent hot new fairway woods p. 94 breakthrouGh How an average joe found His swing —and How you can too p. 64 Plus: Mahan’s 5 Best Moves GEt CENtrEd for PurE CoNtACt LoAd uP WIth your rIGht hIP PoWEr your ArMs INto IMPACt LEAN toWArd thE tArGEt fINIsh soft for ExtrA CoNtroL publicAtion Vol.14 No.1 AUS. $8.50 Inc. GST NZ $9.20 Inc. GST Registered by Australia Post - Publication No. VGQ 8202 Pelz: Play Without Fear my new ways to hit the toughest shots AustrAliAn p. 76 A Daimler Brand Mercedes-Benz M-Class. It sits there with a refined presence as it gently rumbles with an eagerness to roam the streets. The M-Class might be wild at heart, but it always seeks to remind you of a profound sense of wellbeing inside its luxurious cockpit. MBA5951 Featuring a choice of petrol or turbo diesel engines and an optional AMG Sports Package* with aggressive *Available at an additional cost. 21-inch alloy wheels, the M-Class prowls with reassurance from the bitumen to the gravel. Take the wild thing for the ride of your life at your authorised Mercedes-Benz dealer or visit www.mercedes-benz.com.au/m 500 ways to master your game on the road. Canstar Blue – Most satisfi ed customers – Car category, 27 July 2010. †Premium model. HMCA2283/DPS/GM/R Driven by Obsession It takes incredible focus, dedication and preparation to excel at your game. That is why to ensure the i45 lives up to its reputation as a worldclass mid-size sedan, we subject it to 500 rigorous quality checks including an intense high-pressure water test. To assure that the i45 is as beautifully constructed as it looks, we make certain every part is perfectly built, every component is precisely aligned and each and every seal is good enough to get ours. Our passion for getting every element right means the i45 sets new benchmarks in design, comfort, performance, efficiency and safety. Its 2.4 litre Theta-II engine produces up to 148kW of effortless power, and utilises the very latest gasoline directinjection (GDi) technology to run extraordinarily cleanly and efficiently. When it comes to interior design, no detail has been overlooked to obtain maximum comfort and space. The result is a medium sized car with the interior of many larger sedans. A 523 litre boot means you can throw in your best set of golf clubs with room to spare. Meanwhile, a panorama glass roof † delivers a fresh, light-filled driving experience. And headlamps that automatically activate as daylight begins to fade provide safer, clearer vision. To discover more, visit i45.com.au MIZUNO HAS THE RIGHT 2011 RANGE A The chart is used as a guide only. Check with your sales professional to see which Mizuno iron set best fits your game. T IRON FOR YOUR GAME VAILABLE NOW Performance Fitting System with Shaft Optimiser. Mizuno’s Performance Fitting System can find the perfect iron for you. FOR A FREE TRIAL VISIT OUR WEBSITE TO VIEW A DEMO DAY CLOSE TO YOU WWW.MIZUNO.COM.AU OR CALL MIZUNO ON 1300 796 457 Contents M January 2011 Volume 14, Issue 1 the starter (Begins on p. 15) Catching up with Matt Kuchar, What Tour Pros Think, PGA Tour Confidential, Golfer’s Life, Lifestyle, and The Pelz Files. ALSO IN THIS ISSUE 87 p. 10 Letter From the Editor p. 12 Your Views p. 18 Teeing Off p. 44 Rules Guy p. 114 Sidespin—By David Feherty COVER STORY 5 MOVES TO MAKE YOUR SWING GREAT A G A Z I N E your game Tips from Golf’s Best Teachers p. 47 p. 48 p. 49 p. 50 p. 51 p. 52 p. 53 p. 54 Don’t let divots ruin your round The 3-step instant slice killer Putt with perfect pace Wedge your putt when against the collar How to check for an early release How to nail your stance width How to hit high, soft long irons Add loft to hit better putts best travel trips Travellin’ Joe Passov anointed Phoenix/ Scottsdale as the No.1 golf destination— and not just because he lives there. Let him show you around! p. 106 by Hunter Mahan Tiger’s Bagman World No. 18, Hunter Mahan, shows you the positions that helped him turn his swing from “good” to “Tour ready”. p. 87 Tiger Woods’s caddie, Steve Williams, speaks to GOLF Magazine about his boss’s new swing, the tumultuous year that was 2010, and sticking by his longtime friend. p. 81 Cool as Can Be In the wake of his Ryder Cup heartbreak, Hunter Mahan could have chosen to lay low for a while. He didn’t. Four days after losing his pivotal singles match in Wales, Mahan spoke to GOLF Magazine about what went wrong on the decisive hole and why he would “die for a chance” to anchor the US team again. p. 56 The Shop We look at TaylorMade’s new Burner 2.0 irons, five new drivers built for speed—and distance, and six new irons that cover the gamut of playing abilities. p. 92 The World’s Longest Golf Course Pack your sticks, sleeping bag and snake traps. Nullabor Links isn’t just crazy long—it’s routed through a fearsome and forsaken swatch of the outback. p. 70 p. 64 Old School vs New School Which school of learning works best: lessons with a wizened pro, or state-of-the-art clubfitting? 8 | GOLF MAGAZINE Editor’s Letter Presidential debate Damian Shutie, Editor O n the surface, 2010 seemed like the year golf would soon forget. So much focus on scandal and a winless Tiger overshadowed the genuine achievements of many others: Phil’s stirring Masters win in front of his cancer-stricken wife (not to mention that shot); the rise of young golfers on Tour including Rory McIlroy, Dustin Johnson, Martin Kaymer, Rickie Fowler and our own Jason Day’s maiden Tour win at the Byron Nelson; Lee Westwood’s promotion to the world No.1 ranking; Stuart Appleby shooting a 59 at the Greenbrier and winning our version of the Masters at Victoria Golf Club over a strong international field; and Europe’s nail-biting Ryder Cup win in Wales. And while Europe’s Ryder Cup victory could not have been further from us geographically, the event was huge for golf in this country. Sounds strange, I know. But the success of the team-format tournament at Celtic Manor showed us just what Australian golf fans should expect when the Presidents Cup comes to the illustrious Royal Melbourne Golf Club in November. If you needed proof that representing your country meant much to those playing, look at the Europeans’ jubilant faces when Hunter Mahan conceded to Graeme McDowell on the 17th hole to hand Europe the final crucial point—and winning margin (14½-13 ½). And you no doubt saw the genuine disappointment throughout the Yankee camp, including Mahan’s teary press conference following. The players love it. And they love being part of a team. This month we speak exclusively with a candid Mahan about his crushing loss to McDowell back in October, and ask if he had a choice, would he anchor the US again: “There’s nothing like being the 12th man in the Ryder Cup” and “I’d die for the chance to do it again” was his response. Fast forward 11 months and our own players will have the opportunity to break US hearts again. But be wary, the Americans have something to prove at Royal and there won’t be any compromising at the Composite. As I write this—and ignoring the two Captain’s picks—the International team would consist of three Australians (Robert Allenby, Adam Scott and Jason Day, with Geoff Ogilvy on the fringe), four South Africans and a Colombian. Team unity would be strong if the international makeup heading to Royal remained close to this mix. The names on the International team might not be as big as those of the Europeans in the Ryder Cup, but the passion should be—especially considering Royal Melbourne was the site of the only Internationals win at the Presidents Cup back in 1998. Bring on 2011. Bring on the Presidents Cup. See you on the fairways. Cover story, p. 87 Hunter Mahan’s swing went from solid to very, very good as soon as he grooved the positions outlined in this month’s cover story. Copy them to find the sweet spot more often and eliminate the worst shots from your rounds. 10 | GOLF MAGAZINE M A G A Z I N E PUBLISHER Silvio Morelli GENERAL MANAGER Mark Castagnini MANAGING EdItoR Ben Stone EdItoR Damian Shutie Email: damian@blitzmag.com.au INStRUCtIoNAL CoNtRIBUtoRS Arnold Palmer (director) EdItoRIAL CoNtRIBUtoRS David Feherty, Mark Allen, Phil Wall, Sam Letourneau, Bruce Young, Brendan Moloney, Joe Passov. ARt dIRECtoR Javie D’Souza GRAPHIC dESIGNERS Adam Summers, James Steer, Zeenia Lakhani, Adibowo Rusli, Lysha Moniz, Issan Ramma. NAtIoNAL BUSINESS dEVELoPMENt MANAGER Kristian Petersen PO Box 4075, Mulgrave, Vic, 3170. Phone: 03 9574 8999 Email: kristian@blitzmag.com.au MARkEtING MANAGER Natalina Morelli Email: marketing@blitzmag.com.au GoLF MAGAzINE USA Editor ............................................................................................................David M. Clarke Creative Director ......................................................................................Paul Crawford Publisher .........................................................................................................Dick Raskopf Executive Editor, GOLF.com............................................................Charlie Hanger Managing Editor, SI Golf Group .................................................... James P. Herre EdItoRIAL Editor, Sports Illustrated Group ......................................................Terry McDonell Managing Editor, SI.COM..................................................................Paul Fichtenbaum Managing Editor, SI Golf Group ....................................................James P. Herre Assistant Managing Editors................................................................Neil Cohen, ................................................................Hank Hersch, ................................................................Christopher Hunt, ................................................................Craig Neff, ................................................................Christian Stone PUBLISHING President and Group Publisher .......................................................Mark Ford Vice President, Global Sales and Marketing ..........................Kimberly Anderson Kelleher Vice President, Communications and Development .....Scott Novak tIME INC. LICENSING ANd SYNdICAtIoN Vice President .............................................................................................Jim Jacovides Senior Director, Business Development .................................Jennifer Savage Ad Sales & Marketing Director .....................................................Joelle Quinn tIME INC. Chairman ........................................................................................................Ann S. Moore CEO....................................................................................................................Jack Griffin Editor-in-Chief ............................................................................................John Huey Executive Vice Presidents ....................................................................Sylvia Auton, ....................................................................Howard M. Averill, ....................................................................Kerry Bessey, ....................................................................Stephanie George, ....................................................................Steve Sachs Development Editor ...............................................................................Bill Shapiro tIME INC. LICENSING ANd SYNdICAtIoN Vice President ..............................................................................................Jim Jacovides Senior Director, Business Development...................................Jennifer Savage Ad Sales & Marketing Director.......................................................Joelle Quinn Contains materials ©2008 TI Golf Holdings Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or part without written permission is prohibited. GOLF and GOLF MAGAZINE are trademarks of TI Golf Holdings Inc. SPORTS ILLUSTRATED is a trademark of Time Inc. Used Under License by Blitz Publications Pty. Ltd. ACN: 083 149 286 ABN: 33 083 149 286 All editorial correspondence should be directed to GOLF MAGAZINE™; PO Box 4075, Mulgrave, Vic, 3170. Phone: 03 9574 8999 or Fax: 03 9574 8899. Subscription enquiries should be addressed to the above address. GOLF MAGAZINE printed by Phone: 03 9574 9211 Opinions and viewpoints expressed in GOLF MAGAZINE™ do not necessarily represent those of the editor, staff or publishers. The acceptance of advertising does not necessarily imply endorsement of services or products. Manuscripts and photographs voluntarily submitted for publication in GOLF MAGAZINE™ must be accompanied by a stamped selfaddressed envelope. Submitted contributions are at the sender’s risk and while every care will be exercised we cannot accept responsibility for loss. SRIXON is a registered trademark of SRI Sports Limited. SRI Sports is a company of Sumitomo Rubber Industries Group. Distributed in Australia by Srixon Sports Australasia. Call 1800 222 227. Your Views LEFT OUT OF THE WILL letter of the month LESS PHILLING As a golf fan who really doesn’t care about a player’s personal life or what he does outside of the ropes, I found your choice of Phil Mickelson as the No.1 Golfer of the Year [GM November] a curious one. Through the Deutsche Bank Championship, his record of 18 starts, one win and one second hardly seems worthy of such a title. There are a number of golfers more deserving of this award. Based on your choice, perhaps you should rename the award No. 1 Golf Celebrity of the Year. —Kevin Harpin, via email PHIL-ANTHROPY No. 1 ISSUE The KOSTIS RULES! 6/12/10 10:26:58 AM THE STARTER THE TOUR I want to thank Peter Kostis for finally PGA Tour addressing some of the dumbest rules Confidential of golf (“The Five Dumbest Rules in Golf”, GM November). If someone can explain why a ball that’s one foot past a white out-of-bounds marker (put there because they built houses around the course) is somehow worse than a ball hit into a lake, I’d love to hear it. We use one simple rule, which if adopted by golf would eliminate half the rule book: For a one-stroke penalty, a golfer can place his ball anywhere along the flight path of his previous shot, as long as it is no closer to the hole than where it landed or was last seen. This has worked for every situation and has eliminated hazards, OB, lost balls, etc., making the game easier, simpler, faster and more fair. —Dave Nahmias, via email Tour Talk By Peter Kostis GOLF Magazine Teacher and CBS Sports Analyst STATS PHOTOGRAPHY BY Kohjiro Kinno/SI 100 | GOLF MAGAZINE 6/12/10 10:20:04 AM The Tour’s No. 1 Driver New GOLF Magazine research proves that Hunter Mahan is the best RA NKING THE BEST PLAYERS ON THE PGA Tour is tricky business, especially when it comes to driving. When we think of the best men with the big stick, bombers like Phil Mickelson, Bubba Watson and Dustin Johnson come to mind. But in reality, we know there’s much more to being a great driver of the golf ball. The PGA Tour ranks players on “Total Driving,” but that only adds a player’s rank in Driving Distance to his rank in Driving Accuracy—not exactly Moneyball, unless you consider Mathias Gronberg the best driver on Tour. To determine the Tour’s best driver, GOLF Magazine Teacher T.J. Tomasi looked at distance off the tee and fairways hit, but he also included stats like smash factor, which measures the quality of impact. “Accuracy is important in driving, but not as nearly as important as distance, especially since we haven’t noticed a huge difference with the new wedge grooves out of the rough,” Tomasi said. When we crunched the numbers to create the GOLF Magazine Driving Score, some new names moved to the top. (Sorry, Mathias.) PLAYER NAME ABOUT THIS AWARD many looking on are visibly moved. The No. 1 Golfer of the Year is a new, annual honour Saturday in northern that celebrates the player who, more than any other, “It’s incredibly touching to know that San Diego. Six days ago, has shown excellence and sportsmanship on and someone cares about these kids,” says off the course. It’s voted on by a panel of editors and Phil Mickelson shot 67 Susie Sovereign, the principal at Herbert writers from GOLF Magazine and Sports Illustrated. in the fi nal round of the Ibarra Elementary School, which had 78 PGA Championship. Th is students at this year’s Start Smart. “These ballsiest shots in Masters history the next our neediest children. Some of them day: a 6-iron off the pine straw, out of the morning, he’s the cheerful are have literally never had a pair of new shoes trees, over the creek and onto the 13th green host of the sixth annual in their life, only hand-me-downs. Now for a birdie, propelling him to a third green they can feel good about themselves. This jacket. Afterward Mickelson summed Start Smart, a back-toprogram is successful on so many levels.” up the play—and his entire career—by school shopping spree woofing, “A for 1500 needy great shot is Ever since Amy’s cancer diagnosis, Phil primary school when you pull aged kids hosted has been playing for something larger. As it off. A smart shot is when you by the Phil & the couple shared a tearful moment at don’t have the Amy Mickelson try it.” Augusta, a nation cried along with them. gutsYettoeven Foundation. that epic 6-iron is The Mickelsons not the moment could just write a Start Smart is one of the many ways that lingers from his triumph. After tidying cheque, but their intimate Mickelson is touching lives away from the up his bogeyless 67, Phil haltingly made involvement turns Start course. And he still inspires between the his way to Amy, who was waiting behind ropes, too. It’s for the passion with which the 18th green. It was her first public Smart into a celebration appearance since being diagnosed with of family values. On hand he plays and lives that GOLF Magazine honours Mickelson as our No. 1 Golfer of breast cancer 11 months earlier. Phil and to help stock shelves and the Year. In a Tour season with no dominant Amy’s embrace was almost cinematic in its shepherd the kids are the player, Phil created the sport’s most indelible sweetness and a poignant reminder of why we care about sports. Ever since his bride’s Mickelsons’ own children, memories, all of them coming during his storybook Masters victory. His eagle, eagle, diagnosis, Mickelson has been playing plus assorted parents, damn-near-a-third-straight-eagle stretch for something larger than himself, and as friends and on the back nine on Saturday would have he and Amy shared that joyous, tearful business associates. defined his victory if not for one of the moment at Augusta National, a world of 100-103_Golfer of the year award.indd 100 “Come on, Jack. You’re a wealthy guy—you could have afforded to go up one pant size.” Your all-access badge to the PGA TOUR It’s been a year of triumph and trials for Lefty. He won his third Masters, but was diagnosed with arthritis and saw his wife and mother battle cancer. Yet he still signed thousands of autographs, gave to worthy causes, and entertained millions. That’s why Golf Magazine proudly names Phil Mickelson our No. 1 Golfer of the Year. It’s such a feel-good scene that Will Says: “This is my No. 1 golf moment—the ’86 Masters. It was Jack’s finest moment. He made a birdie putt on 17 to lock it up. Notice the look in his eyes [in the photo]. He just knew that putt was going in. Unfortunately, this was also the hardest photo to recreate. I don’t know how Jack got his body into that position. My back’s killing me! How did he not rip his hamstrings or throw his shoulder out of its socket? And the pants? [Ferrell pinches his spare tyre.] Come on, Jack. You’re a wealthy guy—you could have afforded to go up one pant size.” 96 | GOLF MAGAZINE PHIL MICKELSON It’s 5.30am on a YES, SIR! AT 46, JACK NICKLAUS WINS HIS SIXTH GREEN JACKET 079-099_People Portfolio.indd 96 � The No. 1 Golfer of the Year Award � WORDS BY Alan Shipnuck I just finished reading the November issue and enjoyed the re-creations of famous golfing scenes by comedian Will Ferrell. It’s hard to pick and choose but how can you leave out Tiger’s double fist-clench after draining the eight-foot putt to force a playoff for the 2008 1st US Open? Or Payne Stewart’s knockout punch into the air after holing a 15-footer on the 18th at Pinehurst to claim the 1999 US Open? I love Arnie, but both of these moments top his 1960 Open celebration for sheer drama. In fact, both Woods’ and Stewart’s last hole heroics outshine Jack and Phil, too. On the plus side, I gotta admit, he nailed Jack’s winning birdie putt on 17 to record a sixth Masters championship. —Robert Peele, via email DRIVING DISTANCE (YDS) DRIVING ACCURACY DIST. FROM CENTRE FAIRWAY 3 291 JOE DURANT HUNTER MAHAN TOTAL DRIVING RANK GOLF MAGAZINE DRIVING SCORE 67.85 23.8 5 286.2 72.07 24.6 RYAN MOORE 16 288.1 69.93 28 KENNY PERRY 4 289.1 67.57 27.5 124.09 BO VAN PELT 14 289.8 66.45 26.4 125.42 124.05 125.31 124.61 While it wasn’t as important as some other categories, the stat that separated Mahan from the pack was “Distance From Centre of Fairway,” which determines just how far offl ine a player’s drives are when they don’t hit the fairway. When Mahan misses, it’s not by much. THEY SAID IT “Let’s be honest about this, it’s not like he was flushing it with Hank [Haney].” —Tiger Woods’ new coach Sean Foley to FoxSports THE FIVE DUMBEST RULES IN GOLF Who was to blame for Dustin Johnson grounding his club in a bunker at the PGA Championship? Johnson? His caddie? For me it was the inevitable result of the needlessly complicated Rules of Golf. It’s time for the rules to be updated and simplified. Here’s where we can start: 1. BUNKER VS WASTE AREAS This is what created the whole PGA Championship debacle. It adds a layer of needless complexity to the game’s already complicated Rules. The solution: Get rid of waste areas and call everything a bunker. 2. NO RELIEF FROM DIVOTS If a sand-filled divot isn’t ground under repair, then I don’t know what those words mean. Golfers get relief from unusual conditions and those should include divots. “If a sandfilled divot isn’t ground under repair then what do those 3. OUT OF BOUNDS You’re penalised less for whiffing words mean?” your tee shot than you are for hitting it out of play. OB should be played as a lateral hazard rather than stroke-and-distance. The penalty is too severe. Many recreational golfers already play OB areas as a lateral hazard to speed up play. That, and the fact they are too embarrassed to walk back to the tee while another group is waiting there! 4. DROPPING THE BALL Possibly the dumbest Rule of all. If you’re already taking a penalty, you should be allowed to place your ball on the ground. When you drop it, you need to make sure it doesn’t land closer to the hole or roll too far—or whatever! Plus, if you drop two times and the ball still ends up closer to the hole, you get to place the ball anyhow. Enough already. Just place the ball and get out of there. 5. DISQUALIFICATION FOR PENALTY ASSESSED AFTER ROUND A player who commits a penalty that only becomes apparent after he signed his scorecard is disqualified. Why? Not for the two-stroke penalty. Instead, his score has changed so he’s disqualified for signing an incorrect scorecard. Just give me the penalty, but don’t DQ me under another rule. ■ GOLF MAGAZINE | 41 041_PGA tour confidential.indd 41 Peter Kostis’s “The Five Dumbest Rules In Golf” in your November 2010 issue was spot on. His simple assessment of golf’s draconian rules should be mailed to every blue-blood member of the R&A and USGA, who should then be required to read it under threat of a stroke-and-distance penalty. Bottom line is that all five of Peter’s examples should go the way of the stymie. —Paul Jacobs, via email We want to hear all about it! Tell us which story this issue helped you find the hole faster, or just let us know your views on all things golf. Email: golfmag@blitzmag.com.au The best effort will win two dozen Callaway Tour golf balls. 12 | GOLF MAGAZINE 6/12/10 10:33:06 AM