SLOW GOLFERS.
A CULT WITHOUT ADVANTAGE. (By Harry Vardon, Six Times Open Champion). The subject of the playing pace at golf has lately attracted a good deal of attention. Nor is that matter for surprise. My own experience is that there arc more slow players now than at any time in the past, and that is saying a lot.- The harassment that they cause to people who want to go round the course at a normal rate of progress hardly needs to be emphasised. Nothing is more trying and nothing is more calculated to put a golfer off his game than the ordeal of being kept waiting before playing every shot by the dilatory methods of an individual ahead.
In a short time the sluggard has behind him a trail of people who are held up by his slowness. Everybody is fretting and fuming—and with considerable justification—and yet no satisfactory way of dealing' with the trouble has yet been evolved. We have, perhaps, two notoriously slow players in professional golf,. It has sometimes been suggested that anybody who allows the habit to take possession of him should be placed at the end of the draw in stroke competitions, so as to have the opportunity of taking his own time without occupying that of the other players. So far, however, this rather drastr nrqposal has not been put into opera: ion. possibly because the iceling is strong that, where there is a draw for partners, there ought to be no semblance of meddling with it. And so. when one of the laggards is drawn early, those who follow him have to suffer for their loyalty to principle.
With very few exceptions, however, 1 think that professionals play at a reasonable pace. It is amongst club members that the tendency towards procrastination is increasing, no doubt because they have less confidence than professionals and fall little by ; little into the way of taking a long while over their shots. Presumably they are 'thinking of a variety of things that they ought to do in order to achieye the desired result, and waiting in the hope that concentration and inspiration will ultimately take possession of them and enable them to strike their shots aright. Conjuring: up Difficulties.
In point of fact, there never has been a slow golfer among the outstanding players of game, and I fail to see how lons*-drawn-out preparations can ever be a help. They develop simply into a habit, and it is a habit that does far more harm than good to the individual's own golf.
It is surely indisputable that the more a player prepares for a shot the more lie thinks about the possibilities of failure. Otherwise, he would not delay unduly. One has to be reasonably, careful. Slap-dash golf is successful only in the case of an unusual player with an unusual temperament, as, for exampie, George Duncan, and it is not always successful then. Even now, I find myself mentally repeating the golden principles as I address the ball:—"Slow back;" "Head still."But to engage in an elaborate proc:;:; of theorising and finessing is likely only to be fatal to the chances. The mental strain is not only bad mentally; it usually communicates itself steadily to the muscles and causes ihcm to develop a condition of tatitness which hinders the freedom of the swing.
I believe that some people say that they spend a lot of time on the putting green—walking m> and down the line, studying it first fro?r> the ball and then from the hole, ana then starting all over again, prowling about apparently looking for loose impediments, and engaging in every other form of seeming caution—not because they are really worrying about any of these things, but because they feel that they must wait until the feeling comes upBut do they hole it? Not more often, I think, than the average player who takes normal time over the stroke; perhaps less often. The late Willie Park, whose death was announced a few days ago, and who was without question the -finest putter 1 ever saw, never made this hard work of the short game. He took his line from the ball in one easy, quiet survey, and then putted. And, my conscience! he could hole that ball.
On Being Ready. It is not only in putting, however, that a great deal of ' e is Avasted. There are many golfert. who begin the play to the hole badly by walking on to the teeing ground in a desultory frame of mind. If the caddie happens to be slow at making a tee —and slowness is catching—it takes this kind of golfer a long while to get going. He waggles and waggles until he is in something akin to a trance. It does tiim no good, and it is very wearisome for his opponent or partner. There is nothing better when you walk on to the teeing ground than to make up your mind that you are godng to hit the ball without a lot of ado. Excessive waggling only serves to promote a stiffness in the knees—at any rate, in most instances —and so to-'spoil the swing. It is a good sign when a player prefers to make his own j tee. It indicates that he is ready to ) hit the shot, and is keen to get on j With the job. (
Similarly, the golfer who trains his mind in the right way. prettv well decides how to play a shot through the green while he is still walking towards the ball from the spot at which he despatched it. Unless the player cultivates this manner of being decisive on reaching the ball he is—if keen—sure to do too much thinking and waggling. And so he soon loses the distance of a hole or two to the couples in front, and reduces those behind to despair.
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SNEWS19250714.2.24
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Shannon News, 14 July 1925, Page 4
Word count
Tapeke kupu
982SLOW GOLFERS. Shannon News, 14 July 1925, Page 4
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
Copyright undetermined – untraced rights owner. For advice on reproduction of material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.