If there is any one array of hazardous features more than another which intrigues and generally stimulates comment from visitors to Royal Melbourne, it would assuredly be the bunkering, which is so beautifully designed on a huge scale that it is rare to find anything quite like it elsewhere. The depth of sandy soil throughout the whole area facilitated construction of such below-surface features without fear of future maintenance problems arising. CLAUDE CROCKFORD
Golfing News & Blog Articles
Quadrilateral: Major(s) News And Notes, December 23rd, 2021
Mickelson to join other major winners at Kapalua
Phil Mickelson, who qualified by winning the PGA Championship, will join the other three major winners in the field at the Jan. 6-9 Sentry Tournament of Champions.
Eliminate Your 3 Putt Greens
As you finish the final 30 yards of every hole that you play, ever golfer has an equal chance to minimize their strokes. Strength is taken out of the equation for success. It all comes down to skill and intelligence. Your goal is to land on the green and sink your ball in 2 or less putts. Don’t play this game unless you spend time to practice the easy part of this game. Sharpen your chipping skills to get it close and then sink it in 1 or 2 putts.
Chip it Close
When your ball is within about 30 yards, all you need is the right club loft with a good “putting” stroke to hit your ball close to the hole. Think of your short chips as a putting stroke. You don’t need power but you do need a consistent cadence to swing through the ball with a putting stroke that will direct your ball directly at the point on the green where you are aiming for the right roll-out.
Your point of impact for your chip needs to be at the bottom of the arc of your swing. You are not trying to take a divot. You are only trying to direct your ball with enough power to let it roll out to the hole. Choosing the right lofted club is easy to figure out IF you practice with all of your higher lofted irons and wedges. You need “a feel” for each club for flight and rollout.
Putt it Close
Sort out the slope and break on the green before you chip and then again when you setup for your putt. Know the speed of your greens. Stare at the hole while you make your practice swings TO LET YOUR BRAIN TUNE INTO THE RIGHT AMOUNT OF SWING needed to pass the hole. Always putt to the high side as your ball will drop down to the hole or at least stay closer to the hole for an easy 2 putt.
If you can improve your chipping and putting game, you should be able to cut 9 to 18 strokes out of your score for every round of golf. Practice with GOLFSTR+ for your trailing wrist control with a slight lag when you chip and a flat leading wrist when you putt. Buy one today at www.GOLFSTR.com

What’s In The Bag Survey Results Part 1
Last month, we asked you to take our What’s in the Bag survey. Here’s a first look at some of the insights we gathered from your answers.
In Part One, we’re taking a broad look at what clubs our survey takers had in their bags, not by brand (at least not yet) but by club type.
Drivers
Observations
Right off the bat, 93.63 percent of those who answered the survey carry one driver. No surprise there. We’d say that’s … pretty normal. It’s also not completely abnormal that 1.49 percent don’t carry a driver at all. Those that don’t bag drivers likely struggle to keep their driver in play. It’s a guess but a pretty solid one.The 1.79 percent who said they carry two drivers probably have a standard driver and a par-3 or “keep it in play” driver.Out of curiosity, we’d love to hear if you carry more than two drivers. Why? Who hurt you? Are you trying to pick your favorite? One for rain, one for sun? What is it?It’s also worth mentioning that 2.09 percent of survey responders carry a mini driver.Fairway Woods
Observations
As we mentioned above, more than 93 percent of respondents play at least one driver. When we dive into fairway woods, the results are a bit more varied.The 3-wood is the most popular among those who have at least one fairway wood in their bag. Seventy percent of those who carry a fairway wood have a standard (14.5- 15-degree) 3-wood in their bag. The 5-wood is the next most popular.The 7-wood is carried by 13.23 percent of golfers who have at least one fairway wood in their bag. That number will likely increase in the coming years.High-lofted 11-woods are offered by only a few brands and, not surprisingly, are a rare find in your golf bags.Hybrids
Observations
Seventy-six percent of respondents said they carry at least one hybrid. The 4-hybrid is most often used, followed by the 3.Of the golfers who carry at least one hybrid, almost 21 percent of them carry a 5-hybrid. This was an interesting little nugget. We weren’t expecting it to be that high.There was nothing remarkable to note about the higher-lofted hybrids. Higher lofts fall off dramatically after the 5.Utility Irons
Observations
Just over 20 percent of golfers who took the survey carry at least one utility iron. That’s less than one-third of golfers who carry at least one hybrid.While higher-lofted hybrids weren’t as popular, higher-lofted utility irons fared better. The 2 was the most popular utility iron and 3 followed right behind.There are some who are still determined to carry a 1-utility iron. Thanks, Titleist.Irons
Observations
The 4-PW is the most popular set configuration among our survey takers, accounting for nearly 30 percent of all sets. The 5-PW comes in second.The 6-GW is more popular than the once-standard 3-PW and that’s likely because no one makes a 3-iron anymore.Wedges
Observations
Last, but not least, wedges. Not everyone carries a pitching wedge. We suppose that’s a little surprising. But nearly everyone who does carry a pitching wedge plays a set-matched pitching wedge
The sand wedge is a bit more popular than the gap wedge among our survey takers. That may change in the coming years as the gap wedge is becoming a necessity with increasingly stronger lofts.Just under 60 percent of your gap wedges are set-matched, meaning nearly 40 percent are opting for something like a Vokey, Callaway JAWS, MG3, etc.Only 82.23 percent of golfers carry a lob wedge. We say “only” because, even though that’s still a high number, it’s the only wedge type where usage rates are sub-90 percentSand and lob wedge lofts skew heavily towards specialty wedges with only a single-digit percentage of golfers choosing set-matched versions. Folks … at SW and LW lofts, almost nobody is milling grooves in their set-matched wedges. You should almost certainly be playing something else.Stay Tuned. In the next coming weeks, we’ll dig deeper in your bag to better understand what’s in it.
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Ratings: 2021 PNC Championship Up Big!
There is a real art to golf architecture. It involves many skills and gifts. It is a tradesman’s job that produces a course that makes Greg Norman’s knees buckle. Almost anyone can do that. It is another matter to design a course that is all things to all manner of golfers. Royal Melbourne West, and East for that matter, is such a course. PETER THOMSON
The NCGA Mourns the Loss of Past President Frank Brunk
The NCGA Mourns the Loss of Past President Frank Brunk
December 21, 2021
The NCGA mourns the loss of Past President Frank Brunk, who passed away yesterday.
Brunk, who served as NCGA president in 1991, was the recipient of the first Hall of Fame Service Award at Cal-Berkeley, an honor that recognizes a former student-athlete, coach, administrator or friend of Cal Athletics who has made an outstanding long-term contribution to ideals of the Athletic Department.
The award is presented to a deserving individual for demonstrating exemplary leadership and setting a standard for excellence in enhancing the Cal student-athlete experience. A three-year letterman for the Golden Bears football team from 1947-49, Brunk once returned a kickoff 102 yards for a touchdown against USC that helped secure Cal’s spot in the 1950 Rose Bowl.


Spirit of the Game—Babe Zaharias
Spirit of the Game—Babe Zaharias
December 21, 2021
Olympic gold medal winner in track and field. All-American basketball player in college. Champion golfer. If there was a Jim Thorpe among women athletes, it was Mildred “Babe” Didrikson Zaharias. As a professional golfer, she won 31 tournaments, including three U.S. Women’s Opens, and helped found the Ladies Professional Golf Association. “Babe changed the game of golf for women,” said Patty Berg.
Didrikson didn’t even take up golf seriously until she was 21. She was introduced to the game by Grantland Rice in Los Angeles during the 1932 Olympics. Somewhere in between winning gold medals in the javelin and hurdles-she might have won the high jump, too, had she not been disqualified-Didrikson joined Rice and three other sportswriters for a round of golf at Brentwood C.C. According to Rice, the Babe shot 91 that day and regularly hit drives measuring 250 yards.
The following year, while she was touring the country with the House of David baseball team, Didrikson traveled back to Los Angeles and took golf lessons from pro Stan Kertes at Brentwood. Two years later, she won the Texas Women’s Amateur Championship with an eagle on the 34th hole. The United States Golf Association ruled the following day that as a professional athlete Didrikson could no longer compete in amateur events.

WE TRIED IT: The Best Things We Tried in 2021
There is a lot of cool gear in the golf world that doesn’t always fit neatly into Most Wanted Tests or Buyer’s Guides. You still want to know how it performs. In our We Tried It series, we put gear to the test and let you know if it works as advertised.
There were a lot of innovative, impressive and helpful things for golfers on the market in 2021 and we tried as many of them as we could. Some were downright awesome. Others left varying amounts of room for improvement.
Here are the highlights of our 2021 We Tried It tests and golf equipment reviews.
Technology
Foresight Sports GC3
Data-minded golfers anxiously awaited the launch of the Foresight Sports GC3 launch monitor. Its older brother, the GCQuad, is the Holy Grail. So is the next addition to the Foresight family as accurate?
We put it to the test. Check out the results below.


















Quadrilateral: Seth Waugh's PGA Of America Christmas Letter
There is a real art to golf architecture. It involves many skills and gifts. It is a tradesman’s job that produces a course that makes Greg Norman’s knees buckle. Almost anyone can do that. It is another matter to design a course that is all things to all manner of golfers. Royal Melbourne West, and East for that matter, is such a course. PETER THOMSON
PGA Tour Grants Saudi Releases With Draconian Conditions: Players Must Play Return To Play Pebble Beach At Least Once, Possibly Even Twice!
They weren’t bluffing down there at the Global Home regarding February’s Saudi International and preventing as many as thirty top players from playing the same week as the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.
Nobody messes with Jay Monahan! He is the Sheriff of all…wait, what?
The potential defectors get to abandon one of the biggest events on the PGA Tour calendar and their punishment will to play Pebble Beach-Spyglass-MPCC over the next two years? All while collecting huge appearance fees and possibly laying the groundwork for fundamentally disrupting the PGA Tour’s business?
Tony Soprano, he is not. Guess Jay’s in the holiday spirit?
Back in July Golfweek’s Eamon Lynch reported that players would be denied releases to play the event believed to be a precursor to a Saudi Golf League. But now Lynch is first to report the releases will be granted for the February 3rd-6th event but with “strings attached.” Some really, really thin strings.
Bryson Very, Very Briefly Posts Video To Confirm He's Not Using Steroids
Golf is a pastime of the open air—”a blowing away of mental cobwebs,” runs the famous phrase—and in golf there is, or ought to be, no place for the cheat, the ignoramus, or the opportunist where the rules are concerned. GEOFFREY COUSINS
How Tiger Is Being A Parent To A Junior Golfer
It was fantastic to see Tiger Woods making birdies again last weekend at the PNC Father Son Championship. Let’s hope it was a sign of things to come and he can make it back to his best again and compete in the majors in 2022.
It was interesting to hear some insights from Tiger about how he is being a parent to a junior golfer, his son Charlie. He said in a recent interview with Golf Digest that:
“His temper carries over into another shot, another shot, another shot and compounds itself. [I said to him] Son, I don’t care how mad you get, just as long as you’re 100 percent committed to the next shot. That’s all that matters. That next shot should be the most important shot in your life. It should be more important than breathing. Once you understand that concept, then I think you’ll get better.”
At his peak, Tiger had the strongest mental game in golf and it was undoubtedly why he was able to dominate for so long. But what few of us realize is that he worked on it. Hearing nuggets like this give us a look into the work he did, such as how he responded to bad shots and got himself ready to hit the next one. Like Tiger is sharing with his son Charlie, these are great lessons to instill in youngsters if you are a coach or parent to a junior golfer.
Responding To Feelings
After hitting a shot, any number of different feelings can arise – it could be joy and excitement from hitting a good one, or disappointment or frustration from a poor one. Whatever feelings arise, you don’t have control over them. What you do have control over, is your response to those feelings. If you’re a parent to a junior golfer, helping them manage the feelings that arise in a round is an important part of helping them get the best out of themselves.
Junior Legacy–Most Improved Junior Golfer
Junior Legacy–Most Improved Junior Golfer
December 20, 2021
Last Friday, Eva Denten was presented the Junior Legacy–Most Improved Junior Golfer Award at Green Hills Country Club in Fairfield.
Denten is a member of The Olympic Club and Green Hills CC. How did she win the award? Data was taken from a range of scores from 1/1/21 to 10/31/21.
Her starting handicap was 54.0 and her ending handicap was 19.2 Her ending handicap as of 12/17/21 was even lower at 18.1
There were 6,600 golfers in the pool for the determination.

History’s Mysteries: The Nine Lives of Lynx Golf
Welcome to another edition of History’s Mysteries. It’s our effort to look back at some of golf’s bygone brands and find out what happened to them and why. Today’s look back should be an adventure.
Do you remember the original Lynx Golf?
Talk about an aptly named company. The lynx, of course, is a feline and we all know cats have their allotted nine lives. By our count, the current iteration of Lynx is its eighth. The company’s journey from disruptive early ‘70s innovator to corporate cog to mothballed store brand to European niche is a fascinating one.
So let’s jump in the time machine, buckle up and take a trip back in time.
History’s Mysteries: The First Life of Lynx Golf
History, it’s said, is written by the victors. Today it’s pretty much accepted in golf canon that Karsten Solheim is the man who made investment-cast irons a thing. But would it surprise you to know that the first truly successful investment-cast club was designed and sold by Lynx?


















What comes next for Tiger Woods nobody knows -- even his caddie
Tiger Woods showed signs of his old self in three days of golf with son Charlie at the PNC Championship. But he was riding a cart, in a relaxed atmosphere. What does that mean in terms of his return to competitive golf? Only time will tell.
Tiger, son make Sunday charge, fall 2 shots short
Tiger Woods and son Charlie rattled off 11 consecutive birdies Sunday at \the PNC Championship, ultimately falling one shot short of winners John and John II Daly. "We had just the best time ever," Woods said afterward.
Final '21 ranking adds 10 players to Masters field
The top 50 from the final world ranking of the year was set on Sunday, increasing the Masters field to 83 players.
Tiger Woods hits huge drive, makes eagle as he and son Charlie try to make a move
Tiger Woods keeps saying he doesn't have speed or distance. On Sunday, with son Charlie at the PNC Championship, it seems he has both.
Tiger shoots scramble 62 with son in return
Tiger Woods showed flashes of the 15-time major champion amid some struggles in his first competitive round of golf in a year.