THE TRANSATLANTIC MAGAZINE
|
Tuesday TIME: US | UK WEATHER: US | UK THE AMERICAN MAGAZINE ONLINE Back Issues WHAT'S ON Diary Dates SPORTS Features & Blogs FEATURES Politics blog THE NEIGHBORHOOD "Life in the UK" American Groups Essential Contacts Money Education Driving Property |
SPORTS
EAGLE-EYED Golf columnist Darren Kilfara’s fairway thoughts – from the PGA tour to the local links Golf’s Shrinking Upper Class Here are the winners of the first three full-field events on the 2013 PGA Tour – see if you can tell which one of them is not like the others:
Consider this: in 2012, only three golfers with at least 10 PGA Tour titles won another full-field event (Woods, Mickelson and Els). In 1992 nine different golfers reached or moved further along the double-digit win plateau (Floyd, Wadkins, Kite, Crenshaw, Lietzke, Norman, Pavin and Stadler). In 2012, four golfers won events which took them to between six and nine career wins (Z Johnson, Garcia, D Johnson and McIlroy). In 1992, nine golfers reached or moved within the six-to-nine win level (Couples, O’Meara, Haas, Azinger, Calcavecchia, Love, Faldo, Frost and Cook). To put this another way, 20 years ago the Tour encompassed a galaxy of stars, whereas the modern Tour increasingly means Tiger, Phil, maybe Rory and the odd Sergio or Bubba, and a bunch of no-names with ample talent but wafer-thin Q ratings. The Tour of 1992 felt more grounded, less dependent upon the hyper-elite and open to a broad range of excellent golfers with transparently different styles and personalities. At Torrey Pines, Phil finished 14 shots behind Tiger, but in its Sunday telecast CBS repeatedly cut to Phil’s meaningless shots regardless; such excesses were never broadcast in 1992, but their recent frequency underscores the Tour’s tabloid-like dependence on its mega-stars. Why did I compare 2012 with 1992? Two reasons, I guess: one, I graduated from high school in 1992, and I fondly remember the Tour of my childhood as a golden age unsullied by Tiger-sized hype in which dozens of golfers not only regularly contended to win majors but could justifiably claim to deserve them. Two, Tom Watson was the US Ryder Cup captain in 1993, and he will be again in 2014; I wonder how he feels the American talent pool has evolved over the past 20 years? His first team was unspectacular, but it was solid and dependable, and it brought the Cup back from The Belfry; no team featuring Tiger or Phil has won in Europe since. The PGA Tour’s most prominent advertising slogan is “These Guys Are Good”; too often I find myself asking, “Who are these guys?”, and, “Is ‘good’ good enough?” There are plenty of seats available between “good” and “Tiger” on the 2013 Tour bus, and I only hope more of the Sergios and Bubbas, Johnsons and Kuchars, Donalds and Roses regularly elevate their games to sit near the front. That’s how the Tour always worked before Tiger; someday, perhaps that’s how it might work again. Darren Kilfara formerly worked for Golf Digest magazine and is the author of A Golfer’s Education, a memoir of his junior year abroad as a student-golfer at the University of St. Andrews. |