Archive for August 2008

 
 

Wir sind Golf

Persönlich habe ich mit Online-Communities so meine Schwierigkeiten. Registriert bin ich bei ca. einem Dutzend, aber aktiv nutze ich aktuell maximal zwei. Ohne einen dauerhaften Nutzwert ist die investierte Zeit in die Community schlichtweg verschenkt.

Die erste Community im Golfbereich, in der ich Mitglied wurde, war The Golf Space von Tony Korologos, dem Autor vom Hookedongolfblog.com. Nach der intialen Phase des Ausprobierens flachte mein Interesse hier schnell ab, da die Community zu überfrachtet mit Funktionen war und fast ausschliesslich auf den amerikanischen Markt fokussiert war. Aktuell schaue ich da ein bis zweimal im Jahr vorbei.

Im deutschen Markt gibt es auch den Golfnetworkclub, der seinerzeit als FirstgolfBC auf Basis der OpenBC / XING-Technologie startete und vor ca. drei Jahren seinen Relaunch auf eigener technischer Basis durchführte. Mittlerweile habe ich das Gefühl, daß diese Plattform tot ist. Es passiert einfach nichts innerhalb dieser Community außer ein paar Vorteilsangeboten irgendwelcher Netzwerkpartner. Und das brauche ich wie ein drittes Nasenloch.

Neu und vielversprechend startet die Community wirsindgolf.net derzeit im deutschen Markt. „Unsere Idee war es, ein Portal zu schaffen, das internetaffine, sportlich ambitionierte Freizeitgolfer anspricht und das bereits bestehende Formate deutschsprachiger Golfplattformen mit einem konsequent umgesetzten Web-2.0-Ansatz verbindet.” lässt Wir sind Golf über sich verlauten.

Die Plattform bietet viele Funktionen an, z.B. Golfclubs und Plätze bewerten und neue einstellen, Spiel- und Trainingspartner kennen lernen und sich mit ihnen verabreden, Golfgruppen gründen, Fotos von Turnieren oder privaten Runden einstellen, Termine bekannt geben, Informationen suchen und finden. Im Magazin-Bereich kann jeder User Beiträge und Kommentare zu Themen verfassen, die ihn interessieren, sei es von eigenen Turnieren über eigene Schlägertests bis zum Reisebericht.

In der Breite und Tiefe der Möglichkeiten und Informationen behält die Plattform aber immer den Fokus rund um das Golfspiel. Golfplatzbewertungen z.B sind schnell erstellt und geben anderen Spielern eine gute Orientierung, ebenso wie die Fotogalerien. Gemeinsame Begehrlichkeiten sind auch schnell erkannt über die Funktion “Golfplätze, die ich gerne spielen möchte”.

Noch im Betastadium ist er eine oder andere Bug noch in der Plattform, aber es passiert täglich Neues und es das WSGN-Team ist sehr motiviert: „Zusammen mit unseren Mitgliedern und Partnern soll WirsindGolf.net wachsen und sich weiterentwickeln. Unser Ziel ist es, WirsindGolf.net als führendes deutschsprachiges User-generated-Content-Golfportal zu etablieren. Pläne, wie wir auch offline unseren Mitgliedern etwas bieten können, bestehen auch schon“.

Hier findet Ihr mein Profil auf Wirsindgolf.net, schaut doch mal vorbei und bildet Euch Eure eigene Meinung.

 
 
 

Right Hander vs. Left Hander

Via the Golfforum I bumped into this video footage from BMW about a challenge they organised at one of the practice rounds at Wentworth during the BMW PGA Championship. At the par 3 14th they asked players like Luke Donald, Martin Kaymer or Miguel Angel Jiménez to a competition with a difference: they had to tee off with their weaker hand. From air shots to solid shots into the green: really fun to watch.

 
 
 

Joost Hage Golftrickshow

I met Joost Hage at last years Snow Golf World Championships and found his show very entertaining. He now has some videos up on youtube, so lean back and enjoy:

Medium: www.youtube.com
Link: www.youtube.com

 
 
 

The 90th PGA Championship

Wow, Congratulations to Padraig Harrington for his historic win at Oakland Hills.

Here he is taking us through his final round (full interview here):

KELLY ELBIN: Can you go through your birdies and bogeys, please, on a very dramatic day.

PADRAIG HARRINGTON: Yeah. Obviously this was a different win today than the win at Birkdale. I was very comfortable with my game there. Very happy about what I was doing.
Here, it wasn’t the case. I wasn’t happy with how I was swinging the golf club this week in terms of my focus or maybe dehydration or tiredness, but something had me a little bit off my stride this week. My coordination wasn’t quite there.
So once I got into the weekend and holed a few putts, it really was a question of the adrenaline keeping me going, keeping me focused, keeping me pushing along.
I went out this afternoon not a hundred percent sure what lay ahead. As I said at Birkdale, I think I was quite assured of what I was doing. Here, I really didn’t know. So I kept to my game plan; kept hitting my shots. Obviously, as well as I felt I was doing, obviously I was trailing Sergio from early on.
And the only thing from experience that I know is that in a Major, nobody goes without making some mistakes. So as long as I could hang in there, I knew that I would get my opportunity; and if it was going to be my day, I would take that opportunity.
So I was patient in that sense that even though I was 2, three shots behind in the middle of the round, and through the turn I started playing the golf; and Sergio was got up-and-down on 8 and 9 from awkward positions, and it was looking like his day. I just kept in there and said, look, if I hang around, I will get an opportunity. And obviously that opportunity came.
As regards the actual scores, I hit it in close at the first. Hit a nice putt and missed.
Made a good 2-putt on the second. From the front edge of the green.
Had a chance for birdie on 3 and 4. Again, I hit a good putt at 4. Surprised that missed.
5, I hit a poor shot. I let it go in the wind when I was trying to hold it up and didn’t get up-and-down.
6, I was very happy with the birdie. Hit a good drive and a good bunker shot from 35 yards to four feet and holed the putt.
7, 8, well, 7 I made a good up-and-down again, and from about 35 yards, as well.
8, I played well.
9, I hit a decent shot into the bunkers got up-and-down, holing a tricky 3-footer.
Then you get to the back nine of a Major where it all starts. I hit a nice 8-iron into 10. Probably a little unlucky to come up sort of 15, 18 feet short. But I holed that putt and it got me on a run.
A little bit unlucky on 11 for it to hang up on the right-hand side, but a good birdie on 12 from in trouble.
I took the shot on. I knew I had to from in the trees. It was a tight second shot. I had to — it’s awkward when you’re trying to hit a shot around a tree. But you can’t, the tree was actually blocking where I was aiming because it was — so I literally had to hit like I was hitting through the tree for my second shot; which is an intimidating shot, but I knew I needed to take on the shot at this stage and there was no backing off.
Hit a nice shot over the green and played a nice pitch shot. Unlucky to go three feet by. Holed the putt. Actually thought I might hole that chip.
12, 13, has been a difficult hole all week, and with kind of thinking, you know, do we want to play short of the pin, and it’s very tight up the back there, but it worked out nice yardage just a little 5-iron for me. I could keep it down under the wind and hit it to about 15 feet, and my eye was in at this stage. And the putts, there was no question I was just fully focused on holing them and nothing else was in my mind. So I rolled that one in.
14, coming out of the rough, wasn’t quite sure it was a 9-iron or an 8-iron. I tried to hit 8-iron and it came out a little bit quick, and went over the green and got in an awkward lie. Tried to play the safe chip shot, give me some more room. I chipped it to about eight feet and I just hit a weak putt there. Yeah, tried to help it break when it did break itself.
15, obviously hit a nice 7-iron in there. Had a good opportunity for birdie. Hit it through the break.
16, hit a good tee shot there on 16. And it’s an awkward hole. There’s no doubt on under pressure, with that wind, you just are not a hundred percent sure what yardage you’re going to play the second shot there. I had about 135 yards, and I tried to hit a three quarter 8-iron. Hit it in there low. But I knew if I got it up in the wind, I was going about 20 feet left of the flag, and I knew if I got it up in the wind, it would obviously spin back, and come back in the wind.
So I tried to draw it, and obviously I overcooked it a bit and the wind seemed to change a little bit and it moved it left as well.
Wasn’t happy. Obviously. I had a 29-yard bunker shot, and but again I decided I got to take the shot on. I was looking; first time I looked at the leaderboard, it was at 16. I was aware that Ben was up there, and I felt that I had to take the shot on. Unlucky, I caught a stone between my ball and the my club, and that’s why it released so much.
But again the 20-footer, I was just, “Got to hole this, got to give it a chance.” There was no sort of anything but knocking it in the hole. Some days when you get your eye in like that, you do hole putts. So I rolled that one in.
17 was a — I looked at 17 at the start of the week, and we knew the pin would be back right, and on the last day and when the green was firm, we decided that the play was to the front of the green and try and putt up over the tier.
But with a little bit of softness in the green, we knew we could take it on and hit a nice shot straight down the pin. And I kind of felt like I had won the PGA at that stage, and thinking, “this is it.” I didn’t know how close it was, but I kind of felt from the way the crowd was, hopeful it was four feet and maybe six feet.
And I really felt positive that it was going to be my day there. And obviously Sergio followed it up with a great shot.
When I got up to the green we had no idea which was which, and obviously I’m 10 feet and Sergio is four feet. And but I did see, you know, I knew that I had the opportunity to get the putt in first. And that was important. I knew if I holed this, I probably would win the PGA. If I missed, Sergio would probably win the PGA.
So it was down to that. And I hit a lovely putt. Read it exactly how I wanted it, and it did exactly what I expected.
18, I hit an okay drive down 18. It was hanging down the right side. Looked like it could get the edge of the fairway, or the first cut of rough. Was a little, you know, lucky to finish up on the upslope underneath the fairways of the bunker. If I was a foot further right, I could have gone for the green. Tried to hit an 8-iron out about 120 yards, but because of the awkward stance, I hit it a bit fat; I did get a break. I got a nice lie in the rough. The ball obviously pitched and spun back on to the top of the grass in the rough there.
So that was; it was sitting pretty good. I had 142 yards and I hit a full 7-iron. It came out good and we watched it in the air, and it was hanging a bit and we were saying, well, you know, after seeing plenty of balls coming up short in the colder temperatures, it was very happy to see it come down pin-high.
Had a look at the putt, and it’s nice when you’ve got to hole a putt that you read a putt and you see the line straight away. It was an easy putt to read. It was a double-break: I hit it a cup right of the hole, and it was slightly downhill. So I didn’t want to hit it too hard, and I rolled it down there and it broke from a cup right to just outside the left edge.
And now I knew the pace was just about right, so as it was just getting to the hole, I wanted to see it break, and I could see it breaking, and I was just saying: Go on, keep going, keep going, break. It broke on the right left, and thankfully just got inside the left half and dropped very nice, as I said, to see the line on a putt when you’re under pressure like that. And that’s probably why I holed it.

Apart from Harringtons victory, just look at the solid performance the european players displayed. Jeev Milkha “the other” Singh and Robert Karlsson made the early pace in round one, Singh finishes T9, Karlsson T20 (the only major this year where he finished outsied the Top 10). Harrington and Garcia battling it out for the victory, Alastair Forsyth and Justin Rose inside the Top 10, Paul Casey with a solid final round finishing T15. Somewhat I feel confident for the Ryder Cup!!

 
 
 

The Rise of Martin Kaymer as seen by Google

I was playing around with Googles new analysis tool Google Insights for Search. It displays the intensity people search on Google for a certain keyword over time. So I typed in “Martin Kaymer” as search term and this is the result:

I like the commented peaks in the graph that display the news for the individual date. Also interesting in my opinion is the allocation of the search volume by country. Not surprisingly Germany provides the biggest interest here.

Let’s compare this to other golfers:

Rocco Mediate

Greg Norman

Trevor Immelman

Find this interesting? Go play around for yourself.

 
 
 

Internationale Amateurmeisterschaft der Herren

Während sich die Profis diese Woche beim letzten Major des Jahres um Ruhm und FedEx-Cup-Punkte bemühen spielen südlich von Berlin im G&CC Seddiner See die besten Golf-Amateure um den Titel des Internationalen Amateurmeisters von Deutschland.

Der Golfclub Seddiner See etabliert sich hierbei als beliebte Spielstätte für das Turnier, bereits zum fünften Mal werden die IAM in Seddin ausgetragen. So hat schon ein gewisser Martin Kaymer den bis heute gültigen Platzrekord von 65 Schägen bei seiner Teilnahme am IAM in 2003 aufgestellt.

Die IAM sind auch ein gutes Sprungbrett in die Profikarriere, nicht nur Martin Kaymer sondern auch der Vorjahressieger des Events, Ben Parker, hat mittlerweile ins Profilager gewechselt.

Aus deutscher Sicht stellt sicherlich die Truppe aus St. Leon-Rot zum engeren Favoritenkreis mit Sean Einhaus, Stephan Gross, Florian Fritsch und Allen John, aber auch Alexander Knappe (GC Paderborner Land) oder Max Kieffer (GC Hubbelrath) haben das Potential, ganz vorne mitzuspielen.

Weitere Informationen gibts bei Golf.de, auch ein Live-Scoring ist verfügbar. Wenn ich es gebacken bekomme, fahre ich am Wochenende auch mal runter um ein paar Bilder zu machen.

 
 
 

“You putt first.” “No, go ahead, you putt first.”

 
 
 

How far is it?

Check out this really nice video about Fred Funks caddie Mark Long discussing the creation of his yardage books, which are used by many on the PGA TOUR. This guy gives accuracy a new meaning.

 
 
 

Golf TV weekly

Monday, 4. August 2008
15:30 CNN Living Golf
19:30 CNN Living Golf

Wednesday, 6. August 2008
22:10 Eurosport, US PGA Tour, Reno-Tahoe Open
23:10 Eurosport, Golf Club