Tuesday, May 20, 2025
spot_imgspot_img
Home Blog Page 6

Book Review: ‘Legendary Caddies’ from N.C. author provides different perspective of Augusta, Masters

Looking for a good read to get you ready for the upcoming Masters?

Check out (or buy) “The Legendary Caddies of Augusta National” by Durham native Ward Clayton, former sports editor of The Augusta (yes, that Augusta) Chronicle during its heyday in the 1990s and later director of editorial services for the PGA Tour.

It’s a quick read for golf fans, providing a different perspective of the world’s iconic, best-run major championship, mixed with the undertones of the old Jim Crow South. Though you might expect the relationships between the members, Masters contestants and the caddies to be clearly defined, it’s not as black and white as the social stratus throughout most of Augusta’s history.

As the title suggests, Clayton’s update of his “Men on the Bag” book from 2004, provides detailed (interesting, but sometimes sad) insights into the lives of the eclectic group of black caddies who have left their mark on the Masters and the host club.

Ward’s book, published by Blair/Carolina Wren Press of Durham and released last April, tells about personalities involved in the history of Augusta National and the Masters tournament, but not seen through all the beautiful green wrapping on TV.

Legendary Augusta caddies were nothing like the disinterested teenage caddies on “Caddyshack.” They were professionals at a job widely considered to be menial and replaceable by carts. Many were known for their amazing knowledge of the subtleties of Augusta’s famous greens and an ability to quickly assess a player’s capabilities. They took pride in their skills.

Often living bag to bag, they shared their expertise with leades of U.S. industry during the course’s season then hoped to cash in one week per year working for the world’s top players.

Long after the Masters and Augusta National opened their caddie ranks to all races and PGA Tour caddies in 1983, several players, most notably Ben Crenshaw, remained loyal to their longtime Masters caddies. More recently, a professional management company has taken over the Augusta caddie program, largely cutting ties with the club’s former caddie base in a nearby neighborhood.

Beginning with “Stovepipe,” and continuing with other looper legends such as “Pappy,” “Cemetery,” “Burnt Biscuits” and “Stabber,” Augusta National caddies, living walking distance from the course, played major roles in Masters history. Clayton does a wonderful job shining light on some of those personalities, sharing several nicknames and back stories.

The book tells how life for caddies in the all-black Augusta’s Sand Hills neighborhood was much different from members of the adjacent Augusta Country Club and nearby Augusta National.

Perhaps Clayton’s biggest challenge and most outstanding achievement with this book is his ability to share some of the humanity, accomplishments and life histories of the caddies while acknowledging the injustices they faced in the pre-Civil Rights Act Old South.

The book isn’t an expose on Jim Crow or a sanitized justification of the past. It does leave you with the irony that the massive progress of the Civil Rights movement that has improved the lives of millions of black Americans, has had an adverse effect on the pocketbooks of a small group of black workers.

“Legendary Caddies” won’t make you cry. But it will make you think — about where we’ve come and where we seem to be going. And it will harken you back to a history largely untold.

Club fitter finds right shaft at stiff price

Is it the player, or the club? Can a professional club fitting save your game?

I was skeptical, believing the fault is with the player, not the club. But with Club Champion offering a free fitting, I decided to see if a new driver would make a difference.

I opted for a driver fitting only. I’ve been disappointed with my driving inconsistencies for a long time — since I quit using my Callaway Big Bertha with a steel Memphis 10 shaft in 1996. Since then, I’ve had several graphite drivers from Callaway, TaylorMade and Cobra with mixed success.

For me the only things more unreliable than my graphite drivers are the results I get from simulators. On the course, you hit a drive on a 400-yard hole and have 150 left. So your drive is 250, right? Maybe not.

My 250-yard drives on golf courses often turn out to be 220 on simulators. And simulators, I’m told, don’t lie. It’s demoralizing.

Jeremy Wright heads up Club Champion’s Winston-Salem store.

I got the same disappointing results during my early work on the simulator at Club Champion. But gradually, working with club fitter Jeremy Wright, I worked my way through an array of shafts and club heads, improving my results in club speed, launch rate, spin rate, accuracy, and yes, distance.

Wright knows his business. Eventually, he found a combination that helped me hit accurate drives of 240-250 yards at a favorable trajectory.

Not bad for a 61-year-old never-has-been with no remaining rotator cuffs. I felt better about my golf game than I had since the Big Bertha days.

OK, here’s the catch. The cost for the $175 fitting, the new Cobra club head and the Nemesys 55 R shaft I was hitting would be $1,245.20, more than double the price of the top-line drivers on the market.

Turns out, customers pay retail for the basic name-brand club, plus the shaft that will be replaced. Typically, and in my case, the boutique shaft chosen for me was not one that comes as an option with a standard club off the rack or ordered online from major brands.

Club fitters such as Club Champion find the best equipment fit for customers. The company has a huge array of club heads and shaft suppliers. I was impressed.

If you go to Club Champion or a similar club fitter, you’ll probably get a great fit and leave with an ideal set of clubs for your swing.

But you’ll pay for the retail price on the club, plus the price of a specialty shaft. Given my experience and accounts I’ve heard about from others, you’ll play double or more what you’d pay for the best clubs sold by Golf Galaxy or PGA Tour Superstore.

Another option is to take the simulator results and find a private club maker to make your new clubs. Keep in mind that getting the same boutique shaft might be difficult. Perhaps, you’ll get lucky and find a shaft on the mainstream market that approximates the boutique shaft.

A club maker friend, told me he thought he could make a club with the same Cobra head and a similar shaft for under $500.

I was left with a choice — pay $1,245.20 for a club I’m confident would improve my game significantly, or take my chances with my own club maker for less than half the price.

My guess is many players would gladly pay Club Champion an extra $600 or $700 for a driver providing 30 additional yards and better accuracy. Maybe that’s why Club Champions are spread across the country. Seems like a small price for a much more enjoyable golf game. The price likely would go up another few thousand dollars for a full set of clubs.

Do I pay the Club Champion price or take my chances trying to get a similar club built somewhere else? It’s a tough choice I still haven’t made.


Wake’s Chacarra No. 5, Kovelesky No. 14 in rankings

Wake Forest’s Carolina Chacarra ranks No. 5 and teammate Chloe Kovelesky is No. 14 in the latest women’s college golf rankings.

Mirabel Ting of Florida State is No. 1. Lottie Woad of Florida State, last year’s Augusta National Women’s Amateur champion and a former No. 1 in the world amateur rankings, is one spot behind Chacarra.

Wake’s Macy Pate, a former Reagan High star, is No. 63. Wake is No. 9 in the team rankings with North Carolina at No. 10. Stanford, which has either won or tied for the victory in all seven of its matches during the current school year, is No. 1 in the team rankings.

Tar Heel leads NCAA individual rankings

The No. 1 college golfer in the nation plays for the University of North Carolina, according to Scoreboard powered by Clippd, the NCAA’s official golf scores, statistics and rankings reference.

The Atlanta area native, who has two wins this academic year, has a comfortable lead over No. 2 Ethan Fang of Oklahoma State. Luke Clanton of Florida State, who has already qualified for the PGA Tour through the Tour’s Accelerated program, is No. 3.

Pinehurst native Jackson van Paris, who plays at Vanderbilt, is No. 22. Scotty Kennon leads Wake Forest at No. 82. Nick Mathews of Mebane, who plays at N.C. State, is No. 121, Kelvin Hernandez leads UNC Greensboro at No. 408.

In the team rankings, UNC is No. 8, with Duke 17th, Wake Forest at 41, N.C. State at 53 and UNCG at 92.

PGA Tour’s Carolinas events appear to be on solid footing

This weekend’s $8.7-million Valspar Championship recently announced a new title sponsorship deal through 2030. This week, 10 of the top 27 players in the World Golf Rankings are in the field at Innisbrook Resort’s Copperhead Course.

Other prominent names competing the Tampa-area event include Jordan Spieth and Will Zalatoris.

It’s an impressive field, especially for a “non-signature” event with a modest — by PGA Tour standards — purse.

Though many questions remain about its future, the PGA Tour seems to be on mostly steady ground at events in the Carolinas.

Truist has signed a title sponsor extension through 2031 for its PGA TOUR “signature” event at Charlotte’s Quail Hollow Club, complete with a $20-million purse. With the PGA Championship scheduled at Quail Hollow, this year’s Truist will be played at Philadelphia Cricket Club.

The Heritage Classic at Harbour Town on Hilton Head Island, another $20-million event that attracts the game’s top stars, is on a year-to-year deal with title sponsor RBC. A PGA Tour favorite stop along Calibogue Sound since 1969, pundits seem unworried about the Heritage’s future — with or without RBC. Boeing remains as a significant sponsor.

Here in Greensboro, the Wyndham had a deal as title sponsor at Sedgefield Country Club through 2026. Given the investments made by the club and the PGA Tour in Sedgefield’s practice facilities, the Greensboro tournament’s place on the Tour seems secure with its $8.2-million purse. Plus, the players routinely praise the Donald Ross design.

The creation of the LIV Tour, and now the slow movement in negotiations for a working relationship between LIV and the PGA Tour, brought tournament sponsorship deals under more media attention.

After LIV signed PGA Tour superstars such as Bryson DeChambeau, Brooks Koepka, Patrick Reed and Dustin Johnson, and later added Jon Rahm, Cameron Smith, Tyrrell Hatton and Joaquin Niemann, the PGA Tour scrambled to please its top remaining stars, creating signature events that required some sponsors to immediately double their sponsorship contributions.

UNCG men place fourth at Sea Island

Jack Marcotte and Jake Lewis tied for 10th as individuals at even-par 140 to lead UNC Greensboro to a fourth-place finish Tuesday in a 13-team field at Sea Island’s Seaside Course.

UNCG shot 2-over 562 in the 36-hole event, three shots behind team champion Cincinnati and two behind Florida Gulf Coast and Marquette. UNCG topped seven teams ranked between No. 50 and No. 96 in the men’s college golf rankings.

Marcotte and Lewis each followed 72 Monday with 68 in the final round. UNCG’s top player, Kelvin Hernandez, who had a double-bogey in the first round and a triple-bogey Tuesday, finished at 144.

Wake women beat Gamecocks, claim prestigious match-play title

No. 9 ranked Wake Forest won the elite Old Barnwell Derby Match Play on Tuesday with a 3-2 victory over No. 4 South Carolina near Aiken, S.C.

Carolina Lopez-Chacarra, Anne-Sterre Den Dunnen and Sky Sload won matches for the Wake women. Winston-Salem’s Macy Pate lost, 4 and 3 to USC’s Eila Galitzky, a freshman from Thailand, in a battle of players who entered the match 2-0 in the tourney.

Sload, a graduate student who played previously at Virginia and Missouri, won the deciding match 2 and 1, holding off USC’s Vairana Heck, who eagled the par-5 16th hole to pull close the gap to one hole. Sload clinched the victory with a par at 17.

Wake ties for fourth at Dunes Club

Scotty Kennon tied for seventh as an individual to help Wake Forest tie for fourth in a 16-team field at The Dunes Golf and Beach Club in Myrtle Beach.

Kennon shot 71 Tuesday to finish at 6-under-par 210, six shots behind Auburn’s Brendan Valdez, the medalist.

Auburn romped to a 17-stroke victory at 33-under 831 over Louisville. Duke was third at 850. Wake and Baylor tied at 862. N.C. State was ninth at 874. High Point University was 16th at 895.

Nick Mathews of N.C. State, a Mebane native, fought back from an opening 79 with rounds of 75 and 71.

Couples’ old N.C. comments show time may change Rory’s Seniors view

Apparently some candid comments of Rory McIlroy about the Champions Tour rankled — or at least somewhat rankled — the typically soft-spoken, non-confrontational Ernie Els.

“Absolutely not,” said the 35-year-old McIlroy, when asked about spending his post-50 days on the PGA Tour’s circuit for seniors. “I will not play Champions Tour golf. Look, I’ve said a lot of absolutes in my time that I’ve walked back, but I do not envision playing Champions Tour golf. Something has went terribly wrong if I have to compete at golf at 50.”

It harkened me back 25 years to a long solo interview I had with Fred Couples in 1998 for the opening of Carolina National, a Brunswick County course where he served as a consultant for architect Gene Bates.

Then pushing 40, Couples said basically the same thing. And back then, the Champions Tour (then Senior PGA Tour) was a much bigger deal with better TV coverage and legends such as Palmer, Player and Trevino regulars in the field.

I wish I had a copy of my column in The Myrtle Beach Sun News. Archiving was pretty much hit and miss in those early online newspaper days.

But to paraphrase, Couples said he didn’t want any part of the Senior Tour. He didn’t say it, but it seemed to me he didn’t believe it was suitable for a Masters champion and PGA Tour star to compete against former club pros hoping to make their mark against successful former Tour players who no longer had the drive or incentive to prepare at their former top level.

But times and perspectives change. People change priorities. Perhaps the oldies out there riding carts, playing only 54 holes and picking up six-figure checks, don’t play for the money. Maybe they just to keep playing competitive golf with their friends.

Note that Els volunteered his response to McIlroy’s comments — the South African wasn’t responding to a media question.

“Interesting to read @McIlroyRory comments today,” El said via his X account. “At 35 years old I was also bullet proof saying things about not playing past 50. I’m 55 now and laughing at my comments from back then. Champions Tour golf is so fulfilling with a great bunch of players we all grew up together from junior golf. Our sponsors and partners are wonderful companies and people. Competition is a powerful tool!”

I’ll admit I liked covering the Senior Tour. The Vantage Championship at Tanglewood was a first-class event. I also oversaw The Sun News’ coverage for the first five years of The Senior Tour Championship at The Dunes Golf and Beach Club in Myrtle Beach.

I still chuckle when recalling listening to Trevino complain about the Senior Tour forcing him to do an interview with me, as a Tour official had me wait behind a corner in the locker room. After giving Trevino five minutes to cool off, I was presented to a beaming, happy-go-lucky Trevino, who greeted me like an old friend.

Later that week, Trevino was reported to have cussed out fans asking for his autograph in the parking lot. Ah, the Merry Mex. And I remember eventual winner Raymond Floyd blaming an errant shot on a slight movement made by our reporter sent out to follow the final group.

Those guys took the Senior Tour seriously. As did the likes of really good, if not great, regular tour players such as Hale Irwin, Jim Colbert and Bernhard Langer. The Trevino legend and brand expanded as he dominated the senior competition.

But I can excuse McIlroy. He doesn’t need the Senior Tour. Nor does Tiger Woods or Phil Mickelson. If I were Rory, I would also be considering bigger challenges in later years.

Let the likes of Larry Laoretti, Simon Hobday and Walter Hall have the Champions Tour. Give aging CEOs lower-priced pro-am opportunities with names they know in a similar age bracket.

As it turned out, Couples played on the Senior (Champions) Tour, winning Rookie of the Year honors in 2010 and capturing the 2012 Senior British Open title before his chronic back issues put a crimp in his Senior career, which nonetheless includes 14 victories — one as recent as 2022.

My guess is McIlroy won’t change his mind. He already has 28 PGA Tour victories, including four major championships. He’s earned hundreds of millions through winnings and endorsements. He’s a world-wide mega-celebrity.

Would playing on the Champions Tour be worth it to McIlroy?

No, of course not. But was it worth it to Palmer, Player and Tom Watson? How about Bernhard Langer or Els?

No, they didn’t need it. But they played. Langer and Els say they enjoy it. Player seemed to love it, too. Credit Palmer, Player and Watson. They probably did it mostly to give the tour credibility and help their former competitors find a kush retirement option.

So, as unlikely as it might seem now to envision Rory on the Champions Tour in 2040, I wouldn’t rule it out. I wouldn’t rule out seeing Tiger, bad wheels and all, make Champions appearances, either. Probably for altruistic reasons.

In 15 years, Rory might see the Champions Tour as a nice way to spend a few weekends. If nothing else, he might see it as a way to help his former competitors.






Pate goes 2-0 as Wake women advance to Old Barnwell title matchup

Macy Pate won both her matches Monday to lead Wake Forest to victories over national powers Florida State and Auburn at the Old Barnwell Derby Match Play in Aiken, South Carolina.

Pate, a former Reagan High standout, beat Kaylah Williams 4 and 3 Monday as the Wake women beat Florida State 3-1-1. Pate beat Katie Cranston 2 and 1 as Wake edged Auburn 3-2.

Wake will play South Carolina in Tuesday’s championship match.