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Saturday, 2 April 2016

A NOT-SO-SERIOUS LOOK AT THE WGC DELL MATCHPLAY TOURNAMENT




I love golf and if love were enough to make all things succeed, I would be a top-notch golfer.  Unfortunately for me, Murphy’s Law has a way of entangling itself in the execution of my golf and love has not yet found a way of straightening out those Murphy kinks.  That aside, my next love is watching golf and you would think I would be as happy as a hippo in a wallow of mud when sitting snugly in front of the telly with a good tournament to watch – especially as it is only a trivial few days to the first major of the year.

And I should have been a happy hippo but I wasn’t.

On the run-up to The Masters, watching the who-is-hot and who-is-not professionals perform is not merely exciting, it is also informing.  And so it came to pass that I found myself on annual leave from the day job and with all the time in the world to follow the machinations of the WGC Dell Matchplay.  Little did I know I was walking into a storm of distraction and my armchair golf would be far from relaxing and insightful.

It all started when some bigwig golf pundit took exception to a scribed comment in a European Tour piece to the general effect that Austin Country Club looked very much like Dornoch.  That’ll be Royal Dornoch in the north-east of Scotland whose trees, bridges and lakes were “favourably compared’ to those at Austin CC.  In fact, it made his non-existent hairline curl and caused him to explode his apoplectic fit onto the Twitter medium.  A happy bunny he was not.  My mate, Will Shakespeare, pitched the shot perfectly when he said, “Sarcasm is the lowest form of wit” and John Huggan was right on target to prove Will’s point.  To add fuel to fire, insult to injury, Paul McGinley, the voice of reason, proffered the observation that maybe Austin was more like Valderrama.  The apoplexy went into full stroke orbit and I got distracted big-time and although the much-respected Mr Huggan did not bring down t’internet in the manner of Kim Kardashian, he certainly exposed two very big boobs.

For the record, I’m with you all the way on this, Mr Huggan, sir.

The thirteenth hole at Austin CC is a great risk-reward short par-4 and that’s where I caught up with my next distraction when I finally extrapolated myself from the Twitter maelstrom.  There was Phil Mickelson standing close to the water’s edge and just off the green.  I have long gotten over Phil’s from-under-his-cap maverick hair frolic and am able to look at his golf fair and square – and it’s only fair to say he is back on magical form.  There he was, in the throes of annihilating young British Masters' champion Matt Fitzpatrick.  It was a bit like looking at a modern day version of David and Goliath, except this time the fairytale ending did not allow the little guy to win.  In fact, Fitzpatrick’s sole win, coming in the preliminary round robin, came to being solely because Berger had to concede because of a wrist injury.  But here was Phil, putting from the edge of the green and 5-up, when I re-joined the telly-viewing brigade.  I never saw him finish that hole, having become wildly distracted by his general attire, which can only be described as square-rigged and beak-bowed.  It really wouldn’t have mattered if the gusting wind had carried him into the close-by River Colorado that snakes its way through Lake Austin and hugs the outline of the golf course - he would have sailed quietly away, secure in the knowledge that the over-the-top yardage of his flapping trousers and collared top would have mightily aided the Pilgrim Fathers in their Mayflower mainsails and halved their Atlantic crossing time.  Those trousers and top should have been classified as a hazard and penalised accordingly.  Poor Matt.  I’m sure he couldn’t hear himself think with all that a-gusting and a-flapping from Phil but those golfing answers were certainly not blowing in the wind for him.  Despite the loose clothing, there was nothing loose about Mickelson’s play and he ended his winning game at 5 & 4.

From there on in and to quote Gwennie P by way of best expressing what I did next, I made a “conscious uncoupling” so that I could get on with watching golf pure and simple.  All was well for a while and a season until Group 5’s third round where I happen-chanced on Rickie Fowler, world golf ranking number 5, but hot-to-trot number one in the world golf fashion stakes.  Rickie is cutting edge and his golf ain’t bad either.  I was supposed to be marvelling at his 198yd tee shot on the par-3 seventh hole, which he nearly aced - but finished for a birdie putt - but, while the world and his wife were open-mouthed at his spectacular shot, my chin was hanging low because I had espied his outfit.

Oh! Rickie! Man!

You have aced it in your latest outing: cleated high-tops combined with six-pocketed jogger style silhouette “bicycle clip” pants.  You have single-handedly caused a furore amongst the male golfers, especially those over and above the years of middle-aged spread, and you have pushed the limits when it comes to performance and style.  While you may have blinded some with your daring-dazzle fashion and set the traditionalists in a turn of twizzles, you have put the fun back into golf and made its stale image young.  I just wish I could be your style director but I confess you’re doing a good job without me.  Carry on campin’ it up, Ricks.

There are reputedly five “little known” F-facts touted around the net about young Fowler.  He’s Fiercely competitive, loves his Family, is a bible boy and has a Faith that is important to him, was Fantastic at motocross and gave it up after a triple Fracture ended that career.  But less known, and of equal importance, is the Foley fact.

Seeing your latest outfit outing, I remain convinced that your style hero must be Jimmy Foley.  That’ll be my dad, a prototype, and despite the fact that he was a self-taught, skilled engineer who could repair anything from a ship to an aeroplane, he never owned a car his entire life and pedalled himself everywhere.  However, it has to be said that once my dad removed his bicycle clips, his trousers looked like Phil’s.  In fact, they would power Lefty’s into a pale comparison.  While Lefty could potentially have aided and abetted the Mayflower with his sailcloth trousers, my father’s pants would have safely floated the entire Spanish Armada on a round-the-world-in-eighty-days trip.  Sorry, dad, you know I loved you but I was always happiest when you kept your cycle clips on.

Enough distraction!  I am now back following Matchplay again and seriously watching the beautiful game but before I leave, I need to put this out there:
Would Phil benefit from taking a leaf out of Rickie’s book and emulating his “cycle clips” look?
Would Fitzpatrick have been better able to concentrate on his game, freed from the flapping of Phil’s pants, and perchance win?
Should Rickie move to Orange County, given his "You've been Tangoed" look?
Does anybody think that Oosthuizen’s toothy smile is reminiscent of Jürgen Klopp’s and do they swop dental tips?

Answers on a postcard, please.  No controversial remarks either.  It takes diddly-squat nothing to distract my featherbrain.











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