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New Functionality at MyGolfBuddy

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We have upgraded the member tee time sharing system so that courses that have had open tee times slots posted will be highlighted in yellow on the golf course list on the members home page and also on the course search results page. Now you can just scroll through the course list to easily see what nearby courses other MGB members have posted surplus tee time slots to share with you. When posting a tee time be sure to include any special criteria (men/women only, handicap preference etc). After sharing a tee time you will be sent to the partner search page where you can do an advanced search to notify your desired type of nearby golfer. We are excited about this tee time sharing system and encourage you to log in and take look.

Also, we are currently upgrading the members only forum to help bring a greater sense of community for the mygolfbuddy membership. This forum does not require a separate log in, and supports member blogging, multimedia posting and file sharing. Please take a minute to log in and check out the new forum look, and by all means please blog or post liberally. We added this forum by request, and need your participation to make it a success.


As always, we will continue to work to bring you the most useful and technologically advanced golf partnering tools on the internet. Thanks for being a member and stay tuned, we have lots of new functionality in store for the 2008 season!

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Tiger Woods putter

Although it is no secret that Tiger Woods is a great putter, this truth cannot be over emphasized. I've been watching a lot of golf lately, and the difference between Woods and all the other pro golfers is most pronounced on the greens.

His ball striking is amazing, but there are many other great ball strikers on tour. A few guys hit it farther, and many hit it straighter. JB Holmes's driver and Sergio Garcia's irons come to mind. 

His short game is unbelievable. His pitches are true, he chips well, and he sometimes knocks it close to the flag out of bunkers. But there are other golfers who show equal skills with the wedges and short irons. Phil Mickelson and Jose Maria Olazabel come to mind.

But Tiger Woods putting has no contemporary parallel. No one exhibits as much skill with the flatstick. NO ONE. The putter is what separates him from all other professional golfers. He makes the ten footers that they often miss, and he often drains the 25 footers that they almost always miss.

This season is the best putting display he has ever shown. Anyone who witnessed  Woods dropping long putt after long putt at the Dubai Open, or at the World Golf Chamionships in Arizona this weekend will know exactly what I'm talking about. 

If you havent seen the highlights, then you might want to make an effort to find them online, because you will then see what I've seen... the best putting exhibition of all time. http://www.mygolfbuddy.com

 

 

 

 

Phil Mickelson's skills on display at the Northern Trust Open

I just came back from watching Phil Mickelson hold off Jeff Quinney at the Northern Trust Open (the old LA and then Nissan open).

The Riviera is a beautiful golf course with some tight fairways. Phil was driving the ball okay, his approach shots were only fair and he didnt putt well at all, but his wizardry was apparent on chips and especially bunker shots. Phil can basically aim for greenside bunkers, because no matter how deep the bunker or how steep the face, Mickelson was able to get his bunker shot close. This was the difference, along with Quinney sort of cracking under pressure. Good win for Phil. He needs to get wins under his belt before Tiger comes back.

Phil busting another bunker shot close at Riviera

 

  

New functionality added in January
You can now search for golfers by proximity to a specific golf course, also, we have added a state and city golf course directory, click this link to try ou these new tools. http://www.mygolfbuddy.com/course_search_by_state.aspx 
MGB golf instructional video series
We have begun shooting instructional videos to help our members play better. The first clip is on greenside chipping with a 60 degree sand wedge. It is straightforward, covers the basics of chipping, and will give you something you can practice and take out to the course.  Follow the link below, or visit the MGB homepage to view this video. View the chipping video
Upcoming new MyGolfbuddy functionality is unprecenteded

In the coming weeks we will be implementing a new system that will allow our members to post tee times and share open tee time slots they have left after booking a time with other MGB members in their locality.

This system will allow members to fill up foursomes without making any phone calls, and instead by just posting the tee time they reserved to MGB. Once the openings are posted golfers can select to have the tee time slots broadcast to all members within a certain distance radius or just to the certain golfers meeting a search criteria.(age group, gender, playing ability, etc...). Golfers receiving invites can immediately RSVP, ignore or decline the offer, or reply with a maybe.

In effect MGB will be a supplement to the tee reservation vs. walk up waiting list system that is in place now. When the system is implemented be sure to post some times to fill open slots in your tee off group with other golfers from the local MGB community!  

http://www.mygolfbuddy.com

 

 

     

Michelle Wie at the Samsung

I just saw that Michelle Wie shot a second consecutive 79 to remain in last place at the Samsung World Championship currently taking place in the California desert.

Many LPGA veterans resent Wie because she is playing in this elite field yet has never won on Tour and isnt even an LPGA member! I once attended a clinic with Amy Alcott and someone asked her about Wie playing Men's events... Alcott could barely hide her resentment and said as diplomatically as possibly that she thought that Wie should come to the LPGA and "learn how to win" before trying to play with the men.

Personally, I think we may have already seen the best of Michelle Wie when it comes to golf. I think she will never recover the distance she had at 16 again, and I don't think she putts well enough to win on the LPGA.

Having said that, Michelle Wie will always have the last laugh, because of Nike and the multi million dollar contract they gave her before she won her first LPGA event.

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Welcome Technorati
We have just claimed this blog on Technorati and will now be posting regularly. Technorati Profile Support MyGolfBuddy by adding this blog to your favorites, post comments and link to us. Enjoy!
New members only forum on MyGolfBuddy.com

http://www.mygolfbuddy.com We recently added some new functionality on MyGolfBuddy.com, including hundreds of new discount tee times, a new members only comunication center and forum, upgrade to the partner search funcionaity and more.

Be sure to visit MyGolfBudd.oolsy soon and try out the new too!

Why I am so hard on Sergio Garcia - not living up to the early hype, but acting like he has.

 

 

On Tiger's Tail

With a dazzling win in Ireland followed by a near victory in Scotland, Sergio Garcia, 19, of Spain is drawing comparisons to a guy named Woods

Originally Posted: Wednesday July 14, 1999 10:58 AM

  Click for larger image Since turning pro after the Masters, the player known as El Nino has wowed Europe. Jim Gund

By Jaime Diaz

Millennia are supposed to end on a note of tidy finality, but as golf races to the year 2000, it gets more unpredictable and fascinating by the day. Just when we'd gotten used to the possibility of David Duval, not Tiger Woods, becoming the next dominant player, the last three months have seen the game's landscape further altered, this time by a 19-year-old Spaniard, Sergio Garcia.

A coltish 5'10", 155-pounder, Garcia still fights a losing battle with acne and is prepping for his driver's license test in two weeks. He won't even get his high school diploma until next May. All of which helps explain his nickname, El Niño, Spanish for the Kid. But since turning pro in April after finishing as low amateur (38th overall) at the Masters, Garcia is quickly becoming the Man. In a span of just two weeks he has jump-started the moribund European tour by winning the Irish Open at Druids' Glen in Dublin on July 4, following up with an opening-round 62 in the Standard Life Loch Lomond in Scotland three days later and then finishing in a tie for second in that event last Saturday. In only seven pro tournaments he has virtually locked up a spot on the European Ryder Cup team -- if he doesn't make it on Cup points (he has climbed to seventh in the standings), he'll almost surely be one of the two captain's picks. He has also positioned himself to earn a PGA Tour card for next year with his tie for third at the Byron Nelson and an 11th-place finish at the Memorial, which put him at 118th on the U.S. money list at week's end. Along the way he has emerged as a bona fide contender to win this week's British Open at Carnoustie.

"If I keep playing like I'm playing," says the baby-faced Garcia in English that scarcely betrays his coastal Mediterranean upbringing, "I will be up there at Carnoustie."

There's no boast about it. Garcia has shown that he can routinely combine accurate and long driving (he was third longest in the field at Loch Lomond) with finely wrought iron approaches that leave him short birdie chances. When his rhythmic putting stroke is on, Garcia becomes as explosive as anyone this side of Woods and Duval. In the Irish Open, for example, Garcia made two eagles on the back nine of the third round to get within two shots of the lead, then closed the deal with a frighteningly mature 64 to win by three. In Scotland, Garcia had 23 birdies in four rounds and could have made more if his short game hadn't suffered a few lapses. It was all reminiscent of Woods's startling debut in his first eight weeks on the PGA Tour at the end of 1996, when he too seemed to be playing a less demanding game than the rest of the field.

This is not a complete surprise, of course. Garcia has been a winner for a long time, having earned more than 70 victories as an amateur, including the 1998 British Amateur. Given his record, it's not so shocking that some of golf's leading lights -- including Woods himself -- believe Garcia has more control of the physical aspects of his game than Tiger had at the same age. Some think he might have better decision-making skills too.

Jack Nicklaus, who invited Garcia to the Memorial in June and then made a point of playing a practice round with him, says, "I knew he was going to be good, but he's a little better than I thought. It's his composure and the makeup of his whole game." Seve Ballesteros, who has tried to do his part to lessen the expectations placed on Garcia, nevertheless lapsed long enough to allow that "Sergio has everything a champion needs. Everything."

And those impressions were recorded before Garcia's latest hot streak. When Colin Montgomerie weighed in after his final-round 64 overtook Garcia at Loch Lomond for a three-stroke victory, there was an additional point to be made. "Garcia has raised the bar in Europe just as Woods did in America," said Monty, who is closing in on his seventh consecutive Order of Merit, given to the player who tops the money list in Europe. "They are very similar in character, in ability and in their effect on the other players. I played extra well today in part because I knew it was Garcia I would have to beat."

Interestingly, Montgomerie had affirmed Garcia's elevated status in a very different way two days earlier. Unprompted, the Scotsman used a postround press conference to scold the young Spaniard for being impertinent enough to agree with a questioner that his first-round 62, in which he parred the last three holes, could have been a 59. "I'm not here to say I'm going to break 60, that's for sure," clucked Montgomerie before a question could be asked. Garcia was taken aback by the rebuke, pointing out he had never said he should have shot a 59. Just as Woods took heat early in his pro career for saying that he had won the 1997 Byron Nelson Classic with less than his A game, Garcia too has become a lightning rod for telltale bolts of envy.

Garcia has been preparing for this moment almost since he began playing, at age four, under the tutelage of his father, Victor, the pro at the Mediterraneo Golf Course in Castellón. In competition Garcia is a study in sober confidence, whether he's showing his characteristic boldness on a par-5 or accepting, with unaffected poise, the boisterous reception of the crowd. Away from the course, he truly becomes El Niño, flipping a yo-yo, playing video games, or bashfully flirting with the young girls who clamor for his autograph. When his manager, longtime family friend Jose Marquina, firmed up a long-term deal with Adidas, Garcia didn't ask how much it was for, but rather when he could meet his new sneaker-company stablemate, Anna Kournikova.

Garcia's playful nature emerged again after his victory in Dublin. He and his father and Marquina had made a pact after the Masters that they would all cut their hair short to mark Sergio's first win as a pro. Garcia brandished the electric clippers but assured the well-coiffed older men that he would let them off the hook with a trim at a comfortable setting of four millimeters (about a quarter of an inch). Garcia then secretly changed the setting and quickly mowed a to-the-nub swath down the middle of his father's head. Immediate horror gave way to nonstop laughter that didn't subside until all three had burr cuts.

"Sergio's character is to enjoy life as he enjoys golf, the good with the bad," says Victor Garcia. "I know success will bring new difficulties, but I trust his basic character. He will find his way to enjoy it."

Still, the scrutiny has begun to intensify, with the favorite subject being Garcia's distinctive downswing. By dropping his arms at the beginning of the downswing, he is able to increase his wrist-cock and attack the ball as if he were cracking a whip. It's the main source of Garcia's power, but several admirers, including Johnny Miller, believe he will have to temper this "lag" (much as Woods has "rounded" his approach to the ball) or be doomed to fighting wild shots under pressure. "Sergio's move reminds me of Bobby Clampett, who was as good a teenage golfer as ever played," says Miller. "But that steep angle of attack didn't hold up as a pro, because it's built on youth and timing more than solid technique."

Perhaps, but Jesper Parnevik, who was paired with Garcia in the final two rounds at Loch Lomond, saw no hint of impending trouble. "Every other player his age I've ever seen has bad shots in his bag, the kind that ruin rounds," said Parnevik. "But Sergio doesn't have any bad shots. He might hit some better than others, but he doesn't have a bad shot he has to be afraid of."

Garcia is blithe in his agreement. Asked if he has ever experienced a slump, he says, "No, my game has always been quite good." Accordingly, he is eager to go up against the very best, although he is still unsure whether he will play the European or American tour next year or split time between the two. Until then, Garcia will meet Woods and Duval at Carnoustie, the PGA Championship and probably in the Ryder Cup.

Whatever happens, it's a good bet that the battle over who will rule golf will carry into the next millennium. If Garcia continues at the rate he's going, the so-called Showdown at Sherwood, a two-man exhibition between Duval and Woods on Aug. 2, may be wanting for a third.

Issue date: July 19, 1999

Trying to stimulate local golfer connections

We are reviving the MGB golfer hookup message board in an attempt to provide a place where golfers looking to find or fill a foursome, skins game or tournament can post their information for other MGB golfers to check out. The url for the new message board is

Visit MyGolfBuddy

To help jump start this, if you leave your city, state, and mygolfbuddy user name  we will do an email blast to all members in your vicinitiy so that they will be alerted to check the message board if they are looking to play as well.

Lets see if we can get this thing going.

 

 

Tiger Woods at the PGA

Woods has to be the odds on favorite at this weeks PGA Championship. It's his last chance to win a major, and judging from his 8 stroke thumping of the field last week at the Bridgestone Invitational, he's ready to make a good run at the PGA.

What's the chance that Sergio Garcia will challenge Woods at this event? Garcia has two 2nd place finishes in Majors this year, so there is a precedent...

 

Seeking MGB member bloggers

We want to your blog posts! If you want to be a contributing author to the MyGolfBuddy blog space, (guaranteed audience of over 8,000 golfers) just sign up for a free account and we will turn your authorship priviledges on so you can post stories to the blog.

 

No Dogs or Women allowed

The first time golf lured Louise Suggs to Britain, she carried a footlocker filled with clothes and canned hams and traveled by ocean liner.

That Atlantic crossing, in 1948, took one week and made her seasick. The journey she will complete this week took 57 years and at times left her heartsick.

Suggs is traveling Tuesday to Scotland for the Women's British Open, grateful to have lived long enough to grace the galleries when the first professional women's event is held at the Old Course at St. Andrews. She will watch members of the Ladies Professional Golf Association that she helped found test themselves on a layout that will be 586 meters, or 641 yards, shorter than when Tiger Woods won the Open in 2005.

It is the papal blessing at the end of a long pilgrimage for Suggs, who will be 84 in September.

Seated in a conference room recently at the World Golf Hall of Fame in St. Augustine, Florida, gripping a cane the way she once did a driver, Suggs said, "In the back of my mind, I always thought if the ladies were ever allowed to play the Old Course in a tournament, we'd have it made."

The Old Course, the most famous of six public layouts at St. Andrews, is where the first known professional golfer, the ball maker Allan Robertson, carded the first score below 80, in 1858. It is where Old Tom Morris carved out his legend as one of the first golf architects and where Jack Nicklaus bronzed his legacy by capturing two of his three British Opens.

St. Andrews is also where, until recently, a sign hung outside the clubhouse behind the 18th green that read, "No dogs or women allowed."

The Royal and Ancient Golf Club, the sport's ruling body outside of the United States, will open that clubhouse to the women during the Open.

"It's going to be really exciting, I think, to see the women professionals play the course," Peter Dawson, the club's chief executive, said. "I'm looking forward to how the course behaves and how the ladies get on playing."

The exposure the golfers receive this week, they hope, will open other doors. Forgive Suggs if she does not hold her breath. In 1948, when she won the Ladies' British Open Amateur Championship, the rationing and major reclamation projects in postwar England were sobering. But there also seemed so much to celebrate.

The tournament was contested at Royal Lytham & St. Annes golf club, where Suggs' friend, Bobby Jones, had won the first of his three British Open titles 22 years earlier.

It was a classic course, and the crowds were so enthusiastic that Suggs returned home to Georgia believing that equality was at the tee box, tapping its foot. Surely, it was a matter of time, she recalled thinking, before it would be allowed to play through.

In 1949, the year before Suggs and 12 others formed the LPGA, she told a reporter that she might have been born 20 years too soon, but the day was dawning when women would have the same opportunities in golf as men. Reminded of that comment, Suggs said drolly: "Probably, I should have said 50 years. Let's put it that way."

You do not have to have been around as long as Suggs, who won 58 professional events - the last in 1962 - to appreciate how far the women have traveled.

Paula Creamer, a 20-year-old from California who has won three Tour events since turning pro in 2005, called it "a very exciting moment for women's golf." In an interview this month at the World Match Play Championship in New Rochelle, New York, Creamer added, "It's an honor, but it's also amazing how it hasn't happened sooner."

Creamer, who had never played the Old Course, traveled to St. Andrews in April for a few practice rounds. She was surprised to see signs everywhere - promoting the women's Open.

"I'm actually on one of them," Creamer said. "It's the home of golf, and to have a 20-year-old on the front of something like that at St. Andrews is pretty neat."

Women's amateur golf has left a deep divot in St. Andrew's swath of history. The St. Andrews Ladies Golf Club was formed in 1867, six years before the first men's Open Championship was contested at the Old Course. Within 20 years, it had 500 members.

The Old Course has played host to four Ladies' British Open Amateurs, most recently in 1975, and is also the site of a women's amateur event, the St. Rule Trophy, whose past winners include Annika Sorenstam.

And yet women's professional golf in Britain has lagged far behind the sport in the United States. The first Women's British Open was played in 1976, 30 years later than its counterpart in the United States.

The event was handicapped early on by its inability to secure the same courses, with the exception of Royal Birkdale Golf Club, that are part of the men's Open rotation. Until 1994, the Women's British Open was not included in the LPGA schedule. It did not gain status as the last of the four majors until 2001.

Sunday, July 29, 2007

From the International Herald Tribune

 
Local Golf Outings

We are trying to establish a network of regular local golf outings/tournaments for MyGolfBuddy members to play in. So far we have had a very hard time getting people out to participate. Currently, we are working on outings in the three cities that we have USGA handicap clubs. (NY, LA, SF), but we would support any tournaments/outings in other area. If you have a tournament that you want to open up to MyGolfBuddy members, or know of a good venue, contact us. We are working with our forum partner golfwrx.com on this. Let us know if you want to get involved in this effort!

MGB Los Angeles Open Tourney August 31st.

Los Verdes Golf Tournament Los Verdes Golf Course

Join us Friday August 31st at Los Verdes Golf Course, with several holes with views of the Pacific Ocean, it is one of America's best municipal golf courses! View the tournament flyer here . You can register and pay online to reserve a spot at http://www.mygolfbuddy.com

 

Welcome to the New MGB Blog
This is a place where MyGolfBuddy members can share golf related thoughts and comments as well as pictures, images, files etc... It is really easy to use. You can comment on other people's blogs or register and start your own golf related blog. Enjoy!