From the Inside Out. I. B. Nobody. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: I. B. Nobody
Издательство: Ingram
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Жанр произведения: Контркультура
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781633383173
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him more than his triumphs. “Losing,” he said,

      “you just got to learn from losing.”

      I played 365 rounds of golf last year. Thank God for

      whoever invented golf. I’d been dead without it.

      —Babe Ruth

      Foreword

      Of the many instructional books available, it is a pleasure to have yours; in its common-sense approach with tips from the greats to augment the simple swing principles and drawing from your experiences and anecdotes, I. B. Nobody touches us with the lessons learned of golf and life.

      I only wish I had known Mr. Bateman. but knowing him through you ensures his legacy, and for that, our world is a little better place.

      For all of us searching for the perfect lesson we need search no further. I. B. Nobody has it all.

      Jim Langley

      PGA Golf Professional

      Cypress Point Club

      September 26, 2006

      Golf Circa 1920

      Golf was still a fairly fresh export from Great Britain in 1910-1920, and while those out of America’s melting pot who were not of English or Scottish lineage and sought a place in the game were not entirely thwarted, they did have to weather a certain “attitude” toward them by the “ins”. The Black American’s experience in this regard was at least doubly difficult and of a different order.

      Babe Ruth

      The 1920’s was the decade of new consumption. World War I had primed American industry for the mass production of consumer goods. The Highway Act of 1921 spurred growth in interstate trucking, and facilitated the delivery of those goods. The electrification of factories and households stimulated a national spending spree. The big names of the times were, aviator Charles Lindberg; gangster Al Capone; boxer Jack Dempsey; scientist Albert Einstein; singer Al Jolson; motion picture star Charlie Chaplin and musician Duke Ellington. Bobby Jones was a celebrity to golf fans but there weren’t many of them. In contrast, Babe Ruth was the most famous athlete in the world. He reached a level of fame that redefined fame. He restored America’s faith in baseball after the 1919 Black Sox scandal, and played a huge role in making golf a spectator sport in America. Ruth made the game look like fun, and his passion for golf motivated millions of Americans, who never played the rich man’s sport, to pick up a club.

      Babe Ruth was once America’s most famous golfer. Ruth was 20 when he first took up the game—in fact, received the news that he was being traded from the Red Sox to the Yankees while on the golf course. Alex Morrison, at the time golf guru to the stars—he pioneered swing sequence photos by hanging a lantern from a club swung in a dark room—taught the Babe to play. Ruth could arguably be the man who pioneered celebrity golf, playing in numerous matches with the most famous golfers & celebrities of the times. No question, he was the first famous left handed golfer and played a MAJOR role in popularizing the game in America. “A golfer could drain a flask of whiskey while playing and eat a hot dog (or three) between holes...what a game!” Why he’s not in the World Golf Hall of Fame is anybody’s guess. As Babe’s daughter, Dorothy, once said, “Baseball broke his heart but golf kept him going.”

      Alex J. Morrison

      Born in California in 1896, at age 12 he began caddying at The Los Angeles Country Club. By 1920 he had become a noted teacher and exhibition golfer traveling the vaudeville circuit. Alex Morrison had a thread that ran through the three best golfers of all time. Each of the three had signIficant teachers/mentors with definite ideas on what was important. Bobby Jones; East Lake Country Club’s head pro, Stewart Maiden, who instructed young Bobby, subscribed to much of what Morrison taught. Ben Hogan; most significantly, learned to weaken his grip from Henry Picard who spent 8 days with Morrison learning his fundamentals. Hogan dedicated his first book, Power Golf to Picard. Jack Nicklaus; Jack Grout, Nicklaus’s long time instructor, learned the basics first hand from from Henry Picard. Picard had his greatest success while changing from a Vardon grip to an interlocking grip.

      Morrison believed in simplified instruction. “By simply giving their attention to one or two points I suggest they will automatically bring their shoulders, hips & legs into the proper action. These 2 points will help every player no matter what shot he is having difficulty with: standing erect as he can and keep his chin pointed to the back of the ball.”

      Morrison also believed that there are 3 parts of the body that must be taken care of if there is to be anything like muscular coordination in the swing:

      1. Upper section of the spinal column which affords freedom of action to the shoulders, arms, and hand. This source is kept open by the proper pointing of the chin.

      2. Lower section of the spinal column which affords freedom of action with the legs and feet. This is kept open by the side motion of the hips.

      3. Wrist joints. This source is kept free partly by having the hands on the club at the same angle.

      Look after these three main points of freedom and you can always make your swing one continuous motion. The pointing of the chin is the connecting link, in a sense, between the body and the arms and hands.

      Morrison also believed that weight shift is essential in a good golf swing, firmly rooted in good footwork, balance, and the proper rolling of the ankles. The left ankle rolling right on the backswing, the right ankle rolling left on the through swing. He stressed that you must picture the swing as a whole—or one continuous motion—not as a series of separate actions. He believed that golf was 90% mental, 8% physical and 2% mechanical.

      “What Morrison was saying was this: The coordination of the arms & body as a unit, and how you get this organized is critical. And footwork, the rolling of the ankles. But in a nutshell—posture, balance, and the plane of the swing.” Henry Picard

      “Jack Nicklaus’s lifelong teacher has been Jack Grout, who was an assistant to, and a very good friend of Henry Picard. Grout’s teaching was influenced by Picard, who is a very persuassive man and also had the playing record to support his views. Thus, what Alex Morrison was teaching in the 1920’s and 1930’s has touched Jack Nicklaus sixty years later.” Al Barkow

      Golf was an almost exclusively upper-class sport in the 1920s. There were relatively few public courses and private clubs were too expensive for almost anyone but the rich to join. 3 golfers symbolized golf in the 1920s and they were so colorful that millions followed their exploits.

      The Big Three: Robert Tyre “Bobby” Jones, who remained an amateur, the other two were professionals, Walter Hagen and Gene Sarazen

      Jones was more typical of the nation’s golfers. He was from a wealthy Atlanta family and began playing golf at a very young age. He won a children’s tournament at age 6 and played in the top amateur tournaments from his early teen years. He also graduated from Georgia Tech University with a degree in mechanical engineering and later received a degree in English from Harvard. He read for the law, was admitted to the Georgia bar and practiced law while playing in the world’s best golf tournaments.

      Beginning in 1923 at age 21, Jones was the dominant figure in golf for 7 years, winning the U.S. Open 4 times, the British Open 3 times, the U.S. Amateur 5 times, and the British Amateur once. He retired from competitive golf after winning the Grand Slam of the time in 1930. After retiring as a competitive golfer, Jones practiced law, designed golf clubs, and founded both the Augusta National Golf Club and its fabled tournament, the Masters. He continued to host the Masters tournament until his death in 1971.

      Hagen was the son of a blacksmith in Rochester, New York, and he learned the rudiments of golf by practicing in a field while herding cows. He caddied at an exclusive country club where the professional taught him the finer points of the game. He also worked as a taxidermist. A great natural athlete, Hagen turned down a tryout with the Philadelphia Phillies at age 21, in order to play in the 1914 U.S. Open, which he won. Hagen won the U.S. Open again in 1919, and the British Open 4 times in the 1920s, as well as 5 PGA championships.

      At