Golf Stories and Gladys Kravitz

Greetings Golfers,

It’s fun writing a weekly blog. People always ask if I’m worried about running out of things to write about … no I’m not. I have a lot of leeway … sure, it’s a golf blog, but that’s not very limiting. And, I don’t have an editor assigning me stories or ripping apart what I write.

The reason I’m saying this, is because lately it seems that a lot of the online golf magazines are loaded with stories that are just space-fillers. I read some of them, and when I’m at the end of the article … I keep looking for more … “that can’t be it?”.

Read one the other day saying that golfers will never shake hands again … ever … even after this crisis is over. And the reasoning was just flat. Could have been interesting … but wasn’t. Just a space-filler.

Our golf course hasn’t needed a space-filler lately … we’ve been stuffed since we opened last Saturday. Thank God. We’ve been grateful … and the golfers have been grateful. It feels really good.

We started pretty bare bones: no carts, no range, no food & beverage. Just wanted make sure everything was manageable.

Of course we were/are concerned about safety … that’s priority #1. Yet, we were/are also concerned about perception. If it seemed like we weren’t taking precautions, we could hurt golf for the rest of the state. As I said, perception is very important. If you remember the show “Bewitched”, they had a neighbor – Gladys Kravitz – who lived for spying on her neighbors. I’m sure there are “Gladyses” out there who would love to take down a course or even golf in Minnesota.

So, we’ve now added carts, the range, and some beverages and snacks. However, the range and other practice areas are only for pre-round warm-up. There’s no other way we could manage it. Imagine if we had 50 people on the putting green … or 100 waiting to hit balls at the range. Gladys would have her big chance.

Hopefully, you’re getting out to play. As much as I love reading about golf … I’d rather play the game.

Take care,

Tom Abts
GM/Head PGA Professional
tabts@deerrungolf.com

Deer Run Golf Club
8661 Deer Run Drive
Victoria, MN 55386
(952) 443-2351
www.deerrungolf.com
www.facebook.com/DeerRunGolf
www.twitter.com/DeerRunGolfClub

Paved Paradise and Put Up a Parking Lot

Greetings Golfers,

Yesterday, golf courses in Wisconsin got the green-light from their governor to open-up … according to safety regulations.

Obviously, we golf course operators in Minnesota hope the green-light flashes our way … soon. When the weather is nice, we have more people walking the course than we do on a normal day of golf. Putting a golf club in their hand wouldn’t hurt social distancing … it would probably spread them further apart!

Golf is such a great game. We can play it all of our life – no matter our physical condition. A few years ago, I helped give golf lessons to disabled military veterans at a course in South Carolina. These guys and gals were beyond amazing. You think you need the perfect swing to play golf? Hardly. These people had found ways to make it work that you couldn’t imagine – you’d have to see it to believe it.

And that’s true for most of us. Not as extreme … but most of us aren’t in perfect shape, really strong, super flexible, with flawless timing, and great feel. However, we can find a way to hit a golf ball with a golf club well enough to play the game.

I just heard that a course on the Wisconsin border filled their Saturday tee sheet in 45 minutes. Not exactly shocking.

If you are in a state that is playing golf – lucky you! And for those of us who aren’t … let’s not take it for granted when we can tee-it-up.

Remember this verse from that Joni Mitchell song:

Don’t it always seem to go
That you don’t know what you’ve got til it’s gone
They paved paradise
And put up a parking lot

Better not start paving golf courses!

Take care,

Tom Abts
GM/Head PGA Professional
tabts@deerrungolf.com

Deer Run Golf Club
8661 Deer Run Drive
Victoria, MN 55386
(952) 443-2351
www.deerrungolf.com
www.facebook.com/DeerRunGolf
www.twitter.com/DeerRunGolfClub

Better – not Perfect

Greetings Golfers,

The other day I was talking to a local PGA teaching pro. He’s a smart guy and I always enjoy his stories and insights. He gets it. Doesn’t get caught up in the frills – he has a real sense for the bottom line. And what really makes him a good instructor, is that he can figure how to get a student to that bottom line.

He’s also figured it out for his own game. He’s a very good player. And gets better every year. I want to emphasize that point … he gets better every year. That’s a rare thing … not just in golf, but in anything.

Too often we try to make the big jump to “perfect” … it doesn’t happen … so we quit.

There’s an old saying that I love: “Perfect is the enemy of good”. Think about that. Not “bad” is the enemy of good … bit it’s “perfect”. People are not perfect. Life is not perfect. But, we can get “better”.

We’ve all been around nit-pickers. All they see are the flaws … no matter how small – they focus on the flaws. Gee, what a talent! Obviously, I’m kidding. That takes zero talent or awareness. Understanding how things work and why a flaw may be part of the picture takes a lot more insight.

For example, someone’s golf swing might have a little too much lateral motion, but they need it to get movement in their swing because they aren’t very flexible – yet their swing gets them in the proper position to hit the golf ball. A golf course might have some bad spots on the course … but 95% is well-maintained and the superintendent  doesn’t have a giant staff because his budget isn’t huge because the course doesn’t charge $200 a round.

The nit-picker/perfectionist doesn’t see the picture … just focuses in with the microscope to find flaws. Micromanaging is not a skill.

Am I defending bad business, or faulty golf swings, etc? Not at all. I’m trying to put things in perspective.

And … I’m trying to bring up how destructive that perfectionist attitude is. Not just to everyone and everything around a “perfectionist”, but especially to themselves. Being a perfectionist is debilitating. They can’t attempt anything because they can’t do it perfectly.

Many years ago when my sons were in Little League … one son was making the change from a season of “Coach Pitch” where the coach would lob the pitch into where the kid wanted it. The next year … was completely different … now the pitcher was trying get the batter to strike out – not to hit the ball. Also, these pitchers were kids and usually a little wild … not exactly their coach lobbing it into the perfect spot.

So, the Head Coach asked me to be the Batting Coach. (A move he soon regretted!) When we would scrimmage between ourselves … the kids wouldn’t swing the bat. They all wanted to “walk”. It got so bad that I insisted that they swing at EVERY pitch. You should have seen those first few games: kids swinging at balls over their head, or in the dirt, etc … and usually everyone striking out at every at bat. The parents went crazy. I kept asking the Head Coach to hang-in-there with me. He did. Wow.

Well, the season had two divisions: First Half and Second Half. We finished dead-last in the First Half. However, we never lost a game in the Second Half. We could hit. By swinging at every pitch … the kids learned how to get the bat on the ball. After they became good aggressive hitters … I let them choose when to swing. Then they got really good. And, they couldn’t wait for their turn to go to bat.

Did every kid get a hit every time at bat? Of course not. But, now they loved playing baseball. They could deal with the fear of failure at the plate.

There’s even a happy ending to this story. At the end of the season … the First Half champs played the Second Half champs. We won – handedly. The other team had won the First Half because they always walked. They never learned how to hit. Well, not just did we win … our kids were full of energy and confident. The other team was just a bunch of scared kids. It wasn’t pretty.

I know, I know … this blog is too long. But, you’re probably wasting time at home anyway.

Before I end this blog … I want to make it clear that I’m not advocating recklessness. Everything is risk/reward … reckless is just plain dumb. And perfectionism is also dumb … though it’s usually accompanied with a smug attitude – what a combination.

The goal is “better” … not “perfect”. We can get better. It’s a constant process. Usually just baby steps.

But it sure beats sitting on the side-lines of life and just pointing out everyone’s and everything’s flaws.

It’s all about “better” … not “perfect”.

Take care,

Tom Abts
GM/Head PGA Professional
tabts@deerrungolf.com

Deer Run Golf Club
8661 Deer Run Drive
Victoria, MN 55386
(952) 443-2351
www.deerrungolf.com
www.facebook.com/DeerRunGolf
www.twitter.com/DeerRunGolfClub

Chi Chi and the Tiger King

Greetings Golfers,

Yesterday, my wife asked me what I was going to write about … I said “Chi Chi Rodriguez”. I have no idea why I said that. Haven’t heard his name lately … he hasn’t been in the news … no reason to say that … and I didn’t hesitate – just jumped out of my mouth.

Last week I did read an article about Ben Hogan. It was a reprint of an article from 1970 in Golf Digest written by Nick Seitz. You have to read it. It’s unbelievably well written, and a fascinating portrait of Hogan. I can always read Hogan stories.

Chi Chi said that he played 11 tournaments with Hogan and saw him never miss a green. Now, Chi Chi is a storyteller and a lot of fun … but he might not be exaggerating … Hogan was that good.

And Chi Chi was crazy good … not Hogan good … but unbelievably good. He was about 5’7” and 150 lbs and hit it as far as anybody. And he could get it up-and-down from anywhere. He was made for Tour golf. He could hit any kind of shot and was a showman. He played for the galleries. He’d be in the middle of the fairway with a basic shot to a middle pin … and instead, he’d hit a crazy hook or some type of goofy knock-down shot just for the fans. And of course he was known for his bolero act after he’d make a putt.

I’m sure that not all of the other Tour players appreciated his act … or wanted to be paired-up with him. However, normal tournaments on the Tour are not the same as the Majors. The Majors are about pure golf. They’re about testing the best players in the world.

Whereas, the Tour is about good players touring around the country putting on a show – a golf show. Of course the galleries want to see their heroes play great golf … but it’s not the US Open.

Chi Chi had success on the Tour – he won 8 times – but he really did well on the Senior Tour. Probably because the Senior Tour was less serious than the PGA Tour. Also, Chi Chi aged well – at 60, he looked and moved like a 40 year old.

Talk about not having a modern robot swing! You have to check out videos of his swing. And his interviews. He’s a bright, thoughtful, charming fellow.

And, check out that Hogan article. You can’t just watch Netflix and “Tiger King” every day.

Take care,

Tom Abts
GM/Head PGA Professional
tabts@deerrungolf.com

Deer Run Golf Club
8661 Deer Run Drive
Victoria, MN 55386
(952) 443-2351
www.deerrungolf.com
www.facebook.com/DeerRunGolf
www.twitter.com/DeerRunGolfClub