Inside the Ropes Following Player's Hopes
Written by Admin Saturday, 24 July 2010 09:10
Swedish Golf Online has been inside the ropes for the first two days of the Scandinavian Masters, and as a take off of the old joke, "Boy! Are our legs tired!"
We have been assisting with the telecast as a TV spotter, which has given us an upfront and semi-personal look at how the players and caddies interact with each other as well with their fellow competitors. Interestingly, there is a relation between the caddies and the TV coverage, which is not apparent when you watch the telecast on TV.
What does a spotter do? In a nutshell, he is the on the ground eyes for the TV production team. He is assigned a group, or a player to watch and to keep track of his shots, and to alert the truck when anything unusual or eventful happens.
At the end of each hole's play, you also send in your score to see if it jibes with the official score.
You can be called off at a moment's notice to follow someone hot, and hopefully your group stays in the hunt. You can always tell if your player is being featured because there will be a ground camera following you.
Yesterday's best moment for me, was the triple attempt of José Manual Lara's caddy to get his rain pants off. For some reason he was trying to get them over his golf shoes without unzipping the ankles. Finally, on the third attempt, José unzipped the ankles, and the caddy removed his shoes, and perseverance triumphed.
Much has been said about the Bro Hof golf course over the years and two things have proven to be correct. The first is that it is long. That is true (take it from the TV Spotter), in fact, to most of the caddies I have talked to and some of the players, the comment has been, "It's too long!"
I followed Dustin Johnson, the big hitter from the United States on Thursday. In benign weather conditions, he overpowered the the course, tee to green and putted well enough to go five under. On Friday, the wind was up, cooling temperatures and scores, and Johnson went one over.
The second comment, and this is unanimous, is the condition of the course. If there is such a thing as a perfect condition, Bro Hof is pretty close. No one has complained about the conditions, and the greens have been given particular praise. They may be hard to putt because of the undulations, but they never bounce or go awry by the surface. They are truly amazing.
The only one who handled the course well yesterday is our leader, KJ Choi. The Korean, who can hit it big and can handle wind, got to minus 10 before going into the clubhouse at 9 under.
Of course, earlier in the week, all eyes were on Choi on the putting green to watch him practice the side saddle putting stroke. To these eyes, he was struggling, and I saw no consistency in his putting stroke. Tuesday afternoon, he abandoned the club and went back to his regular putter. After the first two rounds, he is in the lead.
At his Friday press conference, when asked about the return to the regular stroke, he said that he hadn't abandoned the side saddle, but would work on it gradually over the next few months. If he wins this week, after struggling with the making cuts at the two previous events using the side saddle, you wonder if he will.
Robert S. Johnson, from Sweden is in second place using a Swedish radio and print humorist for his caddy. Obviously begun as a human interest angle, will Johnson risk a win to keep up the commitment? And if he does, and wins, will golfers become like Chuck Berry in rock, and find a local back up to carry the load?
Somehow, I doubt that.
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