Monday, October 18, 2010

A New Golf Facility in Pune!

My friends Parag and Aditya started a new golf academy at Sindh Housing Society in Pune yesterday. This is a very exciting development for Pune residents for several reasons.

One of the major obstacles to golf becoming more popular in India is the availability of facilities to learn and pursue the game. As an example, Pune, a city of about 4 million people, has only 3 major golf courses accessible to the general public. Of these there is only one public course - the Poona Club Golf Course. There are no driving ranges or practice facilities outside these golf courses. In contrast, a sport like tennis has at least 25 academies around town. These tennis academies run regular programs for juniors.

The Golf Academy started by First Tee Golf (website http://www.firsttee.co.in) in Pune is a step in the right direction.




The academy has a pitching range of about 100 yards, bays with nets to practice full swing shots, a chipping and bunker practice area, and a practice putting green.


First Tee Golf plans to run regular programs at this facility which will enable many more people to learn and enjoy the game. I know several people living in the Aundh/Baner area who would be absolutely delighted to have this facility available - it will save them a lot of driving time.


For me, this is great. My son Siddharth and I can drive about 10 minutes to the First Tee academy and work on sharpening our game.

Good work Aditya and Parag!

Commercial and Vanity Handicaps

In the last few months I have come across a couple of lovely descriptions of two kinds of golf handicaps at my home club.

Like every other golf club, golfers at the Poona Club also place bets when they play. Depending on one's appetite, these bets can be of varying sizes, but the core idea behind these bets is to make the game more serious and to bring in a competitive edge. Therefore a club golfer is at an advantage if his/her handicap understates their golf ability. Stories about "fudged" handicaps - some serious, some frivolous - are not at all rare, and these stories are a major topic of discussion in the clubhouse.

In this context, a friend introduced me to the concept of a "commercial handicap". A commercial handicap is a carefully "managed" handicap that gives a golfer a cushion of a few strokes and therefore helps them win more bets. I don't want to go into the techniques of "managing" one's commercial handicap, but there are some very interesting ones that do the rounds.

And then there are golfers who would like to look good on paper. These are the golfers who would like their golf handicap to overstate their ability. One of my friends describes such a handicap as a "vanity handicap". These golfers typically do not play bet games, and if they do, they are willing to forego some money in exchange for looking good on the handicap chart.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Two nail-biters in two days!

Graeme McDowell is short for an Irishman. He is strongly built with a full head of hair, and facial hair somewhere in-between a stubble and a full beard. He also happens to be one of the best professional golfers in the world.

McDowell methodically won his singles match against the American Hunter Mahan to complete one of the closest ever Ryder Cup wins for Europe against the USA. Those who think of golf as an individual sport would surely have changed their mind after watching this absolutely fabulous tournament.

After almost 4 days of competition Europe and America were tied with 13.5 points each. And it all came down to McDowell's match. He was calm, he was focused, and he was relentless. The putt he nailed to win the 16th hole will become part of Ryder Cup folklore. In all this euphoria, it was important to remember that it was the European team that won the cup, not McDowell the individual. McDowell was the finisher, the final blow. But it was equally important that the Molinari brothers salvaged the half point on the 18th in their four-ball match. The 46-year old Jiminez won his singles game, Luke Donald scored 3 points overall, and Colin Montgomerie marshalled his troops well.

6,500 miles away in Mohali, another nail-biter unfolded less than 24 hours later. This time it was two very good cricket teams battling it out to win a Test Match. In a match that had fluctuated like the Sensex, India were down and out on the last day at 124 for 8, with 92 more runs required for an almost impossible win. At the crease were two injured men, both on pain-killers. VVS Laxman was struggling with back-spasms, and Ishant Sharma had a bum knee. What unfolded in the next few hours will be remembered for a long, long time. Laxman and Sharma battled hard, and played smartly. They fashioned an unlikely 81 run partnership that turned the tables on Australia, and enabled India to win by one wicket. Laxman was absolutely relentless till the very end. What a match!

Again, in this hoopla, it is important to remember that the team won. Without Zaheer and Ojha's bowling and the four Indian half centuries in the first innings, Ishant Sharma's three wicket burst in the Aussie second innings, Raina's run out of Ponting, and many other such small things, India may not have won.

For me, it once again reinforces the notion that winning is not an event, it is a process. Winning is about being relentless. Someone once told me on the golf course: Never give up, and never let up.

These two nail-biting finishes in the last couple of days have only reinforced that principle.