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more Tom Turtle
Tom
Turtle
goes
a'Golfing
 Man,
do they need to rake this trap!
Heigh-ho,
fellow linksters! I am just so thrilled to be able to rub that
green again, getting my wedges dirty and putt-putt-putting those
things around in that place where the pins are flapping lustily
in the wind! What son or daughter of nature wouldn't leap and
gambol at the chance to saunter up a fairway, bathe in the sand,
and play one-holed billiards on the grassy slope of the dune?
Problem is, I had to first be fitted out with clubs. For
a personage of my stature, that was a ticklish matter, at best.
As everyone knows, turtles age quite slowly, and the last time I
had played the royal game was in the 1960's—which means my
sticks were outdated. I had learned the finer points of swing and
lurch in my infancy, around the time of Sarazen and Charlie
Chaplin, and back then a turtle could get by with one curved
piece of hickory and a polished rock. But by the '60's I had
invested in a full set of top-of-the-line metal contraptions with
hozzles and ferrules and buttplugs and whatnot, fully gripped and
cantilevered and counterweighted. With a bag of these worthy
bats, as well as a cartful of dimpled balatas and colored tees
and leather-lite gloves and shoehorns and spike removers and
divot replacers and tom collins mixer, I was able to shave my
handicap down to the low triple digits. For the golf laity, that
means I could break three hundred, wind and weather permitting.
But now, some four decades later, I found my old
equipment would not cut the proverbial mustard. Technology had
advanced at double the rate my hairline had receded, and my once
vaunted clubs were now only objects of derision and contumely.
Yes, upon my return to the digging range I had been mocked
unmercifully. Large clods of dirt and plastic rugging had been
lobbed in my direction, and I have to believe it was no accident
or crosswind.
Of course my only recourse was to rush
pellmell to the pro-shop and beg to be immediately hooked up to
the all the machines. As those know who have done it, what
happens is you are surgically inserted into a sort of standing
cat-scan device, where all your curves and leans and angles and
sags and fluid levels are monitored, via electrodes dangling from
all ten fingers. From the lead-shielded control tower, your pro
gives you the thumbs-up, which is indication for you to make your
“natural” swing. After the laughter dies down you are
presented a video of yourself, a list of numbers in booklet form
(approximately as thick as the third Harry Potter installment),
and a token for one free visit to Psychiatry, Inc. By consulting
the aforesaid booklet—and the entrails of local guinea
fowl—your local pro is able to scientifically match you to
a set of $1000 irons that he just happens to have leaning against
the wall. The drivers and metal “woods” and wimples
and brassies and spoons and warblers and wedges and niblicks and
putters and pimbletons are then arrayed around those irons in a
strategic assembly, the strategy being to make sure your golf bag
is too heavy for any human to carry, but just light enough not to
flip the cart over backward when you hit the electric “gas”.
Assured of the correct launch angles, lie angles, loft
angles, moments of inertia, grip sizes, and anti-matter influxes,
I was now prepared to return to the digging range, to see how
straight and far I could hit my divots. Sure enough, there was
real improvement. I hit one divot over three times as far as my
tee (using the old outdated equipment, I had been hitting my
divot no more than twice as far as my tee).
I only
discovered one problem with my new set of clubs. In order to
convince me that I was hitting the divot farther than ever
before, the manufacturer had shifted the lofts on all the irons.
Whereas the loft on my old 5-iron had been 30o, the
loft on my new 5-iron was 24o. So I was really hitting
a 3-iron, by the old standards, with the number 5 on the sole of
the club instead of the number 3. This was great on a par three,
when one of my pals would ask me what I hit. I would look like a
stud when I hit my divot 90 yards with a 5-iron. But when it came
time to hit a wedge, I was in trouble. By the same math, my wedge
was now an 8-iron, so I needed two “gap” wedges to
fill the new hole between the 8 iron and sand wedge. My new wedge
was 43o, so I needed 47o and 51o
gap wedges. According to touring pro Boo “Boob”
Weaklily, for hard sand I needed a 54o “sand”
wedge, and for soft sand I needed a 58o “sand”
wedge. According to teaching guru and hypnotherapist Dave “Davey”
Delz, I needed a 60o “lob” wedge for
lobbing over medium soft sand from a tight lie to an oblong or
obtuse green. And according to touring pro Phil “the Pill”
Nickollsson, I needed a 64o degree “bopper”
wedge to flip the ball back over my head when facing away from
semi-hard or extra-softish sand (or when trying to save par from
the bottom of the baby pool in mid-winter). With seven wedges, I
had no legal room in my bag for any “woods” or
“putters”, so in tournaments I had to putt with my
“bopper” “wedge”, slapping it left handed
in an inverted “S” pose.
When driving from
the elevated tees of long par fives, I would blade my 3-iron
(loft 17o, lie 56o, MOI 5011, length
39.25”, swingweight D1, clubweight 13.4 oz., specific
gravity 3.022, non-specific urethritis: no) out to about 130
yards, then top the lob wedge into the green from there. Normally
this took no more than 8 or 9 extras hits. I found that chipping
was best done with the 7-iron, hitting it with the grip first,
and if that still left me with a putt too long for the back of
the 64o wedge, I would just kick the bastard. But even
this was done with all due diligence and technology. I had a
precisely calibrated titanium flange welded onto the toe of my
right golf shoe, with cavity back and adjustable screws. With
practice I could lag a 90 foot putt to within a dozen yards or
so, depending on my lie.
This brings us to the greatest
advance in golf technology: the ball! No longer a roundish rock
or a piece of pale rubber pulled from a poor equatorial tree, the
modern ball is a feat of engineering and advertising ne plus
ultra. Some are still relying on the latest release from
Simon-Callow-A or Tite-Leash, but my pro was good enough to hook
me up with next year's technology. At first look, this
ball seems like any other: 394 shallow dimples in a fixed
pattern. But on closer inspection, you find that four of the
dimples are actually tiny screwheads. With the proper $400 screw
driver, you can make the ball veer higher or lower, left or
right. For an extra $3999 (sold separately), you can even have
remote screw control. To make this especially cloak and dagger,
you can install the remote on the end of your driver. The levers
are then installed under your grip, with a wire running down the
inside of the shaft. As the ball is in flight, and you in your
“natural” follow through, the head of the club should
be pointing roughly toward the hole (supposing you finish
somewhat like Michelle Wie). With simple (and clandestine)
pressure from your fingers, you can manipulate the four screws,
and thereby the flight of the ball. Just don't be too obvious
about it: there is only so much you can assign to the wind or to
a normal massé!
I couldn't afford the remote
assembly, so I just purchased the screwdriver. Unfortunately I
positioned the ball wrong on my tee and the ball flew up my pants
leg. This can be solved, I am told, by purchasing a
self-positioning tee. The tee monitors the positions of the four
screws and automatically adjusts, solving the ball-up-the-leg
problem.
Now properly outfitted in club and ball, I was
ready for my first lesson since 1948. This was going to be a
chore, for both me and the pro, since I had to fit my swing to
the new game. Back in the day, I had fit my timing to the whippy
shaft swing of Bobby “Bob” Jones, whereby the
clubhead was supposed to tap you lightly on the left hip at the
top of the swing arc (also see John “John” Daly
“Daly”). At the height of my game, just after the
Boer War, hickory was in short supply, being used to build
submarines, and I often had to make due with a substitute shaft.
If I broke my hickory shafted mashie-niblick in mid-round, I
found I could play just as well with a buggy whip tied to a
brick.
This loose swing did not impress my new coach,
however. Bolstered by the information from my booklet, he pointed
out to me that my arms were 45% shorter than average, that my
neck was 90% too long, and that my torso was actually shorter
than my feet. In addition, I was informed that I only had 7
vertebrae and that my overbite was impeding my backswing. To firm
up my release, he tied red handkerchiefs to my right and left
hips. If both handkerchiefs billowed in the same direction, I was
OK; if they billowed in opposite directions, he hit me with a
dirt clod. He then lashed my right elbow to my right hip, by a
short spring with a monitor. This was to keep my elbow from
“flying.” If the tension on the spring exceeded 10
pounds per square inch, a looped track of Debbie Boone singing
“You Light up my Life” began playing. He then tied a
yellow flag to my left shoulder and a blue flag to my right
shoulder. We were seeking a “Hogan” address, so if
the yellow flag dipped below the blue, he hit me with a pie in
the face. He then affixed plastic aerials to both my ears. Using
a large protractor, he set the angle of the aerials at address to
35o from absolute vertical. If, during my swing, the
angle increased to over 40o or decreased to under 30o,
he shocked me with a cattle prod. Finally, he attached a large
hula hoop to my midsection with clothespins and duct tape. If my
club came into contact with this hula hoop, the flags, the
aerials, or the handkerchiefs, he stormed off the range and filed
an anonymous report with the IRS, accusing me of W2 violations.
This regimen did wonders. In no time at all, I was
fanning it with astonishing consistency. You could set your watch
to my whiffs. I got to where I just left the flags and aerials
and all the rest on at all times. I even slept with them on,
including the hula hoop, to build confidence, sort of like Jackie
Burke used to sleep with his putter. I wore them to the office,
to the gym, to Starbucks. It was great. Nobody even cared. They
were all in nicotine patches and ipods and so on, so they
wouldn't have noticed had I been sporting an Iron Maiden and a
bow tie.
Before long, my handicap was so high, they just
gave me the trophy when I got out of the car. If I broke 20 on
any given hole, I was a shoe in, and besides they didn't want to
have to watch. People would pay bets on the first hole and fake
calls from my wife, just to get me off the course.
It
didn't phase me. I wasn't there to worry Tiger Woods or to
impress the intelligentsia of golf (the intelligentsia of golf?).
I was there, as I said in the beginning, to wander the fair
fairways under the glorious sun, to hail the hares and wink at
the prairie dogs. I was there to get some grass under my
fingernails and some sand in my collar and some leaves in my hat.
If I occasionally rolled in a long putt for a dodecapupple bogey,
so much the better. For a turtle, life is always good as long as
the grass is green, as long as the clouds are light and fluffy,
and as long as the cart girl pokes her head out of her shell and
smiles occasionally. In a pile Upon a log Over the
water Third from the bottom Secreting my own hard shell Tom
Turtle
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