Tuesday, October 30, 2018

Golf: Doctors cite ‘undervalued’ health benefits, call for inclusiveness

Source: CNN
By Motez Bishara

 

(CNN)When Louise Tulip picked up a set of golf clubs for the first time since her teens, she had no idea the sport would consume her — much less provide any health benefits.

The recent retiree had spare time on her hands and picked up the hobby she previously disdained as “a game for old people.”
Four years later, Tulip plays golf three to four times a week at her local club in north London, dropping her handicap to 15 while brisk walking 15 to 20 miles a week.
The 58-year-old credits the sport for a variety of health benefits, and has turned both her husband and 24-year-old son into golfers.
“My blood pressure is lower, and my cholesterol readings are lower; generally, my weight is very stable without doing any other exercise,” she says. “It’s been very beneficial.”
With golf participation falling drastically over the past decade in both the US and UK, the sport’s insiders have been preaching its health benefits as a way to stem the decline.
Now a study led by the top doctors on golf’s European Tour appears to back up Tulip’s claims.
Andrew Murray, who is fresh off his stint as Team Europe’s chief medical doctor at the Ryder Cup, and his predecessor of 10 years Roger Hawkes, were among 25 international experts to author the 2018 International Consensus Statement on Golf and Health, which promotes the lifestyle benefits of golf.
The statement analyzed 400 studies on the health effects of golf — including a Swedish report from 2009 that found golfers have an “increase in life expectancy of about five years” — and summarized their benefits and risks.
Cholesterol, blood sugar, and blood pressure levels were all improved by playing golf, says Hawkes, along with better balance and strength for players above 60, reducing the risk of falls and sparing healthcare costs.
The physical benefits were mostly a result of walking and swinging, so using golf carts annuls much of the upside.
“If you play 18 holes of golf walking at a reasonable pace, you actually feel quite tired in the end,” Tulip says.
“Perhaps you don’t feel out of breath in the way that you would in football or tennis, but because the game itself takes longer, three to three-and-a-half hours, it can be more demanding than people think.”
The one significant risk is overexposure to the sun, according to the report which encouraged wearing sun screen.

‘Undervalued’ benefits

The mental gain from playing golf — especially among seniors — could prove to be the sport’s hidden gem, says Hawkes, who is currently a medical adviser to the European Tour.
“Social interaction is the risk factor which has been undervalued,” he says. “Mental health is a big thing in this day and age, and moderate physical activity is associated with a reduction in anxiety and a reduction in depression.”
Tulip concurs, noting that golf is “very lovely socially, because you actually talk with the people you’re playing with as you play — rather than most sports where you play the game then talk after.”
Furthermore, despite the notorious frustrations of the sport, it helps clear her head.
“When you’re playing, you really don’t think about anything else other than playing,” Tulip says.”So it’s very good for getting rid of any concerns or worries we may have — for four hours at least.”
To increase participation in golf, the statement calls for methods to reverse “perceptions that it is expensive, less accessible for those from lower socioeconomic groups, male dominated, a sport for older people, or difficult to learn.”
“We’ll always have exclusive clubs,” says Hawkes. “But we want governments and policymakers to see that there are benefits in playing golf, and that perhaps they should open up golf clubs to more types.”
Hawkes points to his involvement in Golf in Society, a Scottish golf organization that grants course access to those with dementia and Parkinson’s while analyzing the game’s impact.
“Golf clubs are probably underutilized,” he says. “There are times that other groups could be using those courses and getting benefits that were demonstrated for most people.
“It’s been criticized because it’s exclusive, and we want to try and change that.”

Link to article: Click here

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Saturday, October 27, 2018

Football on TV this weekend at MOC Bar and Grill

Come to the MOC Bar and Grill today and tomorrow to watch your favorite teams. Beer Bratwurst $6.95 add fries for $1.75. Tonights new special is a Pork tenderloin sandwich with lettuce tomato pickle onion and Siracha Mayo. Also we have the Burgerdilla. A cheeseburger quesadilla with lettuce ,tomato ,onion , pickle served with French Fries for $9.95. We have a new Chili recipe that is really good. Happy hour two for one after well drinks after 3 pm as well as our house MOC beer on tap. Amber Bock, Stella Artois, Bud Light, Mich Ultra as well as Tampa Brewery Craft Beer Reef Donkey. Stop by for a good time in a casual sports bar atmosphere. 6 large flat screen TVs for all your sports needs. Open Friday until 8 pm. Open for breakfast weekends from 8:30 am until 6:00 pm on weekends. Moccasin Wallow Golf Club is open to the Public MOC Bar and Grill 9680 Buffalo Rd Palmetto FL 34221 9417230500

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Tuesday, October 23, 2018

Monday, October 22, 2018

Ask an Equipment Expert: What do face inserts and grooves on putters actually do?

Each month, we tap experts from the equipment industry to answer your most commonly asked questions. In this installment, Guerin Rife, co-founder of Evnroll Putters, discusses how face inserts and grooves on putters affect performance.

Q. Do insert materials, grooves and various putterface designs actually do anything, or are they mostly for sound and feel? — K. Lee, via Facebook

The design elements you mention indeed do it all. A softer insert, for example, can make a firmer ball feel softer at impact, but its lighter weight also allows for more perimeter weighting, forgiveness and stability. Odyssey’s White Hot and Scotty Cameron’saluminum inserts do this admirably.

Grooves, on the other hand, are pure performance enhancers. In reality, the grooves themselves don’t do anything — it’s the areas between them that do the work.

At Evnroll, we engineer larger spaces between the grooves in the middle of the putterface and smaller ones in the heel and toe sections to equalize speed on all strikes. Without this variance in groove design, the ball would travel different distances depending on where you made contact across the face. Trust me — you don’t want that.

— Guerin Rife, Co-Founder/Evnroll Putters

Link to article: Click here

 

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Thursday, October 18, 2018

Tips From One Of The Tour’s Best Ball-Strikers

Rely on the fundamentals to find more fairways

There’s a stat on the PGA Tour—strokes gained/off the tee—that indicates how much of an advantage a golfer gets from driving when compared to other golfers. If you look at the names at the top of the strokes-gained list — Dustin Johnson, Jon Rahm, Francesco Molinari, Tommy Fleetwood, Rory McIlroy—you start to realize how valuable good tee shots are to your success. Me? I’m hovering around top 15 on that list, and my work with the driver helped me put together my best season as a pro, nearly winning the Memorial and RBC Canadian Open. My focus with the driver has been to improve sequencing and technique—fundamental stuff—and there’s no doubt what I worked on can help you, too. Read on for the details. — With Ron Kaspriske


GET OFF TO A GOOD START
Many golfers, including me sometimes, start their backswing with a poor turn. The mistake is a flat takeaway where the shoulders rotate level with the ground. Your lead shoulder should move away from the target but also downward as the hands stay close to the body. Everything should move together and in sync, which helps keep the club in a slightly more vertical position going back. This gives you room to shallow the club into a great hitting position on the way down. A flat turn prompts the opposite. The shallow backswing makes you want to swing down more steeply and cut across the ball—the slice move. A drill I use to reinforce a good move off the ball is to pin the upper portion of my left arm against my body, keep it there with my right hand, and then make a one-armed backswing (below). This feeling of a connected takeaway, with the left shoulder dropping, will set the tone for your new-and-improved driver swing.

LET IT END NATURALLY
Some golfers don’t load up and end their backswing too early. Others keep their hands and club swinging back after the body stops winding. Either will lead to inconsistency.

The backswing should end when your upper body feels like it can’t coil any farther against a stable lower body. This feeling of coil is best achieved by letting the trail arm (right for right-handers) stay on top of the left for as long as it can in the backswing (below). This helps maintain good swing width—important for solid contact and power—and deters you from taking the club back too far.

SYNC THE THROUGH-SWING
Once the backswing ends, what comes next happens in a flash, so it’s hard to be conscious of controlling body movement. But if you can get your through-swing to happen in the right sequence of motion, you’ll hit your best drives.

The order: Rotate the lower body toward the target, follow with the upper body, and then finally let the arms and club swing past the body through impact. A lot of this will happen naturally if you learn how to get the lower body moving first. I start with a bump of my hips toward the target, which initiates my lower-body rotation. It’s a bump, then turn. Do that, and your upper body, arms and club will get pulled along.

Don’t think about hitting the ball with your arms. It’s easier to control the shot with body rotation. The secret is making an efficient backswing and a synchronized downswing. Keeping it simple will help you hit it in the center of the face more often. That’s what really matters.

Link to article: Click here

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Wednesday, October 17, 2018

Golf the MOC update October 16th.

 We In august and September we received a tremendous amount of rain which had caused us to close for a significant amount of time as the course was really wet in spots. We have been drying out and the golf course is really turning the corner and will be in great shape in the very near future. We are dry so that cart access is 90 degree rule and cart path only on the par 3’s. In the next few weeks we are planning some more minor projects which include cart path repairs as well as winter golf course preparations.

In the next few weeks buffalo road will be closing to the south of the golf course as the developers are working on their project. We at the MOC will hopefully have the first part of Buffalo road ending at our driveway. We will post directions from south of the club to get you the quickest access to the clubhouse parking lot. We apologize for the inconvenience and appreciate your support.

We are looking forward to our best season yet and happy hour starts at 3 pm.

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Buy a Play Card!

Our play cards are the best way to get more bang for your buck.

Purchase in-person or in our online store!

It’s a great day to golf the MOC!

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Monday, October 15, 2018

Start the week off right at the MOC!

Get your week off to a great start- come golf with us!

Book your tee time online! There are never any booking fees.

It’s a great day to golf the MOC!

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Sunday, October 14, 2018

Golf , hot dog and draft beer starting October 16th before 2:30 pm.

Enjoy our weekday specials starting October 16!

Starting Tuesday, Oct. 16, enjoy a free hotdog & MOC draft beer or fountain drink when you book a tee time before 2:30 PM!

Book your tee time through our online booking portal- never any booking fees! Please bring print out of email and present at counter. This offer ends October 31st.

Claim discount @ check-in.

Stop by the MOC Bar & Grill after your round!

Happy Hour after 3pm | 7 days a week

°  2 for $5.50 well drinks
° $1.50 house draft
° $2.50 domestic draft
° $3.50 house wine

“It’s a great day to golf the MOC!”

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Friday, October 12, 2018

Don’t let these happen to you: the 13 most demoralizing shots in golf

Source: GOLF.com
By Josh Sens

At one time or another, every golfer becomes what Bobby Jones described as “a dogged victim of inexorable fate.” But certain moments leave us more victimized than others. In that uplifting spirit, we give you this list. It’s our ranking of the 13 most demoralizing shots in the game.

1. The Hero-to-Zero Fairway Wood

It’s a reachable par-five, in theory, anyway, so you wait … and wait … for the green to clear, peeving off the group behind you while putting added pressure on yourself. Sure enough, you top it roughly eight feet ahead of you, the only good news being that the green is also reachable from there.

2. The De-Greener

Did you just putt it off the green? Don’t feel bad. Tiger Woods once did the same thing in the Masters. All that’s left for you to do is win 14 majors, and you and he will practically be twins.

3. The New York Super Fudge Chunk

On the one hand, the world’s best players also take divots with their irons. On the other, their divots don’t fly farther than the ball.

4. The Hosel Rocket

Call it what you will. The shank. The foozle. By any name, it’s a word you’d rather not speak aloud, and an experience you now fear you are doomed to repeat.

5. The Bold Effort

In a moment as rare as the Comet Kahoutek, you’ve got 15 feet for eagle, but you leave it 5 feet short. Not to worry. You’ll get another chance the next time the comet comes around.

6. The Lawrence of Arabia Short Game Clinic

Weight forward. Club face open. Feet left of the target. You tried to play the shot like Gary Player. Too bad it caught the bunker lip and rolled back in a footprint. Peter O’Toole had more fun in the sand.

7. The Harrison Ford

When you blade a simple chip, it becomes a runner. Blade. Runner. Get it? It’s funny when it happens to someone else.

8. The Egregious Mis-Club

Look at you posing after flushing your approach shot, hands high, tummy pointing toward the target, your eyes tracking the ball in its majestic flight as it beelines for the flagstick, only to land beyond it. In a pond behind the green.

9. The Shoulda, Woulda, Coulda Been A Gimme Putt

It should have been conceded, but it wasn’t. Silently disgruntled, simmering with resentment, you step up to tap it in and … doph! … It wasn’t a gimme, after all.

10. Here, Topper! Come here, boy!

They say that golf is like life, and it really is. Every round, like every day, begins with renewed hope. Until you top one off the first tee.

11. The Flopped Shot

Phil Mickelson makes those high, feathery shots look so easy. But big deal. That thing that you just did, passing your wedge directly under the ball without budging it an inch, that’s pretty tough to pull off, too.

12. The Player B Water Ball

Having just dunked an old, scruffy ball into the water, you pull out a brand new ProV1 and … do exactly the same thing.

13. The Not-So Great Escape

Trees are 90 percent air. Which makes it all the more impressive that you just hit the other 10 percent, dead center off the trunk, a ricochet that whizzes past your ear and leaves you even deeper in the woods.

Link to article: Click here

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Wednesday, October 10, 2018

10 PGA Tour rookies to watch in 2018-19

Source: Golfweek
By Brentley Romine

A new PGA Tour season means a new crop of rookies looking to find their footing on the big tour. With the first event of the fall, the Safeway Open, having wrapped up Sunday, here are 10 rookies to watch this season:

1. Anders Albertson

Age: 25
College: Georgia Tech
Years pro: 3
World ranking: 245
Buzz: Improved all aspects of his game this past season on the Web.com Tour, and the most noticeable improvement was his putting. Albertson finished fifth in putting average last season on the Web.com Tour after ending up outside the top 100 in his first two seasons. He won the Lincoln Land Championship last season en route to finishing eighth on the Web.com tour regular-season money list. He then added two top-10s in the Finals.

2. Cameron Champ

Age: 23
College: Texas A&M
Years pro: 1
World ranking: 235
Buzz: The long-hitting Sacramento, Calif., native led the Web.com Tour in driving distance last season at 343.1 yards. He also was fourth in greens in regulation and second in scoring average. After a slow start to last season, he turned it on in the summer with five consecutive top-10 finishes capped with a win at the Utah Championship. That helped him finish sixth on the Web.com Tour money list. His best PGA Tour finish in seven career starts remains his T-32 at the 2017 U.S. Open.

3. Wyndham Clark

Age: 24
College: Oregon
Years pro: 1
World ranking: 326
Buzz: He didn’t win on the Web.com Tour last season, but he was able to notch four top-5 finishes to end up 16th on the regular-season money list. He has made eight career PGA Tour starts with a best finish of 17th at last season’s Sanderson Farms Championship. Was a Haskins Award contender during his senior year at Oregon as he led the Ducks to the championship match at the 2017 NCAA Championship.

4. Cameron Davis

Age: 23
College: N/A
Years pro: 2
World ranking: 99
Buzz: While the young Aussie won the Nashville Golf Open last season on the Web.com Tour, he didn’t finish inside the top 25 on the tour’s money list. However, he earned his card with two top-3s in the Finals. Davis is a promising talent who won the 2017 Australian Open and before that, as an amateur, captured the Australian Amateur and Eisenhower Trophy. He also was T-39 at this year’s British Open. Last season on the Web.com Tour, he ranked in the top 10 in driving distance, greens in regulation and putting average.

5. Kramer Hickok

Age: 26
College: Texas
Years pro: 3
World ranking: 129
Buzz: He was a member of Texas’ 2012 NCAA title-winning team and more recently was better known for being Jordan Spieth’s roommate. Now, though, Hickok is starting to make a name for himself. He finished 23rd on the Web.com Tour regular-season money list, then improved his priority ranking with a win at the DAP Championship, the second Finals event, and a T-8 showing at the Web.com Tour Championship. He’s a strong and accurate driver of the golf ball and hits a lot of greens.

6. Sungjae Im

Age: 20
College: N/A
Years pro: 3
World ranking: 97
Buzz: This South Korean prodigy already has been pro for three years yet is still not old enough to drink in the U.S. He is fully exempt on the PGA Tour this season after finishing first on the Web.com Tour regular-season money list. He won the season opener in the Bahamas before finishing second the next week. He added two more runner-up finishes before winning the regular-season finale in Portland. He is the third highest-ranked South Korean in the world, behind only Ben An and Si Woo Kim. He’s not overly long off the tee but is a strong putter.

7. Hank Lebioda

Age: 24
College: Florida State
Years pro: 2
World ranking: 393
Buzz: One of the better stories in this year’s rookie class, Lebioda made his first ever PGA Tour start at the Safeway Open. He suffers from Crohn’s Disease and supports the Crohn’s and Colitis Foundation. He earned the 25th and final card out of the Web.com Tour regular season thanks to four top-10s and seven top-25s.

8. Jose de Jesus Rodriguez

Age: 37
College: N/A
Years pro: 11
World ranking: 283
Buzz: Mexico native started his pro career on the Mexican Tour and has spent several seasons on the Web.com Tour, Mackenzie Tour and PGA Tour Latinoamerica. He is a two-time winner on the Mackenzie Tour and four-time winner on the PGA Tour Latinoamerica. His first Web.com Tour win didn’t come until last season’s United Leasing and Finance Championship, a victory that helped him finish 12th on the money list and earn his PGA Tour card for the first time. He has made eight career PGA Tour starts, seven of them coming at the OHL Classic at Mayakoba. He is nicknamed “El Camaron,” or “The Shrimp.”

9. Chris Thompson

Age: 42
College: Kansas
Years pro: 19
World ranking: 345
Buzz: A two-time All-American for the Jayhawks, Thompson didn’t play his first full season on the Web.com Tour until 2007, eight years after turning pro. Two years later, he made just three starts on the developmental tour and didn’t make more than nine in any single year until last season, when he played 24 times and notched five top-10s to finish 20th on the money list and earn his PGA Tour card for the first time.

10. Chase Wright

Age: 29
College: Indiana
Years pro: 6
World ranking: 227
Buzz: Played three seasons on the Web.com Tour before losing status in 2017. He played the Mackenzie Tour that year and finished eighth on the money list thanks to a win and two other top-10s in 12 events. Last season on the Web.com Tour, Wright won the Rust-Oleum Championship en route to finishing ninth on the regular-season money list. He then capped his season with a T-3 finish at the Web.com Tour Championship. His only PGA Tour start prior to this season came at the 2012 McGladrey Classic, now known as the RSM Classic.

Note: A player’s rookie season is defined as the season in which he becomes a PGA Tour member – or receives special temporary membership – and plays in 10 or more events as a member or finishes in the top 125 in FedEx Cup points. Also, players are not eligible to be a rookie if they have previously played in more than seven PGA Tour events as a professional in any prior season. Gwk

Link to article: Click here!

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Monday, October 8, 2018

Like father, like son at Safeway Open

Source: PGATour.com
By Cameron Morfit

Like father, like son at Safeway Open

NAPA, Calif. – Rarely does a day go by when Kevin Tway is not reminded of his father, Bob, an eight-time TOUR winner who won the 1986 PGA Championship.

Kevin, who made them the 10th father-son duo to win on TOUR with his playoff victory over Ryan Moore and Brandt Snedeker at the Safeway Open on Sunday, takes it in stride. He speaks to his father daily about the family profession, and clearly remembers the spring break in Scottsdale, Ariz., when he was 16, when he beat Dad for the first time.

“I remember it because leading up to that, when we were pretty close, he’d look over and be like, ‘You know I’m going to birdie the last two holes to beat you,’” said Kevin Tway, 30. “And he would, every single time. I’d go home pissed, crying, going, ‘Mom, Dad did it again.’”

This time it was Bob Tway who wiped away tears as he watched the Safeway on TV back home in Oklahoma. He did not dispute Kevin’s account, but made no apologies for making it hard on the kid.

“I told him, I said, ‘I’m not going to lose just for you to win,’” Bob Tway said by phone Sunday night. “‘You’re going to work for it.’ So, a couple times I actually did do that and it upset him. You know how it is, kids want to beat their dads. I said, ‘Unfortunately, it’s going to be a little harder to beat your dad.’”

Kevin Tway has now done more than that, punching his ticket to the Masters and the Sentry Tournament of Champions at Kapalua with his victory at Silverado. All week he stressed the need for patience, and he relied heavily on that quality in the wind, as gusts forced him to turn his cap around backward as he warmed up on the driving range.

“It was blowing like 40,” Tway said. “My hat was flying off.”

This looked like Brandt Snedeker’s tournament for most of the day as he made the turn with a four-stroke lead, but Tway, playing with him in the final threesome, hung around long enough to execute a three-shot swing on the last two holes of regulation, going birdie-birdie as Snedeker went bogey-par.

Tway’s third straight birdie in the playoff, and fifth straight overall, was enough to outlast first Snedeker and then Moore.

It was all plenty dramatic, so much so that Bob Tway joked about hiding behind the sofa as he watched from home.

“I can’t say that I held it back very good with the tears,” he said, “but I did okay.”

Bob Tway’s best season was 1986, when he reeled off four wins including the PGA Championship. He is 59 and mostly retired, but he can still be found many weeks on TOUR, following on foot as he follows Kevin, who bears a striking resemblance to the old man.

Kevin Tway was born two years after Bob’s signature victory, and smiles and nods at all the well-meaning fans who tell him about the PGA and/or his dad’s other wins.

“I’ve had people come up to me and say, ‘Oh, I watched your dad in ’86,’” Kevin Tway said. “I was like, ‘Yeah, I wasn’t born yet, but yeah, cool.’ Yeah, I hear about it all my life.”

Last week, their club back home was set up to play as hard as it can, the greenskeeping staff forcing everyone to play from the tips, and with tucked pins. (Fittingly, it’s called the Tip-and-Tuck tournament.) Bob thought he was doing pretty well to shoot 72. Kevin shot 67.

But if Kevin rarely loses to his dad anymore, Bob still had him beat in one regard: closing. Bob, after all, had those eight TOUR wins; Kevin didn’t have any. When he worked his way into contention at the RBC Canadian Open in late July, only to shoot a final-round 76, it was emblematic of a trend that had seen him falter on Sundays.

As he always has, though, he worked through it. His has been a slow, steady progression on TOUR as he leans on not just Dad but also friends of Bob’s like fellow TOUR pros Willie Wood and Scott Verplank. Bob Tway stressed the importance of hitting fairways and greens, and patience, and Kevin also learned to monitor his food intake, eating every two or three holes.

Now he’s a TOUR winner, which means someday someone is going to tell Bob Tway about being in attendance that time that Kevin won in the wind.

Is there a downside, Kevin was asked, to having a famous TOUR pro father?

“You could look at it that way,” he said. “Maybe a little (high) expectations, but I think it’s almost a plus. He played right where I’m playing for 30 years, so he kind of knows what I’m feeling at any point in time, so he’s a good person to talk to.”

Especially on Sunday night, after you’ve just hoisted your first PGA TOUR trophy.

Link to article: Click here

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Friday, October 5, 2018

Join the birthday club!

Your birthday only comes once a year, & we want to celebrate it with you! As member of our Birthday Club, you’ll get exclusive discounts on your birthday, like a free round of golf, when you bring 3 paying guests!

Save time- book online!

Book your next tee time through our online booking portal.  Never any booking fees.

 

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