FROM THE GOLF CHANNEL WEBSITE
By DOUG FERGUSON
David Lynn is the Englishman who earned his US PGA Tour card last year by finishing eight shots behind as the runner-up to Rory McIlroy at the US PGA Championship.
He can be racy on Twitter. And in his first year on the American Tour,
he already has done well enough to earn over $1.3 million and be No. 29
in the FedEx Cup standings.
Not so well known about Lynn is the story of how he once saved Ian Poulter's life.
''We were in the Czech Republic,'' Poulter said
earlier this year about his time on the Challenge Tour in Europe.
''There was four of us in a room to have a shower after the tournament –
to try to save money, we keep one room open – and all these golf clubs
were strewn across the floor.''
One of the players knocked on the door, and Poulter (pictured) tried to jump over the bags to get there.
''I caught my ankle in the loop, went down on it and
cracked it,'' Poulter said. ''It was so painful. I sat on the toilet as
they ran a freezing cold bath, and when I put my foot in the bath I
passed out. And as I passed out, my teeth clenched and I swallowed my
tongue. He had to wrench my mouth open. It was horrible.''
A decade later, Poulter offered him advice on whether to take up his US
PGA Tour card. Poulter recommended that Lynn at least play the first
half of the season in America, and that's what he has done.
Lynn is not
playing the U.S. Open because he already booked a holiday, and while it
seems like a bad idea, he's not kidding about needing a break. Lynn
already had played 15 events when he finished The Players Championship.
THE ART JUNKIE: Fred Couples was amazed by his most recent visit to the White House as Presidents Cup
captain. And while he said President Barack Obama was in a jovial mood,
what impressed Couples the most was the art on the walls.
That's when he (Fred) let on that he's somewhat of an ''art junkie.''
''What do I collect? I have California art,'' Couples said. ''I have
some, you know, inexpensive expensive. There's some you can buy for 6
grand, some from 150 grand. I like buying one a year. It used to be
cars, and now it's a piece of art. I'm almost done.''
He might be running out of space. Couples is trying to sell his home
in the Palm Springs, California area, and when that happens, his other
house in Los Angeles is smaller.
TOUGH ROUGH: Johnny Miller and Peter Jacobsen miss the days when the U.S. Open was renowned for its long, thick rough.
During an NBC Sports conference call last week for the U.S. Open,
Miller said the rough used to be so tough that it put a premium on
hitting fairways.
USGA executive director Mike Davis, starting in 2006,
began a concept of graduated rough, making it deeper the further away it
was from the fairway. Players have considered that to be a fairest test
over the least seven years.
Miller disagreed, saying the U.S. Open became ''more like a PGA Tour event.''
''I think it lost its identity, personally,'' Miller said. ''I don't
agree with that (graded rough policy) one bit. To me, the U.S. Open is supposed to be the
ultimate test. ... I just thought like at Torrey (Pines), they set it up
like an old Andy Williams with distance. Not that it wasn't a good Open
- it was a great Open. But I like the rough, personally.''
Jacobsen recalled watching Hale Irwin in 1974 at Winged Foot, one of
the toughest U.S. Opens ever (and one that followed Miller shooting 63
in the final round at Oakmont).
Jacobsen said the U.S. Open was about
survival, and it was one of the most intimidating events on the PGA Tour
schedule.
''You had to drive it in play, get it out of the rough, into the
right position where you could get it up and down, and the greens were
quick, and hard, and sloping,'' Jacobsen said.
''It was just very
difficult. It's really going to be fun for me at Merion to see a return –
hopefully a return – to that way of golf.''
NICKLAUS HONOUR: Jack Nicklaus has been selected for
the Ambassador of Golf Award, which is given each year to a person who
has promoted golf around the world. He will be honored on the first tee
at Firestone Country Club on July 31, the afternoon before the opening
round of the Bridgestone Invitational.
Nicklaus won the 1975 PGA Championship at Firestone, along with the World Series of Golf.
He is the second Nicklaus to receive the award from the Northern Ohio Golf Charities. His wife, Barbara, previously was honoured.
''This is certainly a special and meaningful recognition. I feel
blessed to be included among such a distinguished list of past
recipients, including my wife, because I am certainly Barbara Nicklaus'
biggest fan,'' Nicklaus said.
''As Barbara and I look back on our
careers and our lives together, we realize and appreciate that golf has
contributed to us having a lifetime of fulfillment, enrichment and
happiness. But we also felt a responsibility to give back, whenever and
wherever we could.''
FOLLOWING THE PROS: Rand Jerris, the senior managing
director of public services for the USGA, is trying to dispel the
notion that pace-of-play issues in golf are primarily related to
recreational players trying to copy tour players, especially on the
greens.
A tired argument is that amateurs take too much time reading their
putts because that's what they see pros do. Jerris said ongoing research
by the USGA shows that player behaviour is but a small piece of the
pace-of-play puzzle.
That led him to one observation that amateurs don't follow everything they see on TV.
''If we did everything professionals do, there would be no ball marks on the green,'' he said.
Indeed. Next time you're playing golf, see how many people neglect to repair the pitch marks.
.
STAT OF THE WEEK: Tiger Woods earned $12,896 at the Memorial Tournament, his smallest cheque from finishing a tournament since the 2004 Bay Hill Invitational.
FINAL WORD: ''Let's put it this way. There will be
some guys that play the tour to make a living, period. All the good
players play the tour to win golf tournaments to be the best player they
can.'' – Jack Nicklaus.

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