wachovia championship
Sports

wachovia championship

Diary of a week of disability:

On Thursday I didn’t get to the couch to watch golf from 3 to 6 pm. Now checking scores on pgatour.com. I see a thumbnail of Sean O’Hair at the top of the rankings. I chose him squarely and toe-to-toe over Luke Donald. Sweet. O’Hair looks like Ewan McGregor in the mini photo. I tell myself, may the force be with you, Sean.

Later: Donald finishes two shots behind. Two other senior picks are doing well: John Rollins shoots a pair of 70s. Arron Oberholser shoots 71. Good form heading into Friday, though I don’t like Donald being so close.

Friday:

I checked online around 11:30 to see O’Hair’s head still on top! He birdied the first hole to go -6! I check online again and see that he dropped one in the second, while Brett Wetterich birdied the second, joining O’Hair. (I can’t see Wetterich’s mini head because I haven’t clicked on his scorecard; I only open the scorecards of my three direct picks and the heads-up challenger, and sometimes one or two notables, like Vijay and Mickelson, as is the case this week.) My other two direct heads — Oberholser and Rollins — are so far down the page that I stop scrolling. I do this which is totally ridiculous and probably speaks to psychological issues that haven’t been discovered yet, but I do this where I say, in my head, I say, well guys, if you’re not making moves, if I have to scroll down that far to see you I’m not going to move. You have to go up for face time. It’s crazy to talk to little heads. I know this. The same kind of fandom psychological reasoning is in play when your team loses and you couldn’t watch the game for some reason, or you missed a play or even an at-bat, and bad things happened, your team lost, or something situationally undesirable. it happened and you think, Damn, if I had been there it wouldn’t have happened! If I was looking in my usual spot with my usual shirt on, that wouldn’t have happened!

Checking in a few hours later: O’Hair won 7! I watch the computer for half an hour, long enough to watch his little head birdie the ninth. He is -8. I am happy but also very aware that this happens to me every week. I have a guy in the lead or near the lead on Thursday and Friday and by Sunday he’s gone and hard to find.

I go to the gym, find a TV open, click on Golf Channel and start running. O’Hair bogeys 13, then 15 and I think, stay under par for the round, stay that way, I’ll take par on the last three holes. And that’s what happens, except he’s maddening because he has a short birdie shot on the 16th and he doesn’t hit it hard enough, yip yip. The 17th leaves another bit short. Donald had just contributed from further back for birdie. Donald leads. Oberholser and Rollins make the cut at pair and +1, respectively. They’ll be playing hours before TV starts tomorrow. I’ll check your little heads online around 11. I need you to move your heads up fast because I don’t like the look of this O’Hair-Donald matchup. .

Saturday:

morning reading. I have to check and make sure that what I saw last night is true and that the Red Sox have won their last six against the Yankees, who are 8-13. The NFL draft begins at 11:00. The Patriots need a linebacker, cornerback, safety and wide receiver. To pgatour.com at 10:00 am, where I see that John Rollins has bogeyed the first. Barring has a really bad day from now, he’s out of luck. Oberholser also needs to go down. O’Hair leaves at 12:31. I’ll be in the community garden. Plan to leave the sports world until three or four, when the golf coverage will be on and the Sox-Yankees game will begin.

3:00 Return from the garden. O’Hair’s head is now T4, he’s up to six. A guy named Michael Allen is -5 for 10 holes, and one behind Scott Verplank, who is -3 for the day, -8 for the tournament and is in the lead. Rollins went -4 and ranks -3 for the tournament, probably too far behind, but he moved on move day. Oberholser is nowhere in sight. I will not scroll down.

4:00 Scored a TV to watch golf in the gym. Two of the other teams were already in the draft and the Red Sox-Yankees. The Patriots chose a safety from Miami. O’Hair has three holes to play and is six shots behind leader Donald. Another promising week down the tubes in a few hours.

Sunday:

By checking in at 2:00, Rollins is making a move that is nothing more than a taunt. He is -4 for six holes, -7 for the tournament, three Donald backs. In other news, the Patriots traded a fourth-round pick for Randy Moss. That could be very good.

None of my guys are in sight at the end. Verplank wins. My game is Nationwide Tour at best on the weekend…

The double loss week, one and a half units, brings my season total to -7.3 units. I have a quote for consolation, David Brent quoting Dolly Parton: “If you want the rainbow, you have to put up with the rain.”

At this week’s Wachovia Championships, we have a tough course at Quail Hollow and a nasty, long, wet 17th that will be a nice prelude to the Island 17th at Sawgrass.

Take for example Tiger Woods (5-2), 1/6 drive: This is a warm-up for TPC, but Tiger is Tiger. Playing a pro-am round with Michael Jordan would distract almost any other golfer except Tiger.

Take Vijay Singh (18-1), 1/6 drive, for example: The FedEx Cup leader is quietly having a big year. Putting much better. I’d be surprised if he doesn’t win at least one more.

Take Stephen Ames (80-1), 1/6 drive, for example: Nothing spectacular but consistently good and doesn’t fret. I like it in a difficult field.

In heads-up play, he takes Vaughn Taylor over Luke Donald (6-5), 1 unit: Taylor continues to play well. I picked him up a couple of weeks ago at Verizon Heritage, where he finished T4. He finished T6 at Quail Hollow last year, T5 the year before.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *