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| TALES FROM THE BOX

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Friends The much-travelled commentator, Hong Kong-based Julian Tutt, brings us another colourful look behind the scenes at life on the European Tour.

Daniel Wong (Tutt); AFP (Stenson)

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Man in form: Henrik Stenson (opposite) became the first European player to win the FedEx Cup after a brilliant summer 38

HK GOLFER・NOV 2013

llow me to introduce you to two very good friends of mine, Denis and Alf. As yet they have not met each other, but it is high time they did. I am looking forward to meeting up with Denis again soon, when we travel to South Africa for their national Open. You may well be familiar with the wonderful, gravelly tones of Denis Hutchinson; a sound that is born of a lifetime of whisky and cigarettes. Most impressively he gave up the latter in his mid-seventies, some seven years ago, after much nagging from his doctor. He’s been the Voice of South African golf for 30 years or more. After 81 years in existence, he still regularly beats his age by six or seven shots, albeit playing off the senior tees, something that does not seem to merit favour here in Hong Kong. Denis has a brilliant short game even now. The trouble is it starts on the tee! But as he often points out, golf is supposed to be fun, and it probably is not if you’re hitting woods into every green. “Hutchy”, as he is universally known, has always been a fierce competitor. He’s one of the old school who just loves to play golf, but he still very badly wants to play well, and to win. He has the extremely rare – probably unique? – distinction of having played in a competition fourball with Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer and Gary Player, whilst representing South Africa against the USA in the World Cup, somewhere back in the dark ages. When he and I meet, we always play a game whereby we play level, but if either of us goes two holes down we get shots

until we are back level. However, for every hole that you do not win when you are getting a shot you pay a penalty of a pound sterling or ten rand or whatever. It is a very good game for players who are reasonably well matched and invariably goes at least to the 17th hole and normally the 18th. My ambition is always to get Hutchy fired up. If he is cruising I know I am in trouble, but when I play well and push him, it gets his juices flowing and he then either plays brilliantly or starts to lose and then he gets really grumpy. A grumpy Hutch is a great thing to behold, and normally means the trophy we always compete for is mine. (It’s actually a One Hundred Dirham note from the United Arab Emirates, where the competition first started ten years ago). But it is his grumpiness that brings me to Alf, or more appropriately ALF, an acronym that Hugh Mantle, an eminent sports psychologist, taught me years ago. (Hugh worked with Colin Montgomerie for many years and became his friend and confidante while Monty was going through marital hell, until being unceremoniously dumped in the way that rich and famous sportsman seem to think is acceptable; but that is another story). It is a very simple mind game to keep you focused on what you are trying to achieve, whilst not getting too technical. The idea is always to play with an objective. Of course you want to play well, and win, but how do you achieve that? Hugh says you should have a clear, and probably limited, thought process for any given day. It may be a swing thought, or a rhythm or target thought. So the “A” stands for “Accept”. HKGOLFER.COM

As soon as you have hit the ball, it is gone, there is nothing you can do about it. So rather than thrash around with your driver like a demented octopus, blinding and cussing, calmly watch the flight of the ball, acknowledging that its future is now out of your hands, but then move swiftly to the “L” for “Learn”. Did you do what you were trying to do, regardless of the direction of the ball? If so, well done, mission accomplished. If not, why not? How can you do better next time? Then forget it and go find your ball. Hugh says most players are incapable of concentrating fully for a round that might (sadly these days) last four or five hours. So the trick is to relax and switch off in between shots, but then have a mental key that clicks you back into the “F” word, or “Focus”, at the right time. For some people this is a 10m circle around the ball, for others it might only be when you start your pre-shot routine. Either way, full concentration on the objectives of the next shot is crucial to success. It may be too late to teach the old dog new tricks, but it’s just possible that ALF could help Denis. Maybe I won’t introduce them after all … Before we meet up, there’s the little matter of the DP World Tour Championship in Dubai to be resolved. Henrik Stenson goes there as the first European winner of the FedEx Cup in America, and the hottest player in world golf by some margin. The likeable and funny Swede, who loves a practical joke, has all the skill and shots needed to win in Dubai and seal a unique double that may stay unique for quite some time. The four previous winners of the Championship have one thing in common; apart from being top class players, they hit the ball a long way. Luke Donald’s impressive record of two third places and a ninth shows that length is not everything, but the Greg Norman-designed Earth Course at Jumeirah Golf Estates is a beast and if you can carry the ball 300 yards plus, straight down the middle, it is a huge advantage. Lee Westwood, Robert Karlsson, Alvaro Quiros and Rory McIlroy were all able to do that. So too can Stenson who has climbed the peaks and ploughed the troughs in a stuttering career that might have caused lesser men to implode. There is surely not a man on Tour who would begrudge him success there this time. He will need some stamina though as he has committed to all four tournaments in the new ‘Final Series’. From Dubai he goes straight to the lovely Glendower Club on the outskirts of Johannesburg to defend the South African Open, the title he won a year ago that gave notice that he was on his way back to the top. Incidentally it is a title HKGOLFER.COM

The 2013 Rookie of the Year will likely be someone a long way down the rankings, who probably has not even qualified for the Tour Championship; only the top 60 do. It is an obsolete rule that surely needs changing. that Denis Hutchinson won as an amateur way back in 1959, beating 13-time champion Gary Player in the process. Among the many things that will be decided in the coming weeks is the Henry Cotton Rookie of the Year Award. American Peter Uihlein is the standout candidate after a brilliant season in which he has leapt from the Challenge Tour to the European Tour with a dual ranking win in Madeira, and at the time of writing is 10th in The Race to Dubai. But bad luck, Peter: the rules state that the winner must be a European. Who is next in line then? Thailand’s outstanding young Kiradech Aphibarnrat, currently 33rd? Sorry – not European! The winner will likely be someone a long way down the rankings, who probably has not even qualified for the Tour Championship; only the top 60 do. It is an obsolete rule that surely needs changing. Whilst enjoying a cool glass of non-alcoholic refreshment on Fanling’s famous verandah the other day, a distinguished former captain of what was then The Royal Hong Kong Golf Club, lamented how disappointing and disrespectful it was to Seve Ballesteros that so few of the top players had deigned to show up for the Trophy he inaugurated. The sad fact is that the Seve Trophy has never “flown”, and my understanding is that this year’s will almost certainly have been the last. The Tour could have made a rule that required the qualified players to play – if they wished to feature in the next Ryder Cup. But the Tour is run by the players for the players, and one suspects that would have met with violent opposition from the powerful top end. How sad then, that yet another memory of the great player who did more than anyone to create the modern Tour that has given so much to these young men is to be discarded on the scrap heap. Denis, I know, will hate it. Alf will accept it, learn from it, and focus on new horizons, whatever they may be. HK GOLFER・NOV 2013

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