The Proper Way to Throw Your Club A lesson you thought you would never get.
#5
Posted 12 March 2008 - 07:37 PM
Personally I wish I could lie and say I have never thrown a club. I have thrown a few and broke a few.
The problem is I am embarrassed everytime I do it.
Now in 44 years of golf I have broken maybe four putters I kinked and iron once throwing it at a cart (more like shoved it) and I once busted the hell out of a driver against some trees. I may have gotten a wedge once.
But I am not proud of it. I hate loosing control and I think club throwing is shameful.
Worse than that its embarrasing . The last one I threw was about ten years ago and the times before that were at least ten years before that.
How do you feel about club throwing.
#6
Posted 12 March 2008 - 07:43 PM
#8
Posted 12 March 2008 - 08:12 PM
atlanta golfer, on Mar 12 2008, 08:43 PM, said:
I agree its not with in the spirit of the game and sportsmanship. Like I said on the occassion I have done it I have always felt remorseful.
Most of the putters I broke were over my knee sort of a I am not missing with this putter ever again. The five iron I kinked the shaft I just wanted out of my hand.
When I windmailed the driver at the trees I was very upset at a woman I was playing with and hit a bad drive at the wrong time.
People who show no emotion on the golf course always appear to me not to care enough. Not that I want everyone tossing clubs but sometimes you got to let the demons out. At least in my opinion.
#10
Posted 12 March 2008 - 08:20 PM
i felt VERY stupid and childish afterwards, and don't think i would ever do it again... i play with some guys that make a habit of club throwing, cussing and whatnot... i find them humorous at times, but most times it's just downright annoying, and i don't want to come across that way on the course...
#11
Posted 12 March 2008 - 09:08 PM
concerning getting mad etc. i'm a pretty open emotional person on the golf course. i'm definitely not proud of it but i curse a TON. i've never really thrown a club but i have slammed a couple into the ground on occasion. i'm so careful with my clubs in general that I could never bring myself to actually throw one or break one. i'm really working on trying to chill out after bad shots; i sike myself out after a bad hole or two, or even a bad shot. The best moment for me on the golf course was after i started a high school match with a double bogey then a triple. I got pissed as hell those two holes then I just literally said in my head " f*ck it, I'm already 5 over. just stop caring so much" The next hole, my drive was down the middle, hit the green, and JUST missed my 2nd putt by a bit for a solid bogey. The next 6 holes I hit 6 fairways and 5 greens, scoring par on all of them. That just goes to show how chilling out does wonders.
#15
Posted 12 March 2008 - 10:48 PM
#20
Posted 13 March 2008 - 07:34 AM
I do however take solace in the fact that none other than Bobby Jones himself had to on more than one occasion write to apologize to the USGA for throwing clubs in tournaments. He worked on his temper, and I work on mine, but that passion is part of what makes SOME people better players (obviously you can be a better player with a different outlet for your passion, this just happens to be mine).
(post edited for spelling error)
#21
Posted 13 March 2008 - 07:46 AM
Somepeople do the self induced pain bit . Like hitting themselves in the foot with the putter or slapping themselves I saw a guy damn near knock himself out once
I play with a guy who will beat his head with the shaft of a putter occasionaly
I used to smack the putter head landed that wrong once and broke that habit. There are also those guys that are into breakage.
I know a guy who breaks a lot of clubs but he out did himself a couple of weeks ago and broke every shaft of every club but one in his bag he did not break his TM driver.
I am sure there are other ways to display temper.
#22
Posted 13 March 2008 - 09:24 AM
Trevino was playing in a Pro-Am where one player went ballistic after every blunder. Finally he asked the guy what his handicap was and the player said 18. Travino replied "Start cursing on your 19th bad shot."
#24
Posted 13 March 2008 - 10:31 AM
I was attempting to demostrate the act of releasing the club through impact to one of my fellow foursome in a effort to help him.....I suggested(after we all hit our tee shots) that perhaps we try to actually completely release the club from our hands and let it go................................................................
there was a net, after the net there was water all to my Left, I didn't factor in the the "glove effect" and my 2i got wet!
At least my point had and will have a lasting memory for everyone present on that hole and that day!! LOL!
My new 2i just arrived yesterday!
#26
Posted 13 March 2008 - 11:50 AM
I presonally prefer to try and stick it into the ground, blade first. If you hit it just right, the shaft will shatter.
Since I do my own reshafting, my punishment is in the time it takes to rebuild the club and set the loft/lie.
I can't throw putters. They cost too much.
#27
Posted 13 March 2008 - 12:50 PM
#28
Posted 13 March 2008 - 01:01 PM
Just to clarify any misunderstanding from that statement, I'll expand it by saying I developed a habit when younger of gently lobbing my putter towards my bag, usually in disgust after missing yet another makeable birdie putt. I broke a Ping putter quite early on in my tossing days which cost me 60 quid (a small fortune for a 16 year old at the time) and spent the rest of the round putting with a sand wedge and waiting for the inevitable 'words of guidance' from our team captain since it was in a junior club match. Not a good situation from any angle.
I can still occasionally be seen lackadaisically floating a putter bagwards even today, but it's very much the exception rather than the rule these days. I think a gentle lob is just about acceptable - but hurling drivers down the fairway or demolishing the turf with a wedge looks a bit silly in my opinion.
I do, however, reserve the right to quietly use language that would make a sailor blush when amongst suitable golfing company.
#30
Posted 13 March 2008 - 07:29 PM
TM golf guy 182, on Mar 12 2008, 11:50 PM, said:
Taking this too seriously??? Did you happen to see how late his release was? Way left of his target
I would have expected better from an instructional video
#31
Posted 13 March 2008 - 08:58 PM
Not to be upstaged, I took the putter and heaved into a nearby pond! The flight was a breath-taking as I played the wind just right. Oddly enough, the owner was really pissed at me. I was just trying to help. It was obviously a very bad putter.
#32
Posted 21 March 2008 - 11:45 PM
Funniest thing I have ever seen was during a school match when I was in grade 7 against a grade 10, he hit a bad shot, threw the club and acted all cool about it, a few holes later he hit another bad shot, threw his club, and once it got to its apex he started screaming NOOOO. He hadn't noticed that there was a cartpath before he threw it, and his club found it. The club was pretty much done for, and he was almost in tears, wasn't acting like he was cool anymore lol.
That was one of the funniest things i have ever seen on the course, either that or in another school match this cocky kid we were playing against got shot in the face with a big blast of water from sprinkler that randomly turned on while he was about to hit his chip
#33
Posted 22 March 2008 - 06:21 AM
I have a buddy that never, ever shows his anger on the course and is the toughest to beat, at any level. Our last round he was not having a particularly good ball striking day but didn't let it bother him. When the round was over his card read 66. He turned a not so good day into a really good round. Beat me by 10.
p.s. Par 73, 6800 yards.
I can honestly say I have never thrown club.
#34
Posted 22 March 2008 - 06:54 AM
kenk7us2002, on Mar 13 2008, 01:46 PM, said:
I played round last year as a helper for beginners at my club, as a part of the golf proficiency test. As we were playing Stableford the players would pick up when they had used their shots on the hole. One guy was not having a good day and has temper issues which he handled by hitting himself in the head with the ball after picking it up! (no I am not kidding)... He did it the first time on hole #2 halfway to ythe hole, I suddenly hear a few very loud hollow sounds from maybe 50y away, each ine coming from him slamming his ball against his forehead, followed by a stream of swearing. This probably happened on 4 holes out of the 9 we were playing, after the round his wife who was playing just ahead of us came over and asked how his head was doing, must have seen it before...
He did not score his 14 point for 9 holes that day, havent seen him since...
#35
Posted 22 March 2008 - 05:30 PM
My dad got me into playing golf when I came out of high school. When we played, he would always throw clubs....he even lost a couple in trees, bent shafts, one time even leaving his whole bag in the middle of a busy street!! NO ONE could throw a club like my dad.....you could here the whip from 2 holes away!! I imitated him and I was throwing clubs, hitting them on the ground, and I broke a few shafts over my knee. After breaking my 3wd over my knee during a tournament, it started to get expensive to replace my equipment. So, I started to calm down and grow up...I started to just vent within myself, and soon enough I wasn't throwing clubs anymore. Yes I'd still get extremely frustrated at myself, but the temper tantrums were done....
One day my dad threw his typical temper tantrum while we where playing with another twosome. I was absolutely embarrased, the twosome we were playing with were embarrased, and I said never again. I'm done playing with my dad. I walked off after 9 holes, I didn't even tell him or the other two I was leaving. I just went home. He asked me later what was up, and told him if I ever see him do that again, we would never play again.
It's been about 12 years since I threw a club...yes I'll still flip them a couple of yards...but not the 50 or so yrds like the old days. My dad eventually stopped too..I haven't seen him throw a club in a LONG time....it's nice being able to play with my dad and not worry about a club going upside your head...





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