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Dude, Where’s My Driver? – Part Two

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Twelve weeks after I paid for a new driver and with my contact having disappeared off the face of the earth, I had had enough of waiting for him to call and tell me what the hell was going on. I was going to do some calling of my own. The options I had to chase him down boiled down to phoning the club he said that he belonged to, calling the police and getting them involved or phoning everybody in the phone book with his surname.

Phoning someone’s club is different from phoning a persons employer. Personal phone calls at work may be frowned on but they are not a source of embarrassment. If you are there 9-5 (at least!), 5 days a week, sometimes the only place to catch you is at work. Phone calls to someone’s golf club could be hugely embarrassing especially if they want to know the reason why you are trying to get in contact with their member. If there were a reasonable explanation for what was happening– no matter how less and less likely this was becoming – I did not want to be the cause of someone’s reputation being tarnished unfairly.

I wanted to keep phoning the cops as my last resort and anyway I figured that the phone book would be the easiest option, especially as I could use a website that gave the address and telephone number together, That way I could use Google maps to restrict the list of people who I would phone but starting with those that lived closed to the golf courses he mentioned. Typing in his name and town gave me 60 hits. Not a huge amount of people but I didn’t relish wasting that many peoples’ time hunting this guy down. Matching the most likely location for each brought it down to the slightly little more manageable number of 14.

I felt like a bad private eye in a cheap novel – obviously minus the trilby and trench coat and equally unfortunately without the busty blonde out front in reception, but with a steely eyed determination that this guy was not going to elude my grasp. So I sat down with the list and started phoning.

<ring, ring>

‘Hello can I speak to Victor*.’

‘I’m sorry no one of that name lives here.’

<ring, ring>

‘Hello can I speak to Victor.”

‘Sorry mate you must have the wrong number.’

And so on. My hopes were starting to fade as the call after call went to the wrong house. Again, and again…..and again.

And then it happened…lucky number 13.

<ring, ring>

‘Hello can I speak to Victor.’

‘Oh I’m sorry he’s not in,’ the lady replied ‘can I ask who’s calling?’

Great, this tells me I’ve found someone with the same name. While it might not definitely be him, his unusual surname made it pretty likely.

‘It’s Martin from the golf club” – not strictly a lie as I didn’t say which golf club – ‘Do you know when he’ll be back?’

‘Well he’s at football training so he won’t be back ‘til late.’

That sealed it. In one of our conversations he had said that he played football on a Thursday (a fact which I had completely forgotten) so this was his home number. Sounding as breezy as I could, I told her thanks and not to worry and that I would catch him some other time. If he’s out at football training then he can’t have fallen under a train or been in a horrendous accident and been unable to call me from his hospital bed.

So a couple of days later, I rang the number again.

<ring, ring>

‘Hello?’ This time a guy answered and I recognised the voice, it was Victor. Sam Spade eat your heart out!

‘Victor, it’s Martin from Golfwrx. How are you?’

There was a short pause. “I’m fine thanks”. His voice shook a little. He certainly wasn’t expecting me to call especially as he had never given me his home number. ‘Um…how did you get my number?’

‘There are 14 people with your surname in your area, and 12 of them are pissed at me for phoning them up trying to find you.’

‘Why? Did you not get the driver?’

Now this just pissed me off. I had paid him nearly 200 pounds for a club nearly 3 months ago and not received it. It had been a farce from the start and here he was, claiming innocence and wondering why I had phoned him up. If I was in his position, where there had been problems from the start I would have made sure to call and check, just as a matter of course.

It was kind of fun listening to him desperately flapping around when I asked him for a shipping number… at least for the first 5 minutes. After that I got bored. I decided to be nice and told him that he could email it to me tomorrow morning, making it pretty obvious that I was seriously annoyed and if he didn’t there would be ‘repercussions’ – I had no idea what this would be but more importantly, neither did he. Remember, I had his telephone number and also knew where he lived now. That he couldn’t find the shipping number didn’t surprise me in the slightest. On past performance he would be hard pressed to find his arse with both hands, a map, a bright torch and a tour guide.

The next day I spend most of the morning waiting for the email wondering if this time he would actually do what he said he would. His email eventually dropped into my inbox at about 5 minutes to midday. The problem was simple he cried! His mate at the shop had the wrong address for me all along, so if I send him my address again, it could all be sorted out!

Great! It was all just some cosmic misunderstanding due to the misalignment of Jupiter’s moons or some such rubbish but seriously, how could this happen? I’d texted and emailed my address numerous times and if his friend had the wrong address surely the club would have come back undelivered which would raise questions. You’d have to be some sort of moron to screw that up and not think ‘Maybe I should check this out?’. At that point I realised that I was dealing with someone who probably wore his underpants on his head and I wearily resent my address.

But if his friend at the shop was going to be sending the club, why hadn’t he told me this when he was scrabbling around for the shipping number? Surely he would have just told me then? Again, for the sake of the club, I was going to play along with what sounded like a bit of a fib and wait the 5 days that I had been told it would take. How much longer would 5 days seem after all this time?

A surprisingly long time as, of course, it didn’t turn up yet again. So I emailed him, yet again, to find out if I had anything more than a snowballs chance in hell of this thing actually turning up.

If there’s one thing you don’t joke about, it’s serious health problems. So when he told me that his old man had had a heart attack and that he was going away to see him for the next 10 days, I didn’t think that there was anything that I could say or do. At this point, I really didn’t believe him as I felt I had been lied to (or at least deliberately misled) so may times that I had no trust in him whatsoever but then again, it was only a golf club. Just some titanium and  carbon and not that big a deal in the great scheme of things, especially compared to a serious illness.

‘No probs’, I said. ‘Just let me know when you get back and we can pick this up then.’ I’m a softy when it comes to people being ill – a side-effect of working in a hospital for a large part of my twenties – but while I would treat this guy as if he was my best buddy until he knew that his Dad was going to be alright, I wasn’t going to go away.

So a couple more weeks pass and he emails me saying that his dad was fine and that he had an update from the shop. Apparently his friend had left the shop and the staff who now worked there had no idea where the club was and in fact thought that they had sold it. The irony when he described these guys as ‘muppets’ was almost too much, considering that his actions over the past 3 months made Bonzo the clown look like a hard working, dynamic, goal-orientated executive primed for the cut and thrust of the business world.

After much honking of his red nose and putting custard pies down his trousers, he finally decided that he too had had enough of the situation (and my phone calls and emails) and that it might be best for him to return my money.

About 10 days later, the money appeared in my account. Maybe it was guilt or just the interest earned in the prolonged period that my money had been in his account but the amount was slightly more than I had given him at the start. That the money was eventually returned to me on the first day of the month and was paid in as cash raised a few more questions about whether or not he had the money all the while he was promising to give it to me or had to wait for pay day but after all that had gone before, I just couldn’t find it in me to care. I had my money back.

Did I have any confidence that the money would be there if I hadn’t chased and harried him – no, not really. While,if you choose to believe him, he appeared to have gone through a tough time while this farce was going on with a serious illness in the family and a change of job.  I can’t imagine any situation where I would be happy to take hundreds of pounds from someone and at least keep them updated. How much effort does it take to make a phone call or write an email? Especially when you know that the other person has no way of getting in contact with you,  and you have enough time on your hands to go football training! The discrepancy on the shipping where he said that he had a shipping number, then said that his friend had sent it, then said that he had the wrong address, then that he hadn’t sent it and then no longer could all pointed towards a man who while probably wasn’t actively criminal certainly didn’t appear to be a bit of a dreamer/half-wit who wasn’t too bothered about keeping my money if I never managed to get hold of him again

So what did I learn from this? Dealing with private parties on the internet is always going to be fraught compared to dealing with companies but it shouldn’t be too problematic if you stick to a couple of rules: ‘only pay for things that actually exist’ and ‘if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is’. I will keep buying on the web, but in future I will be a lot more upfront and a lot more demanding about how I expect a transaction to be handled.

 *Names have been changed to protect the (maybe, just maybe) innocent.

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2 Comments

  1. Sofa King Great

    Oct 25, 2007 at 8:24 am

    Glad that everything worked out as a positive albeit a bit longwinded.

    Just call the police next time. Who cares about his reputation once the blowoffs started. That is why you pay taxes -USE the police to do your dirty work. They dislike perps and you may help out another buyer from headaches.

  2. JD

    Oct 18, 2007 at 3:57 am

    Have to disagree with your comments regarding ebay in the previous post. I have had great experiences. That’s what the whole feedback system is for. Just make it a rule to never purchase from someone with less than 100 feedback comments and 99.5% positive rating. You’ll end up dealing mostly with shops and get a good deal.

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Equipment

Did Rory McIlroy inspire Shane Lowry’s putter switch?

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Editor’s note: This is an excerpt from a piece our Andrew Tursky originally wrote for PGATour.com’s Equipment Report. Head over there for the full article.

The timing of Lowry’s putter changeup was curious: Was he just using a Spider putter because he was paired with McIlroy, who’s been using a Spider Tour X head throughout 2024? Was Lowry just being festive because it’s the Zurich Classic, and he wanted to match his teammate? Did McIlroy let Lowry try his putter, and he liked it so much he actually switched into it?

Well, as it turns out, McIlroy’s only influence was inspiring Lowry to make more putts.

When asked if McIlroy had an influence on the putter switch, Lowry had this to say: “No, it’s actually a different putter than what he uses. Maybe there was more pressure there because I needed to hole some more putts if we wanted to win,” he said with a laugh.

To Lowry’s point, McIlroy plays the Tour X model, whereas Lowry switched into the Tour Z model, which has a sleeker shape in comparison, and the two sole weights of the club are more towards the face.

Lowry’s Spider Tour Z has a white True Path Alignment channel on the crown of his putter, which is reminiscent of Lowry’s former 2-ball designs, thus helping to provide a comfort factor despite the departure from his norm. Instead of a double-bend hosel, which Lowry used in his 2-ball putters, his new Spider Tour Z is designed with a short slant neck.

“I’ve been struggling on the greens, and I just needed something with a fresh look,” Lowry told GolfWRX.com on Wednesday at the 2024 Wells Fargo Championship. “It has a different neck on it, as well, so it moves a bit differently, but it’s similar. It has a white line on the back of it [like my 2-ball], and it’s a mallet style. So it’s not too drastic of a change.

“I just picked it up on the putting green and I liked the look of it, so I was like, ‘Let’s give it a go.’”

Read the rest of the piece over at PGATour.com.

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Equipment

Spotted: Tommy Fleetwood’s TaylorMade Spider Tour X Prototype putter

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Tommy Fleetwood has been attached to his Odyssey White Hot Pro #3 putter for years now. However, this week at the Wells Fargo Championship, we did spot him testing a new putter that is very different, yet somewhat similar, to his current gamer.

This new putter is a TaylorMade Spider Tour X head but with a brand new neck we haven’t seen on a Spider before. A flow neck is attached to the Spider head and gives the putter about a 1/2 shaft offset. This style neck will usually increase the toe hang of the putter and we can guess it gets the putter close to his White Hot Pro #3.

Another interesting design is that lack of TaylorMade’s True Path alignment on the top of the putter. Instead of the large white center stripe, Tommy’s Spider just has a very short white site line milled into it. As with his Odyssey, Tommy seems to be a fan of soft inserts and this Spider prototype looks to have the TPU Pure Roll insert with 45° grooves for immediate topspin and less hopping and skidding.

The sole is interesting as well in that the rear weights don’t look to be interchangeable and are recessed deep into the ports. This setup could be used to push the CG forward in the putter for a more blade-like feel during the stroke, like TaylorMade did with the Spider X Proto Scottie Scheffler tested out.

Tommy’s putter is finished off with an older Super Stroke Mid Slim 2.0 grip in blue and white. The Mid Slim was designed to fit in between the Ultra Slim 1.0 and the Slim 3.0 that was a popular grip on tour.

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Rickie Fowler’s new putter: Standard-length Odyssey Jailbird 380 in custom orange

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Editor’s note: This is an excerpt from a piece our Andrew Tursky originally wrote for PGATour.com’s Equipment Report. Head over there for the full article. 

…The Jailbird craze hasn’t really slowed down in 2024, either. According to Odyssey rep Joe Toulon, there are about 18-20 Jailbird putter users on the PGA TOUR.

Most recently, Akshay Bhatia won the 2024 Valero Texas Open using a broomstick-style Odyssey Jailbird 380 putter and Webb Simpson is switching into a replica of that putter at the 2024 Wells Fargo Championship.

Now, Fowler, who essentially started the whole Jailbird craze, is making a significant change to his putter setup.

Fowler, who has had a couple weeks off since the 2024 RBC Heritage, started experimenting with a new, custom-orange Jailbird 380 head that’s equipped with a standard 35-inch putter build, rather than his previous 38-inch counter-balanced setup.

According to Fowler, while he still likes the look and forgiveness of his Jailbird putter head, he’s looking to re-incorporate more feel into his hands during the putting stroke.

He told GolfWRX.com on Tuesday at the Wells Fargo Championship that the 38-inch counterbalanced setup “served its purpose” by helping him to neutralize his hands during the stroke, but now it’s time to try the standard-length putter with a standard-size SuperStroke Pistol Tour grip to help with his feel and speed control.

Although Fowler was also spotted testing standard-length mallets from L.A.B. Golf and Axis1 on Tuesday, he confirmed that the custom Odyssey Jailbird 380 is the putter he’ll use this week at the 2024 Wells Fargo Championship.

Head over to PGATour.com for the full article. 

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