Davis Hiring This And That

The biggest question left unanswered (for me) from Mike Davis's hiring announcement as the new USGA Executive Director is what happens to Mike Butz and those immediately below the Executive Director's job. Butz was the interim ED and Ryan Herrington reminds us of this history, which would hopefully mean that Butz is staying on in his valuable role in the organization:
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S.C. State Legislature Revisiting State Sponsorship Of Heritage Classic

Josh McCann reports that the bill from last year to get taxpayer money to fund the Heritage Classic purse is back, with a caveat. State legislature Rep. Bill Herbkersman is the sponsor. Thanks to reader Jonathan for this:

For now, though, the bill offers no specific proposals; it merely summarizes the economic impact of Hilton Head Island's PGA Tour event, Herbkersman said.

The details would be added later if the tournament does not secure a new sponsor, he said.
He said the bill will provide a way to discuss the tournament with colleagues so they can swiftly act if necessary.

"It will give us an opportunity to talk about the ramifications, the financial impact on the state and what would happen if we didn't have" the tournament, Herbkersman said.

iPad And Golf Instruction

I've had little time today to look at the specs on the iPad2, but with the same HD camera as the iPhone, I'm curious if we'll see this device become part of the golf instructor's bag of tricks? So many already use video, but it just seems that if the screen resolution is strong enough in the daylight, that this could become a revolutionary teaching tool due to its simplicity, screen size and portability.

Teachers out there: your thoughts?

USGA To Name Mike Davis New Executive Director**

Even though he said he was not interested and that the job description would have to be changed. So something obviously changed!

Ryan Herrington with the exclusive.

Hank Gives As Many Interviews In A Day As Charlie Sheen

The former Tiger Woods instructor wasmade available to anyone who would listen so that he could plug the season finale of his reality show. Unfortunately, he wasn't the train wreck that Charlie Sheen was, but Hank Haney did offers some interesting stuff on his former pupil. (Only Gary Van Sickle at golf.com refused to ask Tiger questions, so if you want to read about the great strides Rush Limbaugh made, this is your Q&A.)
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"Beth Allen: living donor. Such an extraordinary descriptor."

Beth Ann Baldry with the story of little known American touring pro Beth Allen's extraordinary donation to her older brother, Dan.

Allen, a relatively unknown American professional who plays in Europe, tries to downplay the gift as “a given.” Allen and her older brother, Dan, haven’t talked much about the kidney she’s scheduled to give him March 1.

“We never had an official conversation or anything,” Allen said. “I told my mom I was going to go and see.”
The process began last summer, and on Feb. 2 Allen received word while playing in the Australian Women’s Open that she’d been approved to donate. Doctors told Allen that nothing is certain until she’s wheeled in for surgery, but the exclamation points that peppered a recent e-mail said it all.

Beth, 29, treks the world playing a game that’s the very fabric of the entire Allen family. Yet the independence she enjoys is lost on Dan, 38, who has a rigid 7 p.m. daily curfew in San Diego. “I’m like Cinderella,” he says, laughing. That’s when he must begin the daily 10-hour dialysis treatment that sustains his life. Dan has been married to a machine for the past five years.

"The gloves are well and truly off when it comes to Tiger Woods’ current travails."

That's the perspective Brian Keogh delivers and which I was unable to put into words on the earlier post about Rory's SI piece jabbing at Tiger, who is on the receiving end of criticism from the golf community like never before.

In this sense, McIlroy has been like the child from the Hans Christian Andersen tale The Emperor’s New Clothes . Where others fear to voice what is obvious, McIlroy does not mince his words or hide the fact the man who was once a role model has now been laid bare as a tarnished anti-hero with a balky golf swing.

Frank Deford likens Tiger and interest in watching him play to the Broadway disaster that is Spider-Man.

You know what he reminds me of? The Broadway musical Spider-Man, Turn Off the Dark. It sells out to the curious, even though the critics hate it and it's always a tease, always a work in progress. And there's a dark side that draws us in. Maybe Spidey will find itself. But maybe it'll only be always not quite there.

We watch Tiger Woods with the same almost morbid fascination, afraid to look away because if we do, we'll miss it if he miraculously returns to greatness, as if age doesn't matter with majesty, and what changed his life was all just a bump in the road.