When you come to think of it that is the secret of most of the great holes all over the world. They all have some kind of a twist. C.B. MACDONALD
Let The Debate Begin: 2014 In Viral Videos
/Klein's Year In Architecture, 2014 Edition
/The Great White Shark Is (Showing Us His) Back!?
/"With flush aquifer, Coachella Valley golf courses slow to conserve"
/Take That Kids: 103 Y.O. Makes His Eighth Ace
/Renton Laidlaw Announces His Retirement
/Did Rory Admit It Took Him A Year To Get Used To His Nikes?
/Video: It Is Possible To Hit A Golf Ball Into Your Face?!
/I've hit the replay button too many times on this Golf Fail video linked by Luke Kerr-Dineen (and memorialized by him in a Vine).
But even as steep as his backswing is, it's impossible not to question how someone could do what this poor lad pulls off in embarrassing (and painful) fashion.
Safe to say, he needs some better release point reps.
The full clip:
GolfChannel.com's Most Read Stories Of 2014...
/R.I.P. Ben Doyle
/If Golf Is Still An Olympic Sport In 2024 & The U.S. Hosts...
/Will Normalizing Cuba Mean More Golf On The Island?
/As the United States and Cuba move to officially "normalize" relations, developers will understandably be looked to for their thoughts on bringing resort golf back to the country where there were once two Donald Ross courses.
But before everyone gets excited about the Bandons of the Caribbean, Golfweek's Bradley Klein says it'll take a while to get the infrastructure up to modern standards before any serious development takes place.
The one hopeful sign of development, now more than 15 years old, is Varadero Golf Club, which was designed by Canadian Les Furber. It was home to the European Challenge Tour Grand Finals in 1999 and 2000.
Varadero sits on a peninsula that is pinched by Cardenas Bay to the south and open waters to the north. It's land that would be the envy of any course architect, only 90 miles east of Havana. But access roads to Varadero still betray considerable neglect. They also reveal that the obstacle to development of such dramatic land is basic infrastructure – mainly highways and utilities. Eventually that will come. And when it does, the coastal region will become a haven for luxury-goers, mainly from Latin America – the same folks who have been parking their surplus capital and Rolls Royces in Miami.
This Explains Why Tiger's Going Into The Restaurant Business...
/SI's Michael Bamberger files a story subtitled "How Tiger's Brand Remains Lucrative" and considers how business off the course remains strong for Woods.
If I were his accountant I'd strongly recommend against starting a restaurant (they're a very tricky investment!), but Bamberger says that the upcoming venture strikes at one of Tiger's core values: hating when others make money off of his fame. You know, writers, caddies, teachers, broadcasters and even bars.
Woods’s website shows five courses in various stages of construction where he is involved as a designer. A massive bar and restaurant near his South Florida home called the Woods Jupiter is expected to open in 2015. It might be hard to imagine Woods as a backslapping restaurateur in the tradition of Mickey Mantle, but people who know him say he got tired of filling the Dirty Martini in Palm Beach Gardens and getting nothing out of it. When he arrives at the Martini, his presence gets tweeted out and within an hour the bar is packed by gawkers and drinkers, credit cards in hand.
Video: Clarkie Joins The Bryan Brothers At Pinehurst
/A golf shot trickster who is a little over a year removed from having a tumor removed and is now cancer free, Clarkie Carroll joined up with the Bryan Brothers on a cloudy Pinehurst day to hit some shots. I could do without the music but otherwise good stuff...

