“Like
Taking Candy From A Baby”-The Trials And Tribulations Of Golfer Sand-bagger
Johnson
As
Sand-bagger Johnson headed to the dreaded first tee at Fresh Pond Golf Course
on a brisk Sunday morning in mid-March he noticed that he had once again
forgotten Big Emma his trusty number one wood (some call that monstrous seven-headed
weapon a driver but he preferred the old-time way of describing woods when they
actually were made of wood not the new-fangled woods made of unearthly metals
just as he preferred to call his irons names like mashie and mashie niblick
rather that sterile modern numbering system from three to nine which had always
confused him). One of his playing partners, a burly Frenchman, Lucky Pierre or
something like that, not a Frenchman from France but from up in Quebec whose
forebears had come down from across the Saint Lawrence River in Canada to
America looking for work in the then bustling mills along the Merrimac River in
upstate Massachusetts with some idea of the dream of fame and fortune too,
asked him if needed a text reminder to not forget Big Emma for the next battle
between them. Sand-bagger burned with resentment that this Lucky Pierre thought
him some kind of senile old duffer in need of every modern communications service
to get him through the day.
Worse
the other member of the golfing contingent he had been lashed up with a wily Chinese
guy, Chou something, oops Zhou something, like the old-time Foreign Minister
under Mao, not a Chinese guy from China but from the leafy suburbs of Boston
out in Lexington, you know one of the towns where they had a big dust-up with
the Brits a couple of hundred years ago, snickered, snickered if one can
believe that, in agreement with this tactic by Lucky Pierre. It was from that
moment on that day that he was determined that he would take both these young
toughs down a peg or two. Make them cry “Uncle” at the end of the nine-hole
round and hold his hand out to greedily accept the homage due the victor in the
only way that counts on the golf course-the coin of the realm, kale, dough, you
know moola.
Sand-bagger,
as they reached the first tee box, casually asked his fellow golfers whether
they would care to wager a few bob on the outcome of the game, a match for say
five dollars. Lucky Pierre and Chou, oops Zhou, readily agreed smirking, smirking
if you can believe that, probably believing that the old duffer was having another
one of his senior moments. Sand-bagger snapped them back a bit when he
announced, pretty please announced, that he needed two strokes from each of
them if he were to play a fair match against such fierce-looking competitors.
Moaning and groaning, at least that was their public affect who knows what they
were really thinking they agreed to his outrageous demand. Sand-bagger then as
was one of the strange customs of the game tossed a perfectly good tee in the
air to determine the order of play for the first hole of the match (that order
would change as the game progressed for another strange custom called “honors”
which went according to who won the hole and would continue onward until
someone else won a hole. He never really understood the purpose of this “honor”
business since he had come to the game in an age when “ready” golf ruled the
roost).
Sand-bagger
was not sure whether he wanted to give the reader a blow by blow description of
each match and the outcome of each hole or just proceed to the ninth hole and
the pay-out-whose hand was greedily stretched out to receive the filthy lucre,
you know, dough. He decided just in case his respective burly and wiry opponents
read this screed, or denied reality, that he would at least give a summary of
each hole and its outcome-maybe more if some note-worthy event occurred.
Sand-bagger
who hit second (as a result of that odd tee-throwing custom already mentioned)
placed his number three wood in good position, hit a number five wood (remember
where he says wood that really means metal wood, alright)to about one hundred
yards and put a wedge to about fifteen
feet of the pin. Unfortunately he booted the putter well pass the pin and three
putted resulting in a six on the hole. Fortunately he had had the good sense to
three-putt on a hole when he had a stroke from the fellows. Result Sand-bagger
and Zhou tie. One up on Pierre. The second hole was a nightmare once he got
into the front left trap, played pin-pong across the green and the rest is unworthy
of further waste of cyber-ink. Zhou one up. Pierre-even.
Sand-bagger
hit a great arcing shot on the par three third hole with a number five wood
about twenty-five feet from the pin. Two-putted. Zhou booted the putter as did
the Frenchman. Zhou even. One up on Pierre. The fourth hole another booted hole
by Sand-bagger with an uninspired seven. Fortunately he dodged a bullet against
Pierre with his second handicap stroke. Zhou one up. One up on Pierre. The
fifth hole an average par five garnered an average bogey six. Zhou one up.
Pierre who was beginning to unravel two down. The long par three sixth hole began
Sand-bagger’s patented late charge he knew he was capable of once he got
through the fifth hole. After a good chip he drained a fifteen-footer for par. Even.
Pierre, who exploded a sand shot into the nether-world and picked up, was three
down and done, toasted, finished. See Pierre was three down with three holes to
go which meant he could not win because of another strange golf custom about
tie-breakers (he had lost the number one handicap fourth hole so done, toasted,
finished).
With
the sullen Lucky Pierre totally vanquished Sand-bagger was able to concentrate
his steely eyes on the wiry Zhou. It was on the seventh hole he noticed that Zhou
was putting on one of his classic ruses rubbing his right shoulder like he was
injured. Sand-bagger had expected that little “psych game” on Zhou’s part
although for the life of him he could not fathom how hitting a driver (Zhou’s
name for the number one wood) of about two pounds could wreak such havoc. So
Sand-bagger ignored that silly little game. He won the hole. One up. On the part
three eighth hole Sand-bagger hit his now patented number five wood shot into
the water and then the ball skipped out setting up a tight second shot. This
and that happened to both men as they unceremoniously tied the hole. He was one
up going into the par five ninth hole. A hole he had to at least tie to win the
match since that strange custom business about ties mean Zhou, having won the fourth
hole, had the advantage on tie-breakers. Sand-bagger could see that Zhou was
wilting under the pressure as he continued that shoulder game although he himself
was concerned when he dipsy-doodled one into the drink off the tee box and had to
hit three from the drop area some yards ahead of the tee box.
Sand-bagger
booted the ball down to the green and was on in the horrible number of six and fully
expected to lose the hole since Zhou had hit the green and rolled over in three.
Then Zhou did a classic boot the ball missing the first chip, then the second
and three putted-eight. Sand-bagger two putted-eight. Victory and a greedy hand
out for ten big ones, or really two Abes, you know fives. And a sparkling 49
which could have been a 48, maybe 47 or 46 it was that kind of day.
As
he walked up the hill to the clubhouse with a little fake limp to start his “psych”
game for next outing Sand-bagger thought back to something he had written after
a sparkling 48 on the opening day of the season about how this year “it would be
like taking candy from a baby” in the matches against the wiry Chinese guy not
from China but the leafy suburbs and burly Frenchman, a French man not from France
but from Quebec across the Saint Lawrence. Wondered too about a lanky Japanese
guy too, not a guy from Japan but from the ivied walls of Cambridge. Wondered
about whether he would “forget” Big Emma next time too.
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