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GOLF TEACHING PRO®
Old
Dogs, New Tricks
NO
BONES ABOUT IT!
At
the recent United States Golf Teachers Cup at Carter Plantation
Resort in Louisiana, three of the first four qualifiers to represent
Team USA in the upcoming World Golf Teachers Cup in Brazil were
seniors. Mike Stevens from Tampa, Florida, and Bruce Sims from McKinney,
Texas, were in the 50-and-over division and Jerry Moore from Raritan,
New Jersey, was in the 60-and-over division. All showed that there’s
a little life left in the Geritol generation.
These
“old dogs” are, in fact, one segment of the golf teaching crowd
that I’ve always respected. They impress and intrigue me. In fact,
you know the type: they are not members of the tour, nor have they
ever played on the tour. They are not usually people that have ever
been famous, nor have they won any major tournaments. They are not
the people that should be beating you in tournaments if you are
playing a lot, although obviously sometimes they do.
While
the term “old dog” definitely suggests athletes who are advanced
in years, you do not qualify as one simply by virtue of age. You
have to be smart and you have to be cunning. You would qualify as
an old dog, for instance, if you are over 50, still teaching full-time,
and yet can still finish in the top 10 in the Open division of the
United States Golf Teachers Cup or World Cup event.
There
is no strict old dog qualification standard, but it would be fair
to say that old dogs have to be at least occasionally competitive
with the “full-time, young bucks.” In fact, I think old dogs deserve
more credit than they receive. They provide a good example of what
years of playing and teaching can create, and an example for all
those younger flat-bellied people to look up to.
Most
of us know the feeling of being pursued in a tournament by an old
dog. You hate the feeling, but you know it is good for you. You
know you have to play well and stay competitive to preserve your
dignity.
If you are fortunate enough to have one or more old dogs on your
side in a team event, you know they are terrific people to learn
things from. In fact, most old dogs are pretty willing to share
their teaching knowledge. And we all know that, according to the
Dalai Lama, sharing your knowledge allows you to achieve immortality.
Finally,
old dogs are excellent examples of people who are deeply passionate
about our sport and many of the things that really matter about
it; they love to teach, they love to compete and challenge themselves
and they love to challenge others.
So, to all those Old Dogs out there, I say “Go Fetch!”
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