Fairway to Heaven

Victors and Victims of Golf's Choking Game

Nonfiction, Sports, Golf, History
Cover of the book Fairway to Heaven by Tim Glover, Peter Higgs, Mainstream Publishing
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Tim Glover, Peter Higgs ISBN: 9781780573328
Publisher: Mainstream Publishing Publication: September 30, 2011
Imprint: Mainstream Digital Language: English
Author: Tim Glover, Peter Higgs
ISBN: 9781780573328
Publisher: Mainstream Publishing
Publication: September 30, 2011
Imprint: Mainstream Digital
Language: English

In golf, nowhere is the mental strain more apparent that at the closing stages of a major championship. The crowd, absorbed in every shot, conveys the tension to the players, who are also involved in another contest - the mind game. Before missing the most notorious putt in the history of the Open Championship, Doug Sanders was already thinking of which side of the gallery he would turn to first to acknowledge the applause. When he missed a three foot putt that would have won him the old silver claret jug, there was no applause. Instead people reacted as if they had just witnessed a terrible accident - which, in a sporting context they had. It was Jack Nicklaus, rather than Sanders, who went for the jugular and, in the process, took possession of the jug. The line between victor and victim can be measured not only in millions of dollars but also in fractions of inches. `One minute you're on cloud nine, ' Sam Snead remarked

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

In golf, nowhere is the mental strain more apparent that at the closing stages of a major championship. The crowd, absorbed in every shot, conveys the tension to the players, who are also involved in another contest - the mind game. Before missing the most notorious putt in the history of the Open Championship, Doug Sanders was already thinking of which side of the gallery he would turn to first to acknowledge the applause. When he missed a three foot putt that would have won him the old silver claret jug, there was no applause. Instead people reacted as if they had just witnessed a terrible accident - which, in a sporting context they had. It was Jack Nicklaus, rather than Sanders, who went for the jugular and, in the process, took possession of the jug. The line between victor and victim can be measured not only in millions of dollars but also in fractions of inches. `One minute you're on cloud nine, ' Sam Snead remarked

More books from Mainstream Publishing

Cover of the book Every Chart Topper Tells a Story by Tim Glover, Peter Higgs
Cover of the book Love Hurts by Tim Glover, Peter Higgs
Cover of the book Three Lions Versus the World by Tim Glover, Peter Higgs
Cover of the book Andrew Carnegie by Tim Glover, Peter Higgs
Cover of the book 80s Chart-Toppers by Tim Glover, Peter Higgs
Cover of the book Great Glasgow Characters by Tim Glover, Peter Higgs
Cover of the book Aleister Crowley by Tim Glover, Peter Higgs
Cover of the book No Baloney by Tim Glover, Peter Higgs
Cover of the book The Old Bailey by Tim Glover, Peter Higgs
Cover of the book Fighting Mac by Tim Glover, Peter Higgs
Cover of the book The Royal Scots by Tim Glover, Peter Higgs
Cover of the book The Cocaine Diaries by Tim Glover, Peter Higgs
Cover of the book Devil Incarnate by Tim Glover, Peter Higgs
Cover of the book The Miracle of Life by Tim Glover, Peter Higgs
Cover of the book The Boy in the Attic by Tim Glover, Peter Higgs
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy