At
18, Harry Hurt's goal was to become a pro golfer. At 19, he virtually
gave up the game. Almost a quarter century later, now an accomplished
journalist, he went out again on a quixotic quest to make the golf
tour. He got his wish--on a secondary circuit for over-40s--but, as
they say, be careful what you wish for. Hurt's recounting of his year
is filled with frustration, a scorecard's worth of admitted self-deception,
and just enough triumph to keep him going. His prose captures highs
and lows well, and his narrative offers some engaging insight into
the mindset of professional golf, and some of the teachers and players--including
Greg Norman, Ben Crenshaw, and Fred Couples--he meets, and learns
from, as he navigates his impracticable course
An
unusual perspective on the grinding routines of the pro golf circuit:
A rookie player recalls his road to the PGA Tour and his first years'
experience playing with the big boys. Paulson was a moderately successful
junior golfer, earning a four-year golf scholarship to the University
of South Carolina, where he was an All-America selectee. Turning pro
and winning big on the tour should be a piece of cake, right? Hardly.
As Paulson and co-author Janda (Psychology/Old Dominion Univ.) explain.
There
is no event in golf quite like Q School. It's the grueling, six-round,
end-of-the-year tournament for golf's dreamers, the mostly up-and-coming
wannabes eager for a place on the tour, and the recent washouts anxious
to reclaim what they see as their rightful positions. "This is one
tournament," writes David Gould, an experienced golf writer, "that
Samuel Beckett might have competed in.... The tournament is a specter
of failure on which all the success of the pro-golf tour is built."
The top few handful of finishers qualify for promotion to the PGA
tour's roster of players who get to beat each other up every week
for the big money and the prestige titles. Everyone else gets to go
home and try again. The stakes are high, and the pressure is enormous.
Given that every swing of the club has potential for disaster, the
Q School story is one of some triumph, lots of despair, and bucketfuls
of dark comedy.
The PGA tour needs more stories like
this...Esteban Toledo is a poster child for how to make it." --Peter
Jacobson, six-time PGA tour winner What kind of passion propels a
man, against all odds, to the top of the world of golf? What is life
really like inside the pressure cooker that is the PGA tour? The answers
come to life in the remarkable golf odyssey artfully rendered in Tin
Cup Dreams. At the grueling Q. school, a ragtag collection of thirty-something
pros overcome every obstacle golf can throw in their way to win a
spot on the PGA tour. But now their test is only beginning. To make
it, they must succeed against the best players in the world. Tin Cup
Dreams follows them for the season, focusing on a self-taught golfer
named Esteban Toledo, an unlikely hero from a literally dirt-poor
background. With uncommon grit and determination, Toledo triumphs
where others fail, and along the way teaches us about mastering the
mental side of the game, about ignoring the odds, and about when to
lay up and when to go for it. Traditionally golf was a dreamer's path
to glory. Tin Cup Dreams, one of the most intimate and exciting books
ever written about golf, shows that it still is.
What happens when a man obsessed with
golf leaves home for a year to pursue his dream? This is the story
of that journey. One day when John Paul Newport was in his mid-thirties,
he attended a corporate outing at a golf course. He had hacked around
on the fairways for a couple of summers as a kid, but had always found
other sports, especially football, more compelling. Golf was a game
he had played only a handful of times in the past twenty years. But
that day on the course he more or less accidentally nailed a drive
more than 300 yards. The feeling he had as he watched the ball soar
was incredible--grace, power, and purity combined. Much to his surprise,
he was hooked. Within a month he had bought a set of clubs--the first
he'd ever owned--and discovered he had a knack for the game. With
practice, his scores improved steadily, until one day two years later,
he miraculously shot a three-under-par 69. This amazing experience
triggered all sorts of questions in his mind: How was such a round
possible? Having shot 69 once, what prevented him from shooting 69
every time? In golf, as elsewhere in life, why is one so consistently
incapable of fulfilling one's clearly established potential? Projecting
into the world of professional golf, he wondered what was it that
allowed some pros to stay at the top of the PGA Tour golf rankings
year after year while others with seemingly just as much talent got
stuck in the bush leagues? In pursuit of some answers, John Paul Newport
spent a year playing in the bush leagues himself, the dark, comic
underbelly of professional golf. This is a world in which even highly
talented players sometimes live out of their cars, sneak food from
country clubs, and gamble away their meager earnings in an attempt
to stay afloat. But it is also the world many top pros--including
John Daly, Paul Azinger, and Tom Lehman--first had to conquer before
becoming the stars they did. Newport's year culminated in a bold,
some might say ill-advised effort to make it through the PGA Tour's
infamous Q School.