The article below was written by ‘Angry Club Golfer’, via National Club Golfer.
This putt couldn’t have been more than about a foot. And yet there he was – feet astride the hole – feeling for some imaginary break.
He moved behind, pushed out his putter to draw a line, and stayed there in silent contemplation.
It felt like an eternity before he moved up to the ball, swished once, swished twice, before he finally settled.
And then missed the putt. I bit my tongue, pulled my cap further over my brow, and tried not to scream.
Pre-shot routines have become an absolute blight on pace of play.
I don’t like it in the pros. It’s part of the reason we now endure six-hour TV rounds. But at our clubs? Who are we kidding?
See the shot, hit the shot. Not anymore. Now I must watch any number of elaborate waggles, half swings, truncated take-aways, and ridiculously single-minded focus.
All of which have precisely no effect on the results for the player with club in hand. The ball still slices.
This wasn’t the worst I’ve seen, though. Behold. He’d been told he was too crouched. It didn’t help that his spine was as crooked as Richard III’s. No amount of physics was going to change that biological fact.
But anyroad, in a futile bid to get a better angle he would struggle onto the tee, get into his stance, and then try and stand up bolt straight.
He’d put his arms across his chest and then attempt to bend down into a golf position. Sounds straightforward, if a bit strange on the eye.
Except if he didn’t get it quite right, and that happened A LOT, he’d begin the process again. And again. We used to leave him standing on the tee.
This only narrowly beat the playing partner I once had who would take close on a dozen practice swings before each shot. If it was a tricky chip, it could be more.
We were first out and I’d made the entirely reasonable, but ultimately doomed, decision to schedule an appointment for early afternoon.
After an interminable round, where we had the whole course snailed behind us like it was the M25, I resolved never to be in his company again. I’d remove my name when his appeared next to mine on the booking sheet.
This is all just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to pace of play, of course. It’s unenforceable at our clubs. No one has the will to tackle it.
Our committees don’t want the hassle – who can blame them? – and those players on the slow side have worked out they can take as long as they like and no one will do anything more than gnash their teeth in the clubhouse.
It’s bigger than just pre-shot routines. But if we could save a few extra seconds each hole by trying not to mimic Jordan Spieth, wouldn’t that be worth it?
I won’t hold my breath.