Like a good wine, improving with age

Different Strokes: If we’re honest, golf’s everyman allure was epitomised by Miguel Angel Jimenez’s celebratory poses – with…

Different Strokes:If we're honest, golf's everyman allure was epitomised by Miguel Angel Jimenez's celebratory poses – with glass of Rioja in hand – after he took the record as the oldest winner on the European Tour away from our own Des Smyth.

The pony-tailed Spaniard has, like the wine, improved with age and his win in the Hong Kong Open was an appropriate indicator of his longevity.

At the ripe old age of 48, and in sport where a teenager – Matteo Manassero – preceded him as a winner on the tour, Jimenez’s remarkable durability emphasised that, of all professional sports, golf is the one which manages to cross the generations.

Of course, we only have to go back to Tom Watson’s close call in the 2009 British Open – where he was beaten in a play-off by Stewart Cink – to know that the so-called grey-haired generation can mix it with the younger guns.

READ MORE

After all, Watson, aged 60 at the time and with an artificial hip, took the quest for the claret jug to the wire. Could we envisage Alan Wells doing the same to Usain Bolt over the 100 metres? Or Kevin Keegan coming out of retirement and playing regularly in the Premier League?

That old-timers are capable of mixing it with the younger generations shouldn’t be construed as making golf any way inferior. It is a game of skill and of mental fortitude and, on that point, experience can be a help rather than a hindrance.

And if the likes of Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy have made athleticism in the sport more of the norm than in the past, it really does the old heart good to see someone like Jimenez put one over on the youngsters.

All of which brings us back to Watson who, asked what his achievement at Turnberry in very nearly becoming the oldest winner of a Major title meant, responded: “I think it’s very clear. It means the game of golf is long lived. You play this game for a lifetime.”

Timely Norman

There is some pertinence to the timing of Greg Norman’s remarks about players using beta blockers – in the days before drug testing were introduced on tour in 2008 – to calm their nerves.

The Great White Shark is quoted in the New York Times as saying he remembers a time when “lots of guys were on beta blockers . . . it wasn’t openly acknowledged, but it was obvious to the rest of us. A guy’s personality would change. In practice rounds or friendly matches, we’d see the real guy under stress. Then in competition, he was like a different, calmer person. Those guys were trying to take the nerves out of the game. But nerves are very much a part of the game.”

Norman’s comments come soon after Charlie Beljan suffered a panic attack en route to winning the recent Children’s Miracle Network Classic on the US Tour. If Beljan is required to take medication to treat his anxiety, he will need a therapeutic-use exemption, which requires a review by an independent panel of doctors.

American Doug Barron has the dubious honour of being the first player banned for taking a performance-enhancing drug. He received a one-year suspension for testing positive for using an unnamed drug in 2009.

The Rules

13-2/1.1 Player attempts to take stance fairly but improves line of play by moving interfering growing object

QA player's ball lies under a tree branch. In attempting to take his stance fairly, the player improves his line of play by moving the branch with his body. Before playing, he realises he could have taken his stance without moving the branch. He abandons his stance and the branch returns to its original position. The player then approaches the ball from a different direction, and without disturbing the branch makes his stroke. The ruling?

ANo penalty. When fairly taking his stance the player is required to take his stance in the least intrusive manner that results in the minimum improvement in the position or lie of the ball, area of intended stance or swing or line of play. However, under Rule 13-2/1.1, as the branch moved as a result of the player's attempt to take his stance fairly and was returned to its original position before the stroke was made, there is no penalty. The same principle would apply to fixed artificial objects (eg a boundary stake) if the intruding object is returned to its original position before the player makes a stroke.

In the bag

Henrik Stenson

(South African Open)

Ball – Titleist ProV1x

Shoe – FootJoy

Driver – TaylorMade R11S (9-degree)

Fairway woods – 3-wood: Callaway Diablo Octane Tour (13-degree); 5-wood: Callaway Diablo Octane Tour (18-degree)

Irons (3-pw) – Callaway RAZR Tour

Sand Wedge – Cleveland 588 (51-degree)

Lob Wedge – Cleveland 588 (58-degree)

Putter – Piretti (prototype)

Twitter talk

“Well played congrats to Adam Scott (right) he played lovely today to win the Aussie Masters he’s been trying for years great guy. #thanksfans”

– Ian Poulter graciously acknowledges his conqueror in the Australian Masters.

“BOOM!! 3rd win of the year – honoured to add my name to the great Champions that have won the Dunlop Phoenix Tournament”

– Luke Donald after fine-tuning for the Dubai World Championship with a victory on Sunday in Japan.

“Boring!!!! As usual, @LukeDonald up and down from 90yds to take the charity pot of cash”

– Justin Rose after losing out to his compatriot in a charity round in Dubai yesterday.

“There were times [it] just was out of control – total shame!”

– John Daly, who threw his putter in frustration during the second round of the Hong Kong Open where players were constantly distracted by mobile phone use.

Philip Reid

Philip Reid

Philip Reid is Golf Correspondent of The Irish Times