Golf Quiet Please
by Bill Hogan
QUIET, PLEASE.
April 12, 2002
by Bill Hogan
The Masters. To me, the best event on the pro golf
tour. And not because the golf is any better than it
is at the U.S. Open or any PGA event. It's because the
scenery is second to none. Even through a television
camera the rolling green fairways, magnolia trees and
blooming azaleas that embody Augusta National are spectacular.
Not to mention the storied green jacket, pimento cheese
sandwiches wrapped in green cellophane and the immortal
legend of Bobby Jones.
The Masters is a tournament immersed in tradition.
The green jackets worn by the Masters winners are never
to leave the premises. Caddys are required to wear white
jumpsuits. And everyone at the course must display proper
decorum at all times.
Golf enthusiasts that are fortunate enough to get tickets
to the event (many of the limited passes are inherited)
are not called spectators and they are not part of a
gallery. Those in attendance are referred to as patrons.
Patrons are expected to behave in exemplary fashion
throughout their visit. So, quiet please.
Colin Mongomerie can rest easy. Hecklers will not be
tolerated at Augusta National on the second weekend
in April. There will be no "You the man!"
chants after booming drives and all applause should
be kept to a minimum. Of course, these rules are not
limited to Augusta in April.
In fact, these rules are pretty much the standard at
any golf tournament. Golf is a gentleman's game and
proper etiquette should be displayed at all times. So,
quiet please. All sporting events have rules of conduct
that must be followed by the spectators in attendance.
No lighting the stadium seats on fire. No tossing beer
bottles on the playing field. No throwing batteries
at the opposing team's left fielder. At a golf tournament,
the number one rule is 'quiet, please'.
That's the rule and it should be followed. But I have
to wonder how it ever came to be that complete and utter
silence is necessary to successfully hit a golf ball.
A basketball player at the free throw line, with seventeen
thousand hostile fans screaming disparaging remarks
about his mama and waving streamers and big foam fingers,
can somehow block out all the distractions and make
the shot.
But if a bird chirps when a golfer is standing over
a three-foot putt his knees turn to jelly?
Would anyone disagree that trying to get a bat on a
95-mile-an-hour Randy Johnson fastball requires as much
concentration as chipping out of a bunker?
Picture it. Bank One Ball Park in Arizona packed to
the rafters. Johnson on the mound looking for a complete
game shutout. Two down in the ninth. Two strikes on
the batter. The place is going nuts. Then, over the
public address system, a voice rises above the crowd
noise. 'Quiet, please'.
Average people can read the Wall Street Journal standing
up on a crowded subway but a professional golfer is
sure to slice a seven iron into the trees if someone
clicks a camera while he's in his backswing. There's
nothing more depressing than to wait all year for the
tour to come to town. Get tickets to the final round,
pack a lunch, bring the kids and follow your favorite
player around the course, then find yourself escorted
off the premises because you've got a tickle in your
throat. (Note to rules committee: hacking is not heckling).
The irony lies in the fact that most professional golfers
would prefer a cheering crowd to the deafening silence
they face when lining up the winning putt at a major
championship. When you're trying to concentrate, it's
a heck of a lot easier to block out continuous noise
than to stand in silence waiting for a twig to snap.
I never understood why I could dive off a 10-foot board
at the public pool but jumping in the water from the
deck was prohibited. It made no sense that I could wear
jeans to the office but not sneakers. It puzzles me
to find "Keep Off the Grass" signs at a playground
and big signs on fences that read "Post No Signs".
And I don't understand why a hundred years ago somebody
decided that golf was best played in silence. But that's
the rule.
If you're lucky enough to get a ticket to the Masters,
enjoy the beautiful scenery, get yourself a couple of
pimento cheese sandwiches and stop at all the historical
markers placed on the bridges, trees and fountains around
the course.
But for heaven sake, please be quiet.
|