If you were Tiger, what would you say???
Come on now WTF you know that Ian Poulter is just the Elton John of the PGA clothes wise. From what I understand he gets paid quite a bit of dinero to wear his outlandish outfits. Heck it ain't any worse than what Jesper Parnvick wears and was it not he who introduced Tiger to Elin? Maybe Tiger is hoping Ian sets him up on his next conquest.
And how many of those outlandish golf outfits do you have in your closet heh WTF?
PJ , did you see that crap Ian Poulter had on yesterday. Tiger should have had to fuc'd him as atonement for both of them!
Allred set back women's rights a hundred years with that idiotic rant defending a porn actress being lied to. God Damn if it wasn't for lieing none of us would ever get laid!
Originally Posted by WTF
And how many of those outlandish golf outfits do you have in your closet heh WTF?
Originally Posted by OneHotMale
You don't call bluejean shorts and T-shirts outlandish do ua?
You don't call bluejean shorts and T-shirts outlandish do ua?
Originally Posted by WTF
I don't want to get in between the love fest going on, but I am. Please WTF tell me you don't wear cut off jeans on the course.
I don't want to get in between the love fest going on, but I am. Please WTF tell me you don't wear cut off jeans on the course.
Originally Posted by Ansley
Whatcha wanna bet that he does Ansley along with a Nike T-Shirt that says "Just Do It" and some white knee high socks.
- MrGiz
- 02-22-2010, 04:54 PM
I hope he continues to keep his mouth shut. I really don't see any reason for Jack Nicklaus to get his hands dirty with Tiger's mess.
Originally Posted by Ansley
I'm pretty sure your hopes will be fulfilled.... too much class!! Besides.... his wife washes his balls!
Giz
Here is Dan Jenkins take on Tiger. Dan is a crusty print media guy who has covered the PGA Tour for many years. It was written for Golf Digest.
"Friends have been asking me why I haven't written my take on "the Tiger Woods deal," so here it comes. First, let me just say that I'm still having trouble getting past the video games and Fruit Loops.
That's if I'm to believe the report that Tiger was so distraught after his indoor athleticism became public -- and turned into what some people call a Shakespearean tragedy -- that he crawled into deep, lonely hiding and occupied his time playing video games and eating Fruit Loops.
Maybe it is true, and that's why Tiger's agent, Mark Steinberg of IMG, said to the media at one point, "Give the kid a break."
Kid?
Tiger Woods was a month away from 34 years of age when his debutantes began turning up in the news. He was a grown man with a wife and two children. Well, we supposed he had a wife, but that was before we learned she was only an ornament.
Kid?
Kids flew B-17s in daylight bombing raids over Germany in World War II. Kids fought in Korea and Vietnam. Kids are serving today in Iraq and Afghanistan so Tiger Woods can live in a world where he can win 14 majors and match that number, the last time I counted, with 14 casting couches, most of them reserved for blondes.
Now excuse me a moment while I try to envision Ben Hogan, Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus playing video games and eating Fruit Loops while they try to deal with a career problem.
Of course, Hogan, Palmer and Nicklaus never set themselves up to become future statues in Central Park.
They never pretended to be the All-American Daddy-Pop Father of the Year Who Also Wins Golf Tournaments.
They never sold themselves as the greatest Family Values brand ever, and conquered the marketplace with it, shamelessly scooping up hundreds of millions of dollars while saying, "My family will always come first."
They were never what Tiger allowed himself to become from the start: spoiled, pampered, hidden, guarded, orchestrated and entitled.
I'll tell you what Hogan, Palmer and Nicklaus were at their peak.
They were every bit as popular as Tiger, they endured similar demands on their time, but they handled it courteously, often with ease and enjoyment.
They were accessible, likable, knowable, conversant, as gracious in loss as they were in victory, and, above all, amazingly helpful to those of us in the print lodge who covered them.
That was their brand. All the things Tiger never was.
As for Tiger's brand, boy, did that take a hit.
For all of the Tiger idolaters out there, it must have been like finding out that ice cream sundaes give you gonorrhea.
Never in my knowledge of history has any famous personality -- in sports, show biz, or politics -- ever fallen so far so fast. Tiger Woods is graveyard dead, as the Southern expression goes.
Life as Tiger has known it is over. His reputation is ruined, possibly forever. His name that once meant mastery over competitive golf now invokes cringes, giggles and all the Internet jokes you want to pass along.
Sure, he can come back and even win again, if he man's up, but if he does he will only be a hero to the "you-da-man" and "get-in-the-hole" crowd. And I can't imagine him coming back as a "humbled man." That wouldn't be the owner of a yacht insultingly named Privacy, the guy the press has still slobbered over for these past 12 years.
I covered Tiger winning his 14 professional majors, but I can't say I know him. I knew the smile he put on for TV. I knew the orchestrated remarks he granted us in his press-room interviews. I knew the air he punched when another outrageous putt went in the cup. That's it.
I once made an effort to get to know the old silicone collector. Tried to arrange dinners with him for a little Q&A, on or off the record, his choice. But the closest I ever got was this word from his agent: "We have nothing to gain."
Now it's too late.
I'm busy. "
- MrGiz
- 02-22-2010, 11:01 PM
And here I thought it was easy to be cynical from afar!
It took me a while to legitimize Tiger as the great golfer he surely became. I had to be dragged, kicking and screaming to my recognition... because I always thought the press kissed his balls way too much, way too early. I finally gave in and had to admit.... the fucker (pardon the pun) became the greatest golfer on the planet... at the time! #1 by a fair margin!
I have since thought he was pretty arrogant and smug.... perhaps a bit too private for his adoring fans.... but I gave him the benefit of the doubt.... thinking it must be a real bitch, having to deal with so much celebrity bullshit these days!
I suppose, if I had ever gotten a little closer to The Tiger.... I might not have become so impressed! Many think I'm crazy when I say this train wreck might... just might... prevent him from reaching his goal! Golf is an extremely tough game to master and control. Right now.... Tiger has lost all control... and the clock will not stop ticking!
Giz
I'm pretty sure your hopes will be fulfilled.... too much class!! Besides.... his wife washes his balls!
Giz
Originally Posted by MrGiz
I thought she kissed his putter.
Oh yeah...that's what we need...another rule or law.
Well, at least the lawyers would be happy.
Originally Posted by Rudyard K
It's not
another rule or law, RK. It may be the
original rule or law. Anyone who's ever been married runs smack into it sooner or later...
- MrGiz
- 02-23-2010, 12:02 AM
I thought she kissed his putter.
Originally Posted by Marcus Aurelius
Looks like we both had it wrong....
Johnny Carson from the Tonight show asking Barbara Nicklaus how she encourages Jack before he goes out and plays :
Barbara: " I just kiss his balls "
Johnny: " Bet that perks up his putter "
Giz
Looks like we both had it wrong....
Johnny Carson from the Tonight show asking Barbara Nicklaus how she encourages Jack before he goes out and plays :
Barbara: " I just kiss his balls "
Johnny: " Bet that perks up his putter "
Giz
Originally Posted by MrGiz
The quote is correct. It was actually Arnold Palmer's wife. And she walked off the show.
- MrGiz
- 02-23-2010, 08:58 AM
Nope.... Wrong!!
Look it up... it's one of Johnny Carson's The Tonight Show's most remembered moments!
Nope.... Wrong!!
Look it up... it's one of Johnny Carson's The Tonight Show's most remembered moments!
Originally Posted by MrGiz
Actually, neither.
http://www.snopes.com/radiotv/tv/kissballs.asp
But, as I said in another thread...Don't let the facts get in the way of a good story.
Rudyard is correct. It's all a myth...the Snopes post is interesting.
However, Giz, it mentions the dialogue as regarding Arnold Palmer; not Jack Nicklaus.