By Francis X. Rocca on 5.23.03 @ 11:53AM
We're all golfers now, even if we've never played anything more ambitious than the local Putt-Putt.
All the fuss yesterday about Annika
Sorenstam at the Colonial reminds me of how ignorant I am about
one of America's major pastimes. I've been surrounded by golf all
my life -- the house I grew up in was built on land that a few
years earlier had been part of a course -- but I wouldn't know a
tee shot from a T-bird, or T-birdie, or whatever it is. Putt-Putt
is the closest I've come to playing, and even there my knowledge is
slim. I've always been more interested in the windmills and other
fancy obstacles than in driving the ball into the hole.
My parents, as you may have guessed, are not golfers. When I was
growing up, most of our neighbors belonged to the local club, but
my dad claimed he wasn't interested because it didn't take black
people. I have no idea if there was such a policy, and since the
only black people in our neighborhood were a family of diplomats
from Senegal, the odds are it was never put to the test. It's
probably more pertinent that patience has never been my family's
signature virtue, and from what I can tell, golf -- even the
"speed" kind the Bushes favor -- takes plenty of patience.
In spite of this upbringing, I do have a brother who's been
known to play the occasional round. He went to a Jesuit high school
with its very own course. My high school was also Jesuit-run, in a
marginally rough neighborhood downtown, and my classmates and I
used to smirk at our suburban rivals with their manicured greens.
Maybe we were jealous, though looking back, I still think liquor
stores and housing projects make for a more educational
environment.
Golf is obviously a great game, otherwise so many wouldn't
devote themselves so passionately to it; but it's just as obviously
a great status symbol. It's the aspirational game par excellence.
Though it evokes wealth and power, it's also accessible.
Practically anyone in America who really wants to do so can find a
place to play.
That must be the reason, apart from the opportunities it offers
for talking, that Bill Clinton indulged in it as candidate and
president. The image of him in a golf cart reassured the Bubbas
that he was no Dukakis, without offending the Democrats' liberal
base.
Golf is an "elitist" game, not an elitist one. Whereas polo --
now that's an elitist game. Try to imagine an American politician
letting himself be photographed swinging a mallet from the back of
an Argentine pony.
Of course there are courses and there are courses. Clearview in
Queens and Piping Rock in Locust Valley are in vastly different
worlds, my sources assure me, though merely half an hour's drive
apart. It's not a question of landscaping or maintenance; the
crucial factor is exclusivity. That's what set off the New York
Times on its campaign against the no-girls-allowed Augusta
National. How the membership policy of a private club in Georgia
could possibly matter to American athletics or society is a puzzle
to me, but as noted above, I know scarcely anything about golf.
Ms. Sorenstam is the first woman to play in a PGA tournament
since 1945, and bully for her, though it's hard to imagine how this
can make any difference either. Every sport will always have its
standouts whom the rest of us, men as well as women, stand on the
sidelines and watch.
topics:
Education, Bill Clinton, Sports, Environment