My son Tim and I played in the Parent/Child Championship at our home club, Hop Meadow, in Connecticut this past Saturday.  This was the last time we will compete in the 13 to 17 year old category as Tim, who is off to college next week, will be 18 next year (I turn 60 next year, so maybe they will let me hit from the forward tees.)  We won our flight this year, but our goal was to win the overall competition.  Our competition for the overall title was squarely in sight; we were matched in our six-some with the two toughest teams in the Parent/Adult Child category (the "adult child" was a mere 18 in each group).
    The alternate shot format is the golfing equivalent of hanging wallpaper with your spouse.  No matter how the job turns out or how hard you try not to show your emotions, something bad happens, and then your body language and facial expressions betray you.  You may go in with a strategy - Tim was to tee off on the odd-numbered, tougher driving holes - but you still have to make the strokes.  It is bad enough when you are playing your own ball and hit one OB or lose it in the trees; but when you do it in alternate shot, your partner inherits the mess.  
    Our Waterloo came at the 7th hole when Tim hit one into a tree next to a patch of high weeds.  I figured we would find it so I struck my provisional tee shot with raging indifference, popping it up 140 yards down the fairway on the long par 4.  We never found Tim's ball, and by the time we were done putting out mine, we had a triple bogey 7.
    Long story short, we played quite well the rest of the way, finishing with a 77 which still would have been good enough to win if Brian, the dad in one of the other twosomes, had missed at least one putt all day (actually he did miss one, a 60-footer from the fringe, but he didn't miss any of the rest from 20 feet in).  We lost by two strokes, and it would be easy to look at the 7th hole and say that was it, but in golf, you don't hit one shot badly and the other 76 perfectly.  I missed two putts inside four feet and hit a few chip shots a little short, and Tim left me in the rough off the tee a few times.  We hated to lose, but we lost to an excellent round of golf in a brutally tough format.  After a few quick after-the-fact assessments of each other's play, we put it behind us.  That is probably the best strategy of all for alternate shot golf.

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The 420-yard par 4 7th hole at Hop Meadow Country Club in Simsbury, CT, our home course, cost us a lot of momentum on Saturday in the club's annual Parent/Child Championship.  A lost tee ball in the trees and weeds on the right led to a triple bogey and, ultimately, a two-shot loss.

Architect Ed Seay dies at 69

    Ed Seay passed away last week at the age of 69 after a long battle with cancer.  The golf course architect was probably best known for his collaborations with Arnold Palmer after the two began working together in 1972. A modest fellow, Seay worked on many projects with his partner Palmer, who received the lion's share of credit.  Seay's body of work includes a number of well known layouts in the southeastern U.S., including Sawgrass Country Club in Ponte Vedra, FL (just down the street from Pete Dye's Stadium Course); Old Tabby Links, Spring Island, SC;  and, given Seay's passing, the aptly named Adios Club in Coconut Creek, FL.  He also designed Kapalua Village on the island of Maui (a nice course but overwhelmed in reputation and drama by the adjacent and breathtaking Kapalua Plantation course).  

    Seay was one of the earliest U.S. designers to work overseas, and his international credits include the K Club and the famed Tralee in Ireland; the Four Seasons Resort course in Costa Rica; and a course in Communist China that he designed in 1981... 

A naif's (my) view of the free market 

    It has been interesting over the last few weeks to listen to the pundits on radio and television opine about what to do with the credit markets.  One of my favorites, Larry Kudlow, who hosts a one-hour show on the CNBC financial news television network, always starts his show with a line that goes something like, "Free market capitalism is the best way to prosperity."  He is a rabid proponent of letting the economic and equity markets run without the interference of government.  But in the last few weeks, he's been calling for the Federal Reserve to intervene by lowering rates, and applauding the initial interventions that pumped "liquidity" into the market.  He defends his hypocrisy by calling the Fed something less than a government agency, as if manipulating the markets by, say, international financier George Soros would be any less of an artificial intrusion.
    Smart guys like Kudlow love the bull when it isn't bucking.  But they are at something of a loss when "Goldilocks'" porridge (not too hot, not too cold) begins to freeze up.  Daniel Mitchell of the Cato Institute showed a deeper faith in the free market when he argued the other day for non-interference in the mortgage markets.  He said simply that "Capitalism without losses would be like religion without hell."  Good one.