Thursday, July 22, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven (; . Touching all Nicklaus, Miller headline the bases star-studded Windsor field ,ems, III_ Bill Stieg The game of golf... ... a pure sport AT LAST, BIG TIME tournament golf is back in the Detroit area. So how come everyone is watching channel 7? Lost in the quadrennial hoopla of the Olympics is another fine sports presentation from our neighbors to the north, the Canadian Open. It has all the big stars, plenty of prestige and a lot of pressure. But it still hasn't attracted much attention. Actually, it's easy to see why. To those who don't play, golf is not really interesting. Golfers don't look like athletes, and the game itself can seem very boring and almost silly. That's the basic position of many non-golfers. Trying to explain golf's attraction to someone who doesn't play is like trying to describe a symphony to a deaf person, or trying to explain a spiral without using your hands. It's hard to sound sensible, let alone convincing. But there must be something that draws us to that first tee to start four generally frustrating hours of climbing hills, carry- ing a bag, and occasionally swinging a club. I think the reasons, like the game itself, are personal. Golf is a very personal game. It is a "pure" sport in that external influences are at a minimum. Like the other most obvious pure sports-track, swimming, skiing, skating, gymnastics and diving-golf is an obsolutely individual sport. Whatever hap- pens to your golf ball depends entirely upon what you do to it. Football, baseball, basketball and hockey are group efforts, with teams formed, by artificial boundaries, such as school or country. Sports like tennis or wrestling are individual in a sense, but you need an opponent, and your performance is directly affected by his play. Golf, then, is a pure sport. Like track, skiing, et al, it is fairly free of artificial rules and is straightforward in its object. Run to the finish line. Get down the mountain. Hit the ball in the hole. The setting of a game of golf is unique in sports. The game has no boundaries, as anyone with a chronic slice can attest to. No other sport except skiing takes place in such a natural setting. Many of us learned in junior high about the three basic themes in literature: Man vs. Man, Man vs. Nature and Man vs. Himself. At the risk of sounding too philosophical about a game, golf con- tains more of the latter two themes than any other sport. (Skiing, again, may be he exception.) In tournament play, the element of Man vs. Man is added, and with it, intense pressure. In a game that requires as much finesse as golf does, pressure affects play immeasurably. In sports like football and hockey, such pressure can help an athlete because he can unleash his tension by belting his oppo- nent. In basketball, he can run harder and harder to relieve the pressure. In golf, it just builds and builds . . . there is no outlet. Which is why golf is such a thinkingperson'sgame. The player who keeps his cool the longest is most often the winner. Just ask Jack Nicklaus, who is always calm. Or ask Tom Weiskopf, the hot-headed smooth-swinger who most agree would be one of the game's top players if he could control his temper. All of this is old news to the thousands who will roam the Essex Golf and Country Club. They know what it's like to play this unique game. A good guess is that ninety per cent of the spectators at a golf tourney play the game themselves. They aren't watching great all-around athletes. A potbelly like Mickey Lolich's, which is a laughable oddity in the major leagues, would go unnoticed in the PGA. But these golfers are amazing, nonetheless. It takes remar - able skill to pound a ball 270 yards with one swing, delicately chip it with the next, and then gently tap it into a small hole. And that's with thousands of people staring at you. But besides all this, golfing is fun. There are few things in athletics more satisfying than the look and feel of a cleanly hit long iron shot that soars high and far to a distant green, bounces once or twice and nestles next to the pin. .. Now if I can only do that once in a while I'll be in business. By BILL STIEG Special To The Daily WINDSOR, Ont. - A star- studded field attacks a splendid golf course today as the tour- ing pros return to the Detroit area for the $200,000 Canadian Open at the Essex Golf and Country Club. For the first time since the PGA championship at Oakland Hills in 1972, Detroit area golf fans will be able to see the game's best in action. And, as in '72, both the field and course are exceptional. The traditional big names- Jack Nicklaus, Johnny Miller, Lee Trevino, Arnold Palmer, Gary Player - will tee it up in today's opening round along with more recent big winners like Masters champion Ray Floyd and U.S. Open champ Jerry Pate. AND DEFENDING champ Tom Weiskopf - a two-time Canadian Open winner - and you have a field as strong as any of the major champion- ships. The course is worthy of such a group of stars, as the golfers Guyanan may compete as individual MONTREAL M) - Sprinter James Gilkes of Guyana, whose country pulled out of the Olym- pics with 30tothers in a political dispute that has rocked these Games, asked the International Olympic Committee (tOC) yes- terday for permission to com- pete on his own. The 23-year-old sprinter, who was entered in the 100-meter and 200-meter dashes, became the first athlete to crack the solid barrier thrown up by black nations protesting New ea- land's sports ties with segre- gationist South Africa. Gilkes' attempt to become the first man without a coun- try in Olympic history was the first act of defiance against the boycott. The IOC received the request in a letter late Wednesday, af- ter he had attempted unsuc- cessfully to meet with IOC of- ficials. A spokesman for the IOC said he did not know what action the nine-man executive board would take when it meets this morning. However, when tne boycott started, the IOC issued a state- ment in which it said it would "keep the door open for any team or athlete to come back into the Games." CAMPUS CORNER 818 S. STATE ST. Prescriptions and Delivery Kea Beer for parties Ice Creom Wine 12 OZ. CANS COLD POP P 0c thru Sot, 7/24 OPEN 'TLL MIDNIGHT found out for themselves in practice rounds yesterday and Tuesday. "I had heard that this was a good course, but short," said Floyd yesterday. "But I'd like to meet whoever said it was short. He must be a big hitter." Coincidentally, the Essex course was designod by Donald Rossthe Scottish architect who built the Oakland Hills layout. But that's about all the courses have in common. THE ESSEX course has none of the monstrous traps or mounds in the greens that are found in Oakland. And Essex is quite a bit shorter, measur- ing 6696 yards. But the fairways are narrow, the greens small and the traps cleverly placed. It is consid- ered a "shotmaker's" course- one that reveals thoughtful placement instead of big hit- ting. "It's a difficult test of golf," said Floyd. "It can be reward- ing if you play well, but it can grab you if you don't." Miller, who won the British Open just two weeks ago, likes the course and his chances. "IT'S AN excellent course," he said after a particularly suc- cessful practice round. "It's so beautiful. The greens are per- fect. I haven't played too many courses with greens like this." '-It gives you a chance to play alt your irons. I felt like I could hit every shot stiff to the pin. I could play in the low 60's. I won't say I will, but I feel I can." Miller predicted a winning score of about eight under par. Par for the course is 35-35--70. Though the greens are seem- ingly flat, they have subtle con- tours that could hurt a careless player. The same goes for the fairways - the trouble is not obvious but can catch a player off guard. The course received much rain Tuesday night and yester- day morning, and was washed with sunshine yesterday after- noon. The rough is long but not outrageously so. NADIA Comaneci, who finished the womens all-round individ- ual gymnastics event with two more perfect scores of 10 yes- terday, is seen here holding a "perfect" position on the un- even bars. 50c DISCOU N on admission with Student I.D. WEEKLY HOURS: 9 p.m.-2 HOURS Fri. & Sat. 8 p.m.-2 EDi 516 E. LIBERTY ~,I IT ? .m. 994-5350ONr~ Michigan Wrestlers Named All-Americans Two Michigan wrestlers, Mark Churella of Farmington and Mark Johnson of Rock Island, Ill., were named All-Americans. Churella finished third at 150 pounds in the NCAA tournament and Johnson was second at 177 Pounds, AUG. GRADS TO ATTEND COMMENCEMENT YOU MUST ORDER A CAP AND GOWN BY JULY 23, 1976 FROM THE U CELLAR 769-7940