Sunday, August 16, 2009
Relations
Boys need love.
We have all got to have love.
And not that one-time heat of the moment I'll call you when I've gone until I don't call no more kind of love.
We all need that text message on a Sunday afternoon just because I've been thinking about you and no one else kind of love.
We're all a little older, and a little more experienced.
We're all a little pickier, we know what we need.
Time spent only matters if it means more time spent.
Time is like money, if you spread it around you won't get back a cent.
Love needs time, if you're with me everyday, then you love me.
If you don't want to see me than you don't love me.
When I tell that beautiful woman that I'll meet one day soon
that I love her, that will mean
that I want to spend all my extra time on her
with her, by her side,
because she makes me smile
and if I don't feel that way then I won't utter the words
because we all need love like water.
We all need love like air.
We all need love, everyone, everywhere, and I'd be lying if
I said I didn't care.
Tuesday, August 4, 2009
Calling all angeles
-Kanye West
No matter what the race, racism, as Kanye so elegantly stated, is very much alive in the land of the free. Although this was meant to be the home of the brave, many citizens focus their hateful minds onto internet chat rooms in the privacy of their homes. Here on the web, there is no face to attach to the stream of ignorance, and there's always someone who shares your view. Even when I ignore the fact that racism exists, I am reminded in a most shocking way. Just glancing at the messages online about black people in golf and sports writing, and how there aren't hardly any, and what people have to say about is enough to steam my kettle:
"The absurdity of the media demanding that blacks be represented on the PGA tour is astounding
No athlete (if one considers golfers athletes) has ever received the accolades of Tiger Woods. He is the most compensated athlete in terms of endorsement money ever. His visage is all over golf magazines and on the talmudvision. The emphasis that is placed on him is well over the top even in light of his considerable accomplishments.
The First Tee Program which is funded by the PGA of America has been concentrating upon minority golfers much to the exclusion of young Whites ever since Woods came on the scene. Woods has been a pro since 1996-14 years. Every effort in the world has been made to darken professional golf.
The simple fact is that Tiger Woods is a fluke. A once in a generation golfing talent and a once in a millenium negro golfing talent. Woods considers himself to be cabrinasion. Which to him means Caucasion, black, indian and asian. He is a mutt. I don't know what percentage he is negro, but it's not the majority of his genes. Though I am perfectly content to classify him as a negro, his genetics say that this is only a minority portion of his make up.
Perhaps more genetically pure blacks simply lack the necessities to play the game at a high level. An average IQ of 85 and general emotional immaturity isn't going to lend itself to a game which requires fairly deep (in terms of sports) analysis of a rather complex motion-the golf swing-and steadiness of mind and high levels of concentration.
While Tiger Woods has not managed to darken the ranks of professional golf, his success on the course combined with the sickeningly high amount of coverage and fawning by the MSM has played a very signficant role in darkening something far more important-The White House. Not to even mention the ammunition it has given the kikenmedia to promote even more miscegenation among White girls.
As ESW SS said, the negro is best suited for raking the trap from which the White man exits."
-Wuzzarepublikan
The year is 2009. This is where we're at. Golf is in my future. I love it.
Mr. Sifford
| Charlie Sifford |
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Golf Pioneer Sifford paved a path for me to follow.
By LELAND STEIN III
Sports Editor Black Voice News
VALENCIA, Ca, March 1 - How bad do you want it? Can you put your pride aside to accomplish something that has the opportunity to be special and legendary? Do you have the vision to see the big picture in life? Are you the architect of your own destiny? In the case of Jackie Robinson, he became the architect of his own destiny by the way he conducted himself and his unbending focus on the task at hand. He swallowed his enormous pride and fighter’s spirit for a bigger cause. Robinson knew that if he entered baseball and fought every person that called him a demeaning name, he would be a failure. Why? Because if he failed in the grand integration experiment, it would have taken years for another integration opportunity to be extended by Major League Baseball. Well, Charles Sifford, who was born in 1922 in North Carolina, found himself in a similar situation, breaking barriers in golf, only with a lot less fanfare, but no less the pain and resistance than his friend Robinson endured. Maybe, because of less visibility and press coverage afforded to Sifford’s quest to integrate the Professional Golf Association Tour, he endured and withstood even more degradation and contempt than Robinson. But Sifford had the vision and the will to make it against all odds. Surely the White dominated sport of golf and the infra-structures that supported it (the Country Clubs) were rock solid in their clubhouse ways and determination to keep the sport all White. Weathering the sting of exclusion and missed opportunity (he never played in the Masters), Sifford, now 76, endured long enough to become the first African -American to win a PGA Tour event; he won the Hartford Open in 1967, where he shot a scorching 64 to out last the charging field. Sifford won the Nissan Open - played as the the L.A. Open - in 1969 held at Rancho Park Golf Course. He overcame Harold Henning in a sudden death playoff. During his career he won six Negro National Titles, before joining the PGA Tour in 1960 at the age of 39, long past his prime playing years. Besides the Hartford and L.A. Open titles, he won the PGA Seniors’ Championship in 1975 and the Suntree Classic held in Melbourne Australia in 1980 Sifford won $1,265,490 during his PGA career. The majority of the prize money came on the Seniors’ Tour ($924,145). Conducted at the Valencia Country Club, the following is a question and answer interview with pioneer Sifford, whose autobiography, “Just Let Me Play”, says volumes about Sifford’s quest to integrate the golf world.
Q: How did you get exposed to golf.
A: Well, I got a job as a caddie in North Carolina when I was 13. I could shoot par then. The thing about it was my dad, who was a laborer, made only $2.00 a week. I made that much caddying.
Q: When did you get the fever for the sport.
A: As soon as I got on the course I felt it. I knew that was something I wanted to do for the rest of my life. At the time, it seemed like just a dream, because professionally the sport wasn’t accessible to Blacks back then.
Q: Who was instrumental in helping you realize your dream of being a golf professional.
A: I worked for Billy Eckstine as his personal pro for many years. He helped keep me in the game. I also hustled and played anywhere I could to make a buck . . . and, to just play for the love of the game.
Q: As you continued to play, you realized you had a special gift for the game, but the PGA was off limits to Blacks, what were your options.
A: We played in celebrity tournaments and worked with the top Black athletes and performers of that era. Joe Louis had Teddy Rhodes as his personal pro. We played in many non-sanctioned PGA events. The UGA (United Golfer’s Association) became a nice opportunity for us to travel and play the game, as well as earn a small buck.
Q: Did you like the hustling life and pick up golf.
A: No. I wanted to play 72 holes of golf and try to make the less mistakes and out think my opponents. I didn’t necessarily like hustling and the other stuff we had to do to survive, but I was forced to do that to put food on the table. I really wanted the opportunity to beat someone and earn the No. 1 trophy at the end of a tournament, that’s what its really all about.
Q: What is your recollection of boxers “Sugar” Ray Robinson and Joe Louis.
A: Both loved golf. Robinson never could play too well, but he supported us. He really loved to play the game. Don Newcomb (ex-Dodger great) was another who was just like Robinson supporting us, and, our quest to make the Tour. But Joe Louis did as much as anyone. Louis was a big reason, along with California District Attorney Charley Moss, that the LA Open fought the PGA Constitution’s “Caucasians Only Clause” - it was stricken in 1961.
Q: How would you characterize your strengths as a golfer.
A: I used to always keep the ball in play. I wasn’t a great putter, but I was a decent putter. I had a good short game and I kept my ball in play always. Also, I think I was a smart player . . . I tried to think through situations.
Q: What was the lowest round you shot. Did you shoot under 66.
A: I shot a lot of those. At Hartford I shot a 64 that led to me winning the tournament. I could shoot some numbers. The lowest I’ve shot is a 63.
Q: When were you playing your best golf.
A: I say that 1947 through 1960 I was swinging the clubs pretty good. I won the Long Beach Open in 1957, but it wasn’t a sanctioned PGA event, so I didn’t get invited to the Masters.
Q: Why aren’t more young Blacks on the Tour.
A: I think they just don’t have the will to endure the effort it takes. You have to put something into this game . . . you have to sacrifice alot to get here. I sent my nephew (Curtis Sifford) to qualifying school, but he didn’t . . . it’s tough going. A lot of the youth today will not put up with the stuff I did back then. I had to be strong to deal with the stuff that was placed in front of me
Q: What stuff did you have to put up with.
A: I don’t want to repeat the things that were said to me and about me, or rehash the threats. But let me tell you, I was the first Black to play in a PGA event in the South in Greensboro, North Carolina, and I can tell you I didn’t play too well because of the other things I had to deal with.
Q: Was it very frustrating being excluded from golf courses and not given the opportunity to compete.
A: Of course it was frustrating not being able to compete on the PGA Tour, especially when you could see there were many players that were out there that you knew you could compete with or were better than. In fact, there were a number of Black players that were very good golfers and enjoyed the game. Yes, it may have hurt to be told you can’t compete because of the color of your skin, but we went about our business and just tried to have fun. We felt if we stayed at it and kept working on
our game, things would have to change. They eventually did, but I was too old when it opened up in 1974 for Lee Elder who played in the Masters.
Q: What will it take to get more Blacks involved in the game.
A: Well, it will be hard. Most of the urban area schools don’t play the sport in high school. They are use to playing basketball, football and baseball because the parents can take them anywhere to play those games. But to take a kid to the driving range to drive balls all day, well, most families have to work to make a living. Also, the cost of playing has increased and in many cases it’s not affordable.
Q: Has Woods presence changed the game in a way that more minorities are involved and maybe that will translate into more pros out on the Tour.
A: Sure his presence has change the Tour. Look at the galleries he has that follow him at every tournament. But, I don’t see anymore Tiger Woods’ coming behind him. On the Senior Tour a couple years ago there were five, Ben Morgan, Calvin Peete, Lee Elder, Jim Thorpe and me. Now there’s only Tiger. I’m not sure, but we seem to be going backwards (with diversity).
Q: So what do you think the future holds for diversity in golf.
A: To be a golfer you have to take it upon yourself. Your mother and father can’t make you play enough to be good at it. Just because Tiger has done so well, most people can forget about that. You can teach the game but you have to have the skill, and, the opportunity to play to make it happen.
Q: Do the youth of today recognize you and know what you’ve accomplished.
A: Many don’t know what I’ve done or the foundation myself and many others laid so we can have a Tiger Woods today. What the kids today need to know is that golf didn’t start in 1997, but in 1947. It’s a good thing what Tiger is doing, but most kids don’t know nothing better than Tiger Woods, that shouldn’t be. They should know where the game started from, they should know their history.
Q: You say golf started in 1947 what do you mean by that.
A: The UGA was a Black league that played in Washington D.C., Philadelphia, Cleveland, Detroit, New York and Chicago. It was a group of Black players. We also had a few White players, too. But none of them could beat Teddy Rhodes or Bill Spiller.
Q: Are you bitter about the things you had to endure and the lack of opportunity available to you during your era.
A: No, I’m not bitter. If you go around being bitter at people you won’t live long. I’ll be 76-years-old this year. I’ve put all that negative stuff behind me and decided to look forward a long time ago. When I was going through what I did, I focused on proving that a Black man can play the game of golf as good as a White man. What I’ve tried to prove has been proven by Tiger Woods. I was too old when they let me play, but I never did learn how to play the game the best I could, because I had too many other things to worry about.
Q: How do you feel about what Tiger Woods has accomplished on the Tour.
A: Well, I’m really glad he has come along like he has . . . it really makes me smile . . .a big smile. They need some more Tiger Woods, but I don’t know if they will find any soon, because the majority of the youth are not into golf. What Tiger has accomplished is wonderful. There is tremendous pressure on him from all angles, but the way he has handled himself is special.
I’m very proud of what he has done and the way he has done it. I had breakfast with the kid this morning, and he understands and respects the players that played before him. He’s a very smart guy and knows how to handle what’s happening around him.
Q: Are you a role model.
A: Well, the parents are the real role models. But, I’m sure someone out there admires the trail I’ve blazed and the things I went through to get on the PGA Tour. We had our fun, but I always tried to make sure I didn’t do anything that would reflect bad on myself and others. I want respect and gave it. I just wanted to play the game and show people Blacks could play at the highest level, too.
