Golf Fanatics Unite! The Perfect Gift for the Golf Fanatic!
ProLooper.com- Where EVERY Shot Counts. Play, Capture, Analyze and Improve your Golf Game!
The ProLooper™ Golf Game Analyzer runs on GPS range finders or other GPS devices. The ProLooper™ Golf Analyzer compatible devices can be used during handicap play and non-tournament rounds. It is specifically designed not to interrupt the flow of your game. After a round, simply upload your data. Add as many details as you want. Club, lie, lay, slope, weather, wind and many other factors can be added. The more you give, the more you get. Once you upload your data the analysis is done instantly. Choose from dozens of standard metrics and reports or define your own. Coaches and Teaching Professionals can run reports on individual or team results.
The ProLooper™ Golf Game Analyzer gives you detailed, yet simple to read and understand statistical analysis of your played rounds. Maximize your game or your team performance by targeting the areas of your game that will yield the most improvement. ProLooper™ takes the guess work out of improving your game. If there are strokes to be found, the ProLooper™ Golf Game Analyzer will find them!
AffiliateProgram Details
Payout: 8% of sale
Cookie Duration 60 Days
100% returnable
Prompt refund service and customer service options available
NOKEYWORD RESTRICTIONS!!!
ProLooper ships internationally!
Coupons Available
Sign up today at ShareASale to be a ProLooper.com Affiliate and start collecting your commissions NOW. We look forward to your partnership!
For the serious golfer who wants to kick butt on the course or the occasional duffer who wants nothing “butt” fun.
Let’s not be “Udderly Ridiculous”. No “Wisecracks” About ButtheadCovers!
A Unique Golf Gift for the Wacky Fanatic
Once in a while, the stars align and God smiles upon a couple searching for that perfect match to share life’s dreams, hopes, desires, and love. So it is for Danny and Alice Scott, who have blended years of extensive corporate training and leadership experience with their passion for life, golf, and family. An idea was born on a golf outing, when a fellow golfer asked what was in our golf bag. “It looks like a turkey’s butt”, he said. It was actually a well worn reindeer with its antlers hanging low. A few holes later, the idea of Butthead Covers was born.
For the serious golfer who wants to kick butt on the course or the occasional duffer who wants nothing “butt” fun.
Now with product names like “Wisecrack”, “Baby Bum”, “Stinky” and “Udderly Ridiculous” this isn’t your normal line of golf products. Yet these headcovers fit all clubs from the big butt 460cc driver on down to the little fairway woods and hybrid clubs.
It is a great and unique golf gift to the wacky golf fanatic!
As a longtime reader of Golfweek I received this “sorry”email notification regarding the cover that is coing out with the “noose” image. I have followed this story over the last few weeks and with some interest. While I know the reference to lynching Tiger Woods was made, aplogies offered and accepted, the most interesting issue is how long the media will continue to run and re-run this story for the shock value that it symbolizes. I suspect Tiger would like this to all go away, regardless of his friendhsip with Kelly or not. But, the media, and maybe I am one at this point, will continue to probe and ask and question and ridicule as long as it sells magazines, newspapers and provides fodder for radio and television.
I wonder who is not going to come to the defense of the poor fired editor? What about the graphic artist? Couldn’t he/she have said “no”?
And, of course I think using the word “sorry” isn’t a very sincere way of apologizing. It’s almost as if they are saying: “We’re sorry we didn’t get away with it.” Plus “management” really doesn’t acept any responsibility for the cover going out. That is pretty sorry even if the tenor of the posting was meant to assure the readers of better systems being put in place so this type of sorry pandering doesn’t occur again.
‘We’re sorry.’ Dear Golfweek reader,
We’re sorry. We made a grievous error.
The graphic image of a noose in the Jan. 19 issue of Golfweek offended our readers, customers, advertisers and people who’d never previously heard of our magazine. For that, we sincerely apologize.
The decision to publish this cover image, which was intended to illustrate a story about the much-talked-about suspension of Golf Channel anchor Kelly Tilghman for a controversial comment said during the Mercedes-Benz Championship, caused an outcry of harsh criticism. It was a story placed on the cover after dedicating four pages of thorough, balanced reporting to the subject.
We made a big mistake. Dave Seanor, the editor who chose the cover image, was fired. (Senior management above Seanor did not view the cover before it was published.) And Golfweek’s solid reputation built on more than 30 years of being a leading publication was damaged.
No organization can experience adversity such as this and remain unchanged; so it is for Golfweek. We are examining our policies, procedures and practices to ensure sensitivity, responsibility and adherence. And we are recommitting ourselves to being golf’s news leader and to covering the many facets of a game so many of you love. We share that passion for the game and what it represents.
There are no degrees to offending people. We now begin a new mission to re-earn your trust. To restore your loyalty. To regain your confidence. And we move ahead determined that an episode like this one will not happen again. We hope that you will not dismiss three decades of diligent and dedicated work with one bad choice.
Please accept our apology.
Thank you.
William P. Kupper Jr.
President
Turnstile Publishing Co.
Woody Austin greatly enlivened the President’s Cup while displaying a great golf ability. Under the “Don’t take yourself too seriously” banner, Woody dons goggles to play the 14th hole he had fallen into the day before. This will be a highlight for years along with his splash into the lake. Can’t keep a good man down.
Maybe now it’s the lady’s time to get some press as the FedEx Cup and the Pesident’s Cup are over. Paula Creamer and Angela Park shot 5-under 67s Thursday to share the first-round lead in the Samsung World Championship.
The two front-runners have something else in common – the 21-year-old Creamer was the LPGA’s Rookie of the Year in 2005 and the 19-year-old Park already has clinched the honor this year.
Park, who was born in Brazil and moved with her parents to the Los Angeles area when she was 8, said she was nervous but thrilled to be in the tournament.
“I don’t know how to describe the feeling, coming out here,” she said. “Obviously being one of the top 20, elite members of women’s golf, is a very priceless experience. And especially to be the only rookie out here gives me great pride and gives me a lot of confidence.”
Creamer had her irons clicking during her bogey-free round.
She said getting up and down from 115 yards for a par on the second hole seemed to steady her, and she birdied No. 3 to get some momentum.
“I hit the ball really solid, had a lot of good looks at birdie. Made some good ones, missed a couple of very easy putts,” Creamer said. “But overall, it’s the first day and I am very pleased with the way I played.”
Creamer finished second to Annika Sorenstam in the 2005 tournament, and was fifth last year when Lorena Ochoa won.
Ochoa led most of the first round this time, but a late lapse cost her when she made a double bogey on the final hole to drop into a three-way tie with Morgan Pressel and Mi Hyun Kim at 68.
Wie, who turned 18 on Thursday, sprayed some shots and couldn’t get putts to fall Paula Creamer and Angela Park shot 5-under 67s Thursday to share the first-round lead in the Samsung World Championship, while Michelle Wie was last in the 20-player field after a 79. The two front-runners have something else in common – the 21-year-old Creamer was the LPGA’s Rookie of the Year in 2005 and the 19-year-old Park already has clinched the honor this year. Creamer hit the irons great during her bogey-free round. Creamer finished runner up to Annika Sorenstam in the 2005 tournament, and fifth last year when Lorena Ochoa won.
“Should Have Quit for the Year” Michelle Wie, who turned 18 on Thursday, sprayed shots and couldn’t get putts to fall and shot a 79 for last place in the limited field event . She was three shots behind 19th-place Bettina Hauert. At her news conference she was more worried about getting her homework assignments done for Stanfors than in playing golf. Too bad. Hopefully she can pull her head together before her money from Nike runs out.
Watching Tiger Woods playing over the last 3 weeks has been truly awesome. Mixed in with some great play by Phil Mickelson, Steve Stricker (in particular), Rory Sabitini, and Steve Verplank the FedEx Cup was actually more entertaining that I first thought it would.
Saturday at East Lake was particularly inspired with the play of Geoof Olgilvy (62) and by Zach Johnson’s 60. Who says low scores aren’t fun to watch. But none of them could do much more than creep up on Tiger’s 63 for the day… and none could duplicate their scores of Saturday to make a run on Sunday.
Tiger’s 2007 season with the 7 wins could have been even more spectacular if not for putting well at the Master’s and the US Open.
And the scary part is he looks more comfortable driving the golf ball than ever. If he continues to hit 60-70% of the fairways as he has in this latest run, look out even more. Another amazing stat that came out this week: Tiger is#1 in closest to the hole from 150-175 yards and from 175-200 yards on tour. He doesn’t even need a driver, so what happens when he really gets comfortable as he is now?
Scott Bess is a long, long time friend of mine. We started playing golf together when we were about 15 or 16 years old. Scott was #1 on my Hickman High School golf team and was a big part of the team winning 3 state titles in a row. My senior year we won the title by 13 strokes, beating Tom Watson’s team by 27 strokes, they were favored to win. Yes, it was that Tom Watson. Scott finished 2nd in the state behind Tom, Jeff Smith and I finished tied for 7th and Tom Dersham, finished 12th in the state. We pretty much lapped everyone that year.
Scott was also the only golfer to beat Tom in the Missouri State Amateur tournament that Tom started winning when he was about 17 or 18 years old. Watson won 5 out of 6 years, only being beaten by Scott.
After college Scott turned pro and has been playing and working in the golf industry his whole life. And he is funny.
He sent this to me today and I couldn’t resist posting it:
“I was thinking to myself the other day that it had been so long since I had a hole-in-one, that I couldn’t remember the last one. Somebody asked me how many I had and I said 6, then later remembered another to make 7. To be clear, I was thinking that almost every day in the paper somebody has one at a nearby course, and I was feeling left out.
So, today I played Old Hawthorne, a new course in Columbia, and started the round with two lost balls and an 8 on the first hole. Then, on the second hole, in between clubs but not in the mood to be gentle, I hit a seven iron that appeared to go right into the hole. And so it did!
That’s fun enough, but the best is coming: I called Mary (my wife) to tell her the news and she listened patiently to the above and then said: “Is that all you called for?” Then one of the others in the group called his wife to tell her what he saw (he has never had a hole-in-one) and she said: “Is this his first one? When she was told it was number 8, she said “So, what’s the big deal?” Then I went into the pro shop and one of the assistants said “damn, that’s the first one on that hole, and I missed by just an inch the other day.”
In short, I guess I need to keep my hole-in-one stories to myself, but I had to tell somebody! S”