LynnBlakeGolf Forums - View Single Post - What do you know about - Mac O'Grady? Thread: What do you know about - Mac O'Grady? View Single Post #2 09-23-2006, 08:36 AM comdpa Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2005 Location: Singapore Posts: 627 Awesome... Originally Posted by RatherBeGolfing "five years of tutelage under the auspicious guidance of Homer Kelley" macogradygolfschools I am a fan of Mac O"Grady. Mac spent 5 years with Homer Kelly. I have been told that Homer Kelly's wife Sally, was once quoted as saying, Homer had to spoon feed the golfing machine to Mac. Whether or not true, any original student of Homer Kelly I believe not only should be remembered and recognized, they should also be heard. Below are some exerts from the Golf Digest archives that include Mac O'Grady. Enjoy. The Martinez file Name: Andrew James (Preacher) Martinez. Age: 49. Personal: Wife Stacey; daughter Alexis (1. Career as tour caddie: 30 years. Current job: Six-plus years with Tom Lehman. Other employers: Grier Jones, 1968-'70; Johnny Miller, 1970-'82; Bobby Clampett, 1982-'83; Bob Gilder, 1983-'84 and '89; Gary Hallberg, 1984-'86; also worked for other players in 1986, including Miller, Jodie Mudd, Mike Donald, Gibby Gilbert and Mac O'Grady; Hal Sutton, 1987; took a year and a half off and returned in 1989 with Gilder, Donald and Mudd; John Cook, 1989-'92. Tour victories: 30. Major championships: 1988 du Maurier, with Sally Little; 1996 British Open, with Lehman. Sidelight: Martinez, a devout Christian, owns more than a dozen Bibles, including one printed in 1871, given to him by friends who found it in an antique store. Andrew James (Preacher) Martinez What was it like caddieing for Mac O'Grady? Martinez: Mac is a fascinating personality. I remember the Tucson Match Play in '85, which Jim Thorpe won. We lost to him in the semifinals, but they made us play a third-place match. They had a seniors match play running concurrently and sent us out last against Bob Tway. We were 2 up going to the 15th hole and Mac hits it in there 51/2 feet. Tway has about a 40-footer. Well, the senior match had ended on 15 and somebody did a victory dance on green. There were big spike marks in our line. So, if we make the putt we go 3 up and dormie. I complained about excessive damage and advised Mac to call for a ruling. It was at the height of his squabble with the tour. We tried to get Tway to say something, but he wouldn't. They refused to give Mac any relief, and he was fuming. He was so mad that he threeputted from 51/2 feet. Tway two-putted for par and we lost the match on 18. Gary McCord I never played in the Masters, of course. But I did get to play Augusta National during a practice round in the mid-1980s. I was with Mac O'Grady and Jodie Mudd, and when we came to the 16th hole the flagstick was back-left in its traditional Sunday location. Mac says, "Gary, let's not go for the hole; it's too easy. See that little shelf on the back right? It's very difficult to make the ball stay up there. It's probably the hardest shot on the course. Let's aim there." I said sure, and of course my ball doesn't stay on the shelf. It rolls sideways down the tier, all the way across the green and dives in the hole. The gallery, of course, goes wild. All the way to the green I'm bowing, waving and smiling, saying quietly, "Thank you .... I wasn't aiming there. ... Thank you. ... It was a terrible shot.... Thank you. ... I stink." By Bill Fields Golf World Crenshaw knew all of this before Leonard putted, of course, but had stayed away from Ouimet's old house all week, hoping for fate, yet He may have been right. When the 1988 U.S. Open was played at TCC, Mac O'Grady wandered over to the yard of the amateur legend's former home and snipped off a twig to carry for luck. He shot 75-72 and missed the cut by one shot. E. Michael Johnson Golf World July 28, 2006 Mac O'Grady went hi-tech, going with Ping's Rapture big stick during the final playing of the upstate New York event. Golf Digest October 2005 Q Switch-hitters in baseball have two batting averages, one for each side of the plate. Could a golfer who can play lefty and righty maintain two handicaps, one for each side? -- Larry Thee, Greensboro, N.C. A No, you can't have a left-handed handicap and a right-handed handicap. The best-ever ambidextrous golfer is Mac O'Grady, 54, a brilliant eccentric who is nearly a scratch golfer as a lefty and won twice on the PGA Tour playing righty. He once entered a two-man team event where he would be both men, one left-handed and one right-handed. The application, sadly, was turned down. Tim Rosaforte GolfWorld.com exclusive "It would have been great publicity for the tournament. I would have had two bags and two caddies. I would even have made sure I shot the same scores so I could play in the same group on the weekend." -- Mac O'Grady, in Southern California Golf magazine, on why he wanted to play in this year's B.C. Open as both a right-handed and a lefthanded golfer. Tim Rosaforte GolfDigest.com exclusive "The side of my brain that controls my left side is still young. It's not beaten down with bad memories." -- Mac O'Grady, who won two PGA Tour events as a right-hander, on why he plans to enter this year's Senior PGA Tour qualifying tournament as a lefthander. Golf World November 19, 1999 So Neher, yet so far. The shock and frustration on Jamie Neher's face as he stood in front of the scoreboard last week at Bear Lakes CC in West Palm Beach, Fla., told the entire story. Neher had just birdied three of his final four holes in second stage PGA Tour qualifying, only to miss this week's. Neher was in some good company. Ryder Cupper Per-Ulrik Johansson, former U.S. Amateur champion Chris Patton, former U. S. Amateur runnerup Steve Scott, former tour players Ed Humenik and Mac O'Grady and young Robert Floyd did not make it. Q. Mac O'Grady maintains that you have stolen ideas from him without citation and used them in your book, The Golf Swing. Particularly the idea of the swing being made up of links. David Leadbetter- A. Before I had ever heard of Mac O'Grady, whatever his name was before that, I was working on positions in the swing. And this can be backed up very easily by players I have worked with, in the early, early ‘80s. It was a thing that Gary Wiren used to promote. This was when video had first come out and you could actually stop and look at the swing at a certain point. I just figured out that these approximately 11 links were sort of stop points that we could actually use. And to be honest with you, the reason I wrote my first book was I wanted to have a book to give people who came to the academy that they could use when they went home. If they were able to use this book and then compare that on video, they'd have a checklist. That's the reason those links came up. I did that ages ago. Let's face it. There is only so much stuff in the golf swing. We are not reinventing the wheel here. Q. Has Mac ever confronted you? A. We had some words at one stage. But I don't let things like that bother me. I couldn't tell you where some of the stuff I have got comes from. You get feedback from players and probably some of the players have spoken to Mac. But to say I plagiarized his methodology is absolute baloney. Dan Jenkins Golf Digest Two actual, living, breathing touring pros of stature, Peter Jacobsen and Mac O'Grady, took part. Peter wins the Colonial after “Kenny” blows it, and Mac gives “Kenny” a lesson on a practice tee. Before we shot the scene with O'Grady, Mac said, “Can I say to Randy that you have to play this game on the cutting edge of reality?” Tim Rosaforte Golf World July 27, 2001 Ballesteros began falling behind because of instruction, first too little, then too much. After years of rejecting help because he felt no one could understand his feel-based game, Ballesteros went through a series of teachers--Mac O'Grady, David Leadbetter, brother Vicente Ballesteros and Butch Harmon--in search of some semblance of his old self. He was better when he played like Javier,carefree, with only the basics in his head. After dinner one night last week, Seve's oldest son took a driver and sent a golf ball chasing across a grass promenade. Seve stepped it off at 175 meters. It was his proudest moment of the week. "Play by instinct," he tells Javier. "That is the best way." John Strege Catching Up With … : Mac O'Grady retains his passion for golf, evidenced by the fact he caddied at last week's Bob Hope Chrysler Classic for real estate developer Lee Brandenburg. O'Grady, a resident of Palm Springs, also attempted to Monday qualify at the Sony Open and intended to do so again at the Buick Invitational, despite the fact that, at 54, he is eligible for the Champions Tour. O'Grady is not inclined to join his senior brethren, however. "The guys on the senior tour, God bless them, they're looking for two or three things," he said. "One, they're mad they're not playing the regular tour. Two, they know they're going to have to go back to the bosom of the earth forever. And three, they know they can't take their money with them." He prefers playing with the kids, "because their dreams are still real." O'Grady, meanwhile, said he is completing a book entitled, "Seve, the Commissioner." The book's narrator is Seve Ballesteros, who he said, "should be the commissioner. Seve knows the game better than anybody." As for his caddieing career, "It's just a master-slave relationship," he said. "There are four rules: show up, keep up, shut up and don't throw up." Jim McLean: With a huge talent like Seve, conscious thought can short-circuit the intuitive gift. He got with Mac O'Grady, and they had that ritual of burying Seve's old swing in the desert. I thought it was a sad day for golf. I wrote a long letter to Seve after reading that but never got a reply. Mac knows a tremendous amount about the golf swing, and he's a compelling teacher, but with Mac talking a lot of science and demonstrating, it was a lot for Seve to absorb. Changing Seve was taking an artist and making him a mechanic. I too, Mark, am a fan of Mac's brain and his physical talent. Thank you for this post. __________________ The Singapore Slinger http://justintanggolf.blogspot.com comdpa View Public Profile Send a private message to comdpa Find all posts by comdpa