stuart winton smith

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stuart winton smith

stuart winton smith

@SmithWinton

Golf is the greatest game, but it's just a game.

Nashville, TN เข้าร่วม Kasım 2013
1.2K กำลังติดตาม314 ผู้ติดตาม
stuart winton smith
stuart winton smith@SmithWinton·
@Clowfb @Vol_Hoops Good for Tony White. Too bad our UTAD can’t speak to this “shakedown” from current Vol athletes. The Vols are now the new conduit for transfer $$$. The snake is now eating its tail.
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Chris Low
Chris Low@Clowfb·
Tony White, @Vol_Hoops Hall of Famer and one of the best to play at Tennessee, said it best about the exodus of transfers from the program. “These cats want to get a million dollars averaging 4 to 6 points. Back in the 80s, I could’ve gotten 8 million averaging 24 a game.” #Wiz
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stuart winton smith
stuart winton smith@SmithWinton·
@Vol_Golf Great play on the back nine today. Winds gusting to 25-30, made for a tough day. Patience was rewarded. Go Vols!
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Tennessee Golf
Tennessee Golf@Vol_Golf·
All to play for in round three… Vols in 2nd, Bruce and Chase in the top 5 👀
Tennessee Golf tweet mediaTennessee Golf tweet media
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Mark Townsend
Mark Townsend@MTownsendGolf·
Tom Watson with a persimmon 4-wood from 213 yards At Augusta Over water Without any headwear Nor any logos Cracking polo shirt Proper trousers World-class footwear With a yellow glove
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Flushing It
Flushing It@flushingitgolf·
Bryson DeChambeau, Paul Casey and Anirban Lahiri have a very interesting opinion on golf club technology and the rollback. Bryson believes that drivers haven’t changed much since 2009 and the improvements are more to do with athletic ability. Paul Casey agreed with that and said there isn’t enough credit given to the athlete. And Anirban Lahiri said that golf course design has played a big factor. Bryson then followed up by questioning what the governing bodies are actually trying to achieve with a roll back and laid out what his goals are for the game. I found this 3 minute clip fascinating and it’s definitely worth a watch to understand the thoughts of the elite pros when it comes to this issue.
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Tennessee Golf
Tennessee Golf@Vol_Golf·
Bringing some extra luggage back to Knoxville ‼️ Team victory No. 2 of the 2025-26 season!
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stuart winton smith
stuart winton smith@SmithWinton·
@NUCLRGOLF Lack of weekend protests in Jacksonville? Keegan’s family is on the course bearing Ryder Cup scars, still? Beer sales hit a record? Or all 3?
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NUCLR GOLF
NUCLR GOLF@NUCLRGOLF·
🗣️🏌️ Thoughts on this?
NUCLR GOLF tweet media
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stuart winton smith
stuart winton smith@SmithWinton·
@playgolfcollege @polknotpaul This post is spot on. I played college golf in the early 80’s. We had some success as a team. I asked the one, who went on to have a career on the PGA Tour “what made us a good team?” His reply “no solo artists” That stuck with me. My teammates are good friends 40+ years later.
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Brad Sparling
Brad Sparling@playgolfcollege·
What College Golf Is Actually Like Most junior golfers dream about college golf. Almost none of them know what it actually looks like. After coaching at Duke and Ohio State, and sending 165+ players into programs across every division, here’s what college golf is really like: 1. It’s a job. Early morning workouts. Film sessions. Travel weekends. Team meetings. The romance fades fast if you’re not truly committed. You are an athlete first, a student second, and a normal college kid third. In that order, most days. The players who thrive treat it like a profession from day one. 2. The jump is real. The gap between the best junior golfer in your state and the average D1 player is significant. Prepare accordingly. The speed of the game increases. The courses are harder. The fields are deeper. Most freshmen are humbled before they’re ready to contribute. That’s normal. Plan for it. 3. You will sit the bench. Most freshmen don’t play right away. How you handle not being in the lineup defines your trajectory more than your talent does. Coaches watch practice players just as closely as tournament players. Nothing is invisible. The ones who stay ready when they’re not playing are the ones who earn the spot eventually. 4. The coach relationship is everything. You will spend more time with your college coach than almost anyone in your life for four years. Choose that person carefully. A great coach at a smaller program will develop you faster than a disconnected coach at a prestigious one. Ask hard questions on your visit. How do you communicate with players? How do you handle conflict? What happens when I’m struggling? 5. Teammates matter. You travel with these people. You compete with them for spots. The culture they create will shape who you become. Talk to the players on a visit without the coaches present. They’ll tell you the truth. The best programs feel like families. You’ll know it when you walk in. 6. Academics are harder than you think. Golf travel means missing class, managing makeups, and studying on the road. This is not optional. Programs that don’t support your academic success aren’t programs worth attending. Ask about graduation rates and academic support before you ask about the practice facility. 7. It’s a short window. Four years goes fast. The players who are present for the journey enjoy it. The ones always looking ahead miss it. Freshman year feels long. Senior year feels like a weekend. The players I’ve coached who were the happiest competed hard and stayed present. Both. At the same time. 8. Not everyone turns pro. The goal of college golf is not the Tour. It’s becoming the best version of yourself as a player and a person. Keep perspective. Less than 1% of college golfers play professionally. Plan your four years around the 99%. The discipline, teamwork, and work ethic you build will pay dividends for the next 40 years of your career. That’s the real return on investment. 9. The right division matters more than the prestige. Playing every weekend at a D2 program beats riding the bench at a D1 program for four years. Fit is the most underrated word in recruiting. Academic fit. Cultural fit. Geographic fit. Golf fit. I’ve watched players thrive at NAIA programs and wither at Power Five programs. The division does not predict the experience. 10. You have to want it. Coaches can feel the difference between a player who chose their program and a player who settled for it. Be somewhere you chose. Motivation borrowed from your parents doesn’t survive the first hard stretch of college golf. The players who last are the ones who chose the game, chose the school, and chose the grind. All three. On their own. The dream is worth chasing. Just make sure you understand what you’re chasing.
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stuart winton smith
stuart winton smith@SmithWinton·
@eamonlynch Nice piece, if the corporations saw a value in their brand the PGA Tour could fill it would happen and make sense. The tour’s “Star Gazing” method is more of the same. Tiger has left the building. Highlight the game and let tournaments compete for views, ie Phoenix.
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TheGolfDivoTee™ 
TheGolfDivoTee™ @TheGolfDivoTee·
There’s something distasteful about Patrick Reed being able to use his bizarre Honorary Lifetime Membership to harvest easy prize money on the DP World Tour while serving out his suspension on the PGA Tour as a result of having deserted LIV Golf. He’s currently playing in his sixth tournament since January at the Joburg Open having already won twice in the Middle East together with €2,282,000 which puts him way ahead in the Race to Dubai rankings. So much for the Strategic Alliance!
TheGolfDivoTee™  tweet media
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stuart winton smith
stuart winton smith@SmithWinton·
@cookiejargolf HOF members Darwin, Wethered, Tolley and the 6 year break for WWII. Great play met with great dignity for country.
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Cookie Jar Golf
Cookie Jar Golf@cookiejargolf·
The incredible rollcall of President's Putter winners. What sticks out to you?
Cookie Jar Golf tweet media
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stuart winton smith
stuart winton smith@SmithWinton·
@AndyTFE Public and affordable run different themes. Agreed, The Park is a public facility. Head south to Miami Lakes Golf Course to see great golf that is affordable as well.
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Andy Johnson
Andy Johnson@AndyTFE·
It’s amazing what a well-executed vision for a community golf course can become. The Park strived to be a gathering place for golfers and families. Here it is at 6:15 on a Wednesday night. This is an example of what public golf can be for a community.
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stuart winton smith
stuart winton smith@SmithWinton·
@acaseofthegolf1 Great post! This is one of the many reasons sports are great! Recent rule changes for the PGA Tour and NCAA would have you think otherwise.
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stuart winton smith
stuart winton smith@SmithWinton·
@AD_DannyWhite “Save college sports” Please explain. Be the example of what this means. You don’t need collective bargaining to do the right thing.
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Danny White
Danny White@AD_DannyWhite·
1st: You don’t have to get a federal law passed to build a collective bargaining construct to save college sports. It’s actually the only solution we have that doesn’t involve asking congress to give us a pass on the Sherman Act. 2nd: Nobody has said collective bargaining would be “simple.”There are no “simple” solutions to this problem. Clearly, asking congress to save us has not proven to be a “simple”solution. 3rd: Not pursuing all avenues to solve our dysfunctional system is negligent.
David Cobb@DavidWCobb

In a wide-ranging discussion with NCAA president Charlie Baker just now in Indianapolis, he talked with CBB media about eligibility issues, the CSC, ongoing efforts at federal legislation, etc. I asked, “why not collective bargaining?” Part of his response👇

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Cameron Jourdan
Cameron Jourdan@Cam_Jourdan·
Asked by @AdamSchupak how less is more in the new PGA Tour schedule, Tiger Woods: "We're going to get more top players playing and we're going to make it more competitive by having -- we'll have fewer cards, so that in itself is going to make it more competitive just to be out here."
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stuart winton smith
stuart winton smith@SmithWinton·
@TheGhostofhogan Danny Edwards David Edwards Doug Tewell Mark Hayes Dr. Gil Morgan Bob Tway Willie Wood Possibly Scott Verplank
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Paul Regali
Paul Regali@TheGhostofhogan·
A. Who remembers the Oak Tree gang? B. Can you name them?
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stuart winton smith
stuart winton smith@SmithWinton·
The fact that a college athlete is worth more in college than as a pro is “bass ackward”.
Greg Byrne@Greg_Byrne

While Coach Oats provided his perspective earlier today on Charles Bediako and the process of him becoming eligible to compete for the Crimson Tide, I wanted to follow up with some additional thoughts. I think it’s safe to say the majority of us have concerns about the state of college athletics and are all for uniformity versus inconsistencies.   There are many programs across the country with former G League and EuroLeague players on their rosters who have been deemed eligible. At the end of the day, these are men with professional basketball experience that are now playing in college. The distinctions between those cases and Charles’ situation are without real differences. A professional contract should be a professional contract. Why should a student-athlete who earned millions competing professionally overseas be eligible to return to college, while someone earning $50,000 annually in the NBA G League is not? Similarly, an athlete who leaves high school for professional basketball returning to college later is okay, while a student who entered the draft during college, perhaps based on incomplete or poor advice, may be barred. These distinctions are impossible to explain, undermine confidence in the system and do not meaningfully advance the educational mission of college athletics.   That said, we must remain competitive and act in the best interest of our teams. As Coach Oats stated, Charles is still within his five-year window, is 23 years old and started classes again this semester to work towards degree completion. He’s also not taking away any opportunities from a high school prospect or anyone else with there being a vacant roster spot.   If this particular case can help shape the future of the sport, and better regulation of college athletics as a whole, we welcome that.

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