By Carlton Payne
They exist in every sport-players who can deliver when it counts the most and when the pressure is on. After a while the feats of such players take on a life of their own-a mythology starts to surround them. In baseball, their final inning home runs soar out of stadiums like guided missiles, their fielding plays start to include jumps and stretches that would rate "10's" from Olympic diving judges, and their willingness to take one for the team makes you think they deserve the Congressional Medal of Honor. So who are those few ball players who rise to the occasion when that occasion demands something big, stunning, and final?
Part fact and part fiction, clutch players aren't judged so much by how many game-winning plays they make but by the circumstances under which they make them. Reggie Jackson built a career on heroics that annually occurred during the tenth month of the year, earning him the appellation "Mr. October."
Yankee third baseman Alex Rodriguez has had a lot of hits that have won games, but often they've come early in the
game or in contests that were not in the limelight. He's also made amazing defensive plays throughout his career. However, large numbers of fans, including many lovers of the Bronx Bombers, see him as a goat-the ultimate choke artist. That's because more often than not when in a big game, he hasn't come through or he's made a mistake. His other problem is that he has never been on a World Series winning team.
His teammate, Derek Jeter, is known as one of the best clutch fielders and hitters in the game. When in the national spotlight, Jeter has delivered. Who can forget the play against the Red Sox a few years ago when Jeter gave up his body and sailed into the stands to catch a foul ball, getting injured in the process?
There's a certain cache that comes with being a cardiac kid-someone who takes the final game, the last play, the ultimate moment to the limit. In 2004, David Ortiz did it in both American League playoff series-first against the Angels and then against the Yankees. Last inning game tying and winning homeruns and hits seemed to fly off his bat at will. Big Papi became ensconced on the public stage. The following season, he continued his late game clutch performances, which resulted in Ortiz being compared to Boston's patron saint of the big hit-Carl Yastrzemski.
Chicago White Sox third baseman Joe Crede, of last year's World Series Champs, was given the name Captain Clutch due to his unbelievable defensive plays and decisive late-inning hits. Crede had a dismal first playoff series, batting only .111. But in the American League Championship Series and the World Series, he banged a total of 4 homeruns and hit .333. The thing about being known as a clutch player is people will forget and forgive the .111 performance if you make up for it later in an even bigger situation. That's exactly what Crede did.
Consider Albert Pujols, first baseman for the St. Louis Cardinals. Many feel he's the best hitter in baseball and his performances in post-season contests underpin this reputation. Pujols has been in the post-season for the past 4 out of 5 years. His batting average for those games is .336. In 37 games, he's had 10 homeruns, 29 RBI and 28 runs scored. He's struck out only 27 times.
Is Pujols a clutch hitter? He is. Is he known as one? Pujols has only been in one World Series and in those four games he had 5 hits, 0 RBI and 1 run scored. Although he batted .333, he didn't have one extra-base hit. It was the series in which the Boston Red Sox easily won their first World Series in 86 years. In those games, Pujols was a non-entity, as was the entire Cardinal team, and his former achievements paled in the glow of the charismatic Red Sox team of Idiots.
Clutch players are known as clutch players as much due to the public's perception of them as for their achievements, and the more buzz those achievements create the more clutch a player becomes.
The Braves' Andruw Jones, Blue Jays' Troy Glaus, and Mariners' Ichiro Suzuki, like Pujols, are some of the finest defensive and offensive forces presently in MLB. They've all had amazing performances in numerous games. They are true clutch players, especially in the eyes of the fans who see them play day-in and day-out.
However, where the general public is concerned, these players have not reached the status of a David Ortiz or a Derek Jeter. Before they can do that, they'll have to do amazing things on the biggest stage in Major League baseball. In order for that to happen, they need a little bit of luck, the right circumstances, and a great team that can give them the chance to make the unbelievable catch or smash the huge hit that wins the game and solidifies their reputation forever.
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Quick Advice For Beginning Golfers
By Arnoldo Watson
Taking out the phonebook and picking a course for its name is not a good idea for beginning golfers. Choosing a course is one of the most important decisions a golfer can make when they are first starting out. Golfers need to have confidence to continue to excel at their game, if they choose a course too hard this could ruin ones passion for the game. Conversely golfers won't want to play a course too easy because they must be challenged to play their best each time they step on the course.
The actual build or DNA of a course can be defined by its slopes, water, traps, rough, trees, and greens. Some courses are consistently hillier than other courses. Some courses are surrounded by water; others are dry as a desert. Many courses utilize trees as a natural barrier against the public, thus many courses are plentiful with trees. The physical landscape of a course can make a lot of difference in selecting a course for beginners. Typically you wan to choose a course that is less hilly, and doesn't have too much water attached to it. This will allow beginning golfers to hone their swings, and skills before trying to master a PGA level course. Also beginner courses should have limited brush, this makes finding your balls much easier assuming you hit a few into the rough.
Cost should be another factor in choosing a course for beginners. Courses that are too costly can be unrealistic to play on because of their cost. Unless the golfing budget is as big as a 6 figure salary, you want to be able to play on courses that will allow for an easy return at little cost. Golf, like any other sport requires a tremendous amount of practice, and patience. If you play less costly courses you will have more opportunity to play the same course often, because it's not going to put a dent in your bank account. So choosing a cost effective course for beginners is a great first step. Look for public courses, or find out where the local college tees off. Typically the college will have its team play on a course that isn't going to cost the school too much money.
Rules on the course are another important aspect in selecting a course. Find out what the dress code is, who is allowed to play, if they have golf carts, if they require a caddy, and if they have additional rules for guests. Many times golf clubs will have additional rules for guests that can be prohibitive towards your game. If you are playing on a course that requires you to do a bunch of tasks that will distract your game, don't play on such a course.
Tee time in golf is also important in choosing a course. Call the local clubs and ask about the tee times available for the day you want to play. If there is a large amount of players teeing up on certain day, it may be a good idea to wait for another day to play. Typically if there are many tee times booked the course will be full of players that might want to play through your hole because you are new and still learning, thus taking more time to get your shot off. Be sure to go to a course that doesn't have too many tee times scheduled for the day you select, if there is a bunch of times already booked simply ask for a less busy day.
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