http://www.thenational.scot/sport/golf-hickory-dickory-turn-back-the-clock.1859Golf: Hickory, dickory, turn back the clock
APRIL 9TH, 2015 NICK RODGER AT AUGUSTA WHEN you get to Sandy Lyle’s vintage, the phrase “turning back the clock” tends to be trotted out any time the celebrated Scot dips into his golfing archives and conjures some old Augusta magic. This week, the 57-year-old has turned that clock so far back he actually looks black and white. “I’m going to use a hickory putter this week,” revealed the 1988 Masters champion as he prepared for another batter about in his happy hunting ground. And why shouldn’t he? Lyle is the World Hickory Open champion, after all, having lifted that particular title at Panmure last autumn. “I won’t be wearing the plus fours mind you,” he added as he opted for more modesty in the sartorial stakes. “I like hickory golf but I’m not that serious.”
Who knows? With Lyle taking something of a step back in time, it might catch on. A certain Tiger Woods seems to be taking an interest. “I was at the Champions’ Dinner the other night and Tiger came over and said, ‘I hear you played on Saturday with hickory clubs?’,” continued Lyle as he reflected on a practice round at the weekend during which he played a full 18 holes with the auld sticks.
“My challenge was to break 80 but I didn’t. It was off the back tees mind you. I parred the first and the 18th. I think the young guys might struggle to break 76 round here with the hickories. I had Dustin Johnson hit my hickory driver one time and he still hit it 280 like a bullet. I’ve been using hickory clubs that are manufactured by a man called Tad Moore for a while. Tiger hadn’t heard of Tad Moore before but he sounded pretty interested. At the end of the evening he came over to me and said, ‘What was that name again?’ He wants to look at my hickory clubs and maybe try something different.”
The last time this correspondent clapped eyes on Lyle at the Masters, he was utilising a modern-day putting contraption with a head so vast it could have been visible from Jupiter. This week’s weapon will be a little bit different. “I’ve actually been putting quite well with the hickory putter and the wife said, ‘Well, why don’t you use it at Augusta?’,” he said. “I said, ‘I can’t do that’, but here it is. It’s something a bit different.”
The Masters still gets Lyle’s juices flowing. This will be his 34th appearance in the first major on the golfing calendar. The former Open champion has made the cut on his last two outings here and is relishing the prospect of getting into the old routine again. “My game is in reasonable shape,” he added. “The Masters still gets the old ticker going. I’m looking forward to it. The course is in good condition, there’s plenty of growth and it’s a little softer as well after all the rain. The big bombers may have that edge.”