The Editor's Desk

In the latest issue of Golf World ...

Editor-In-Chief Geoff Russell

Editor-In-Chief Geoff Russell

March 30, 2009

Dear readers:

A few years ago, we added a regular feature to Golf World called "Backspin." This was a one-page story where we revisited a person (usually a player) on the anniversary of some golf deed that was chronicled in the pages of the magazine. (That's a long-winded way of describing what is basically a "Where Are They Now?" concept.) It quickly became one of my favorite departments -- and of readers as well.

The reason for that, I think, is that golf fans -- at least those of us who are passionate enough about the game to work on or subscribe to a weekly magazine such as Golf World -- have an appreciation for its history and its heroes (including its one-week wonders) not usually found among casual followers. Few people know who Ted Schulz is, nor care much about what he is up to these days. But not only do Golf World readers remember that Schulz (the subject of our Backspin feature three weeks ago) won a Los Angeles Open, or that he faded from prominence shortly thereafter, but some of them -- like a particular reader from Jacksonville, who wrote to tell me how gracious Schulz was 15 years ago when the reader asked for an autograph -- actually wonder and care about where these players ended up.

I bring all this up because this week's issue -- outside of the ones in which we preview or review the four major championships -- might be my favorite of the year. It's our Backspin Issue, where we expand on that one-page department and turn it into a 15- or 20-page section in the magazine.

This year's offering features three excellent feature stories:

1) Has anyone seen Tom Weiskopf lately? That was a question the editors found ourselves asking when we met a few months ago to plan the Backspin Issue. Weiskopf, one of the most interesting and volatile characters ever to play the PGA Tour, pretty much disappeared from the public eye after winning the 1995 U.S. Senior Open. Where did he go?

Al Barkow, noted golf historian and frequent Golf World contributor, went and found Weiskopf. Part of the story won't surprise veteran Golf World readers. Weiskopf has spent the last decade or so focusing on his very successful golf course design business. But part of the story probably will surprise you. Weiskopf has mellowed since you last heard from him. And you'll never guess why.

2) Remember when the Song sisters -- Aree and Naree, identical twins from Thailand -- were going to take over women's golf? It hasn't happened yet (and likely never will). Meanwhile, players like Paula Creamer, Michelle Wie and Morgan Pressel have become the faces of youth on the LPGA Tour.

Executive editor Ron Sirak spent some time recently with the Song sisters in Orlando, where they live and are currently preparing for their 2009 comeback (Aree on the LPGA Tour, Naree on the Futures). The Songs he profiles will impress you with their maturity, humor and realistic view of where they stand right now in the world of golf. The story also provides a cautionary tale about pushing young athletes into the pro ranks before they are ready.

3) The third story has a personal appeal for me. Growing up in the 1970s as a lonely golf fan (the game hadn't become "cool" yet, at least not at my high school) I devoured every book on the sport I could get my hands on. In the middle part of the decade, a writer named Dan Gleason published "The Great, the Grand and the Also Ran," his diary-like account of the 1973 PGA Tour season (think of it as an early version of John Feinstein's classic "A Good Walk Spoiled").

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