Don't Worry EA Will Fix It
A Guide For Fellow Players 1) Complete your Amateur Tour and Q.School there are No shortcuts
2) Fast Tracking Your Pro Career
First play and course through 4 rounds in career, this unlocks your 'Wire to Wire Trophy'
Next Set your career play to 1 Round, on Pre-Determined weather, Live could be anything up to 35 miles per hour wind.
Jump forward on Career by selecting the Tournament Two Before the Next Major and then delete these two tournaments individually, you will recieve a invite to the next Major, Play it as a One Round Tourament, win it then Repeat the process with the next Major, after four Majors in a row you will Unlock the 95% Calamity Jane Putter in the Pro Shop, Complete 6 Masters, 6 (British) Opens, 5 (US) Opens, and 5 US PGA titles,These wins are Enough to win the Fedex Cup and Make You World No.1.
3) Setting up the Course for Big Payouts
When maxing your golfer, you can either use the setting that EA set for the career game or reset it in Gameplay, once you have started the round, I used Pro Normal, Any Time of Day, Clear Weather, Calm Wind, Wind, Gusts on, Black Tees, 18 Holes, Expert Flags, Average Course Conditions, Long Rough, Wind Arrow Direction m.p.h. On, Shot Shaping Normal & NO Mulligans (if you have mulligans on, you can’t earn XP). You can change these however you feel the most comfortable, but doing this exact course setup should give you 2.95x XP Multiplier for your round.
When you are setting up the course that you are playing in the Practice Mode section of the game, you are going to want to set the course up in the most difficult settings that you can while still shooting a decent score.
You get an XP multiplier if you set up the course in tougher conditions.
This is Okay While Your Building Up Your Character But, XP is No Good for anything after you Max Out at 95% on the right hand side of your attributes screen, on the left hand side you will see 100% after you have completed your Career objectives (14 of 14)
When You gain the max. 100% you will unlock the Hammerhead Power Suits, in a Variety of colours these are no help in Power but you look cool in the Mirror Shades, Lol.
Once you are a 100% Pro its Time to Up Your Game and Set some Really Tough Settings.
These settings Will Give You a 3.95x Multiplier
Tees: Black(Expert)
Flag/Pins: Medium
Difficulty: Pro
Swing: Expert, this will show as Custom on Difficulty,
This setting plays exactly as Pro. except you Cannot Fade the shot, you can Only play Straight shots, it will Catch Out alot of opponents Online, who ever Don't Know or have Forgotton it.
Weather: Sunny, Calm Winds, Gusts On.
Course conditions: Average
Second Cut: Long
Spin: On
Swing Meter: Off
Zoom to Aim; On
Green Grids: Off
Putt Preview: On
Wind Indicator: Arrow Only
Never be worried about this setting as when you view the Arrow, if its Still Just adjust the Shot as a Wind Strength of 5 to 7 m.p.h. if the Arrow wiggles slightly it could be 7 to 10 m.p.h. Never more on Calm settings.
Shot Shaping: Normal
Mulligans: Off
AfterYou Master that setting Try......
Swing: Analog
This Will Gain You 4.25x
For Players who are Accurate and do not Venture into the Rough, if you do, You will have to hold Down the Right Analog stick Holding the Red Curser on the Desired Spot on the Ball while Swinging the Club with the Left Analog stick. A Good Setting for Career Play or Practice Mode as a 100% Pro But, Hard to get a Game with Online.
Or, Analog Fade
This Will Gain You 4.35x
Where the same thing happens But, the Curser Disappears after a Couple of Seconds Once Moved, Deadly in Heavy Rough for You or an Opponent. This is My Personally Prefered Setting for Practice Mode.
Again a Good Setting for career and Practice But, Near impossible to get an opponent Online.
Now Go For Gold! 4.45x Turn your Wind to Arrow Only
4.65x Turn off Zoom to Aim
4.85x Now Turn off Wind Arrow on Live Calm Settings, All you will have is your Wits and Putt Preview, Give it a go its Fun!!
Other settings Could Put Your Multiplier Up as Far as 6.20x But Could Drive You to the Edge of Sanity, as does Real Golf :0)
When You Have a Online Glitch Such as Clubs Disappearing of Late (See Top of Page) Stay on Career or Practice Mode Until it is Solved, or do not chop and change between on and offline in a Session, before you sign out check you clubs are still there and save, they will then be there on your next session.
Happy Scoring !!
Colinmafia - looney toones CC (World No.1's)
-22 Sheshan 4x65 on Silver





Mid-June saw dramatic confirmation of some previous rumours about James Bond movie no. 24. On the eve of the opening of his new musical Charlie and The Chocolate Factory at the Theatre Royal in central London, Skyfall director Sam Mendes confirmed in public for the first time that he has been in talks with the James Bond producers about the possibility of still taking on directorial responsibilities on the next 007 adventure. As the JBIFC had reported on our website on May 29, new rumours had emerged that, after initially saying he could not commit himself to the next Bond film given his impending theatre projects, Mendes had changed his mind, and was now back in negotiations. A key incentive had apparently been an offer by the producers of greater scheduling flexibility over the start of production on Bond 24.
Meanwhile, James Bond star Daniel Craig has been busy getting ready for his new stage role in New York this coming autumn. Along with his wife Rachel Weisz and fellow actor Rafe Spall, Daniel will star in a new version of Harold Pinter’s classic play Betrayal, a gritty drama about adultery and its impact on three lives. The acting trio were recently reported to have spent three weeks at a special workshop carefully going through each line of the play, under the watchful tutelage of director Mike Nichols. Full rehearsals for the play are due to commence in August, and the play will start previews at the Barrymore Theatre in New York on October 1, with an official opening night on October 27, 2013. It will then run for 14 weeks. There are already strong indications that it will be a sell-out play. Interestingly, Rafe Spall is taking his wife, actress Elize du Toit, and their two young children with him to New York while he takes part in the play. Coincidentally, Elize appeared in Skyfall with Daniel Craig, playing one of M’s assistants. Unconfirmed rumours also emerged recently that Craig has been playing a key role in the lobbying for Sam Mendes to return for the next Bond movie.
In our Easter Newsletter we revealed some advance details about ‘Bond World 007’, a new special James Bond-themed exhibition and experience at Schiltorn, the site of the now famous Piz Gloria mountain-top location, which was used by director Peter Hunt for Blofeld’s lair in George Lazenby’s one-off 007 movie On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (1969). This exciting new project was officially launched on June 28, with a special opening ceremony attended by Lazenby himself, along with 300 invited guests and members of the media, or ‘distinguished members of the world’s press’, as Draco might say. The inauguration ceremony also saw the presence of an official representative of Her Majesty’s Government, the British Ambassador to Switzerland, Sarah Gillet. George and Sarah both cut through the ribbon to officially open ‘Bond World 007’. Members of the original EON production team involved with the movie were also in attendance, including the director of the film’s Second Unit, John Glen, who was responsible for overseeing many of the memorable action and stunt sequences shot for the movie, including the very realistic bobsleigh fight. The special day included a re-enactment of the iconic helicopter attack on Piz Gloria (staged by two Air Glacier helicopters), and culminated in a spectacular firework display on the terrace of the revolving restaurant. The ‘Bond World 007’ experience, which has a number of virtual and interactive displays for visitors to directly participate in, officially opened to the general public on Saturday, June 29, and it is estimated that around 1,000 visitors went through the doors on the first day. Already a bit of a shrine to dedicated Bond fans in the past, there is no doubt people will now be eager to make a return visit to the location.
Stunt artists are the great unsung heroes behind many of the most famous sequences in the 007 films. The JBIFC was thus very sad to hear of the death of ‘Nosher’ Powell, one of the most well-known and respected stuntmen in the UK’s movie stunt business. He died on April 20, aged 84, after a long career that started back in 1944, when he appeared in Laurence Olivier’s Henry V. He had small parts in such movies as Oliver Twist (1948) and Cosh Boy (1953), and went on to perform numerous stunts in many British TV dramas (such as the Roger Moore version of The Saint in the 1960s and the 1970s police drama The Sweeney) and also in big-screen movies including, of course, the Sean Connery and Roger Moore James Bond films. Indeed, the Powell family tradition of working on the Bond films continued with his two sons: ‘Nosher’ was the father of Greg and Gary, both of whom became stuntmen and have built up major reputations in the business for their professionalism and absolute dedication to their work. After working as a stuntman on the Bonds, for example, Gary (now 49) was elevated to the position of stunt coordinator on Casino Royale and, again, on Skyfall. Indeed, his father Nosher was very proud of his two sons. Nosher’s funeral took place on May 14 in Morden, in Surrey, and a wake was held at Epsom Race Course. George Frederick Bernard ‘Nosher’ Powell (1928-2013). R.I.P.
In Daniel Craig’s first James Bond movie Casino Royale there is a great scene between Bond and his boss ‘M’. Bond, having broken into his boss’s electronic files, begins to say to her: ‘I thought M was a randomly assigned letter. I had no idea it stood for...’. But ‘M’ quickly cuts him off by saying: ‘Utter one more syllable and I’ll have you killed’. Internet discussion forums and various media outlets therefore devoted considerable time in May to the news that ‘M’, as played by Dame Judi Dench, stood for ‘Olivia Mansfield’. Spotted by the eagle eyes of a keen Bond fan, who made use of some skilled freeze-framing, the real name of Dame Judi’s character, ‘Olivia Mansfield’, appears in small handwritten letters on a box passed to James Bond after her death in Skyfall. Zooming in on the inscription, it reads: ‘From the estate of Olivia Mansfield, bequeathed to James Bond’. Meg Simmons, who oversees the Bond archive at EON Productions, when asked for her response to the discovery, told The Times newspaper: ‘We have searched around and as far as we can see this is the first and only time anyone has ever revealed M’s name’. It may be pure coincidence, but it is interesting to note that the first ever head of the real-life MI6 was Sir George Mansfield Smith-Cumming, who began the tradition of signing correspondence with a single letter. But in his case he used ‘C’, and the head of the British secret service has been known as ‘C’ ever since.
Michael G. Wilson, co-producer of the James Bond movies, spoke to the BBC recently in London about the nature of his job and the particular challenges that arise from being a producer on a highly successful global franchise. In a short piece for the BBC news service, Wilson was interviewed at the Jameson Empire Awards, where Skyfall and its director Sam Mendes had just picked up more well-deserved awards, voted for by readers of the popular Empire magazine, which is currently the UK’s biggest-selling movie magazine. The veteran 007 producer made it very clear that he still thoroughly enjoys his role as producer. He said his job is ‘thrilling, it’s a great job’ and ‘wonderful’. He also praised the crews, writers, cast and everyone involved with the production of the James Bond films, and said that everyone who works on the series ‘is a joy to work with’.
Interesting news emerged in early April that Daniel Craig, along with his wife Rachel Weisz, were part of a small but distinguished group of 20 guests invited by Her Majesty the Queen for a private dinner party at Windsor Castle, which is located a few miles outside London. Just the previous week HM the Queen had received an honorary BAFTA award from actor Kenneth Branagh who had dubbed her ‘the best Bond girl ever’ for her role in the special film made by Danny Boyle for the 2012 Olympics opening ceremony, where Her Majesty appeared to parachute from a helicopter into the stadium with 007 actor Craig, much to the surprise and bemusement of millions of viewers. That event clearly delighted the Queen, and it would appear that she rewarded Daniel and his wife with the special invite to Windsor so she could renew her acquaintance with the UK’s most famous spy. Gossip in the British press claimed that there was much amusement at the private dinner as the Monarch and the 007 actor talked about the making of the special Bond sequence. One guest was quoted as saying afterwards that the Queen ‘was in sparkling form. There was a very warm, jolly atmosphere’.
The month of April, 2013, witnessed various celebrations of the 60 th Anniversary of the publication of Ian Fleming’s very first James Bond novel Casino Royale, which first saw the light in 1953. As part of this, the UK’s Sunday newspaper The Observer (April 14) published a nice set of pictures of some of the best dust-jackets and cover design images from the various UK and US editions of the novel over the years, including the first Jonathan Cape edition (1953), with the famous ‘nine of hearts’ artwork devised by Fleming himself, the first American edition in 1954 (from the Macmillan Company which, curiously, changed the design to nine diamonds), the Signet Books 29 th printing (which was a tie-in to the rogue Charles K. Feldman 1967 ‘comedy’ movie version created by five directors), and the Jonathan Cape 4 th printing from 1957. All the covers were supplied by Michael VanBlaricum, who has been collecting ‘Bondiana’ (as he puts it) since 1979, and is president of the Ian Fleming Foundation, which is based in the USA. Mike also contributed a commentary to the Guardian website (the sister paper of the Observer), which gave some interesting notes on eleven of the Casino covers.
One of the big news highlights of April was undoubtedly the official announcement of the title for the new James Bond book, written by the award-winning author William Boyd. In a special promotional interview given at the London Book Fair on April 15, Boyd announced that he had chosen the title Solo for his new 007 adventure. Some tantalizing clues were also offered about the plot locations, with Bond apparently travelling to three continents, the main focus being on the continent of Africa. In fact, Bond’s experiences in Africa generate his urge to take matters into his own hands and go to America. Explaining his choice of title, Mr. Boyd told the assembled media in a press release: ‘Sometimes less is more. For me as a novelist the simply beauty of Solo as the title of the next James Bond novel is that this short four-letter word is particularly and strikingly apt for the novel I have written’. He continued: ‘In my novel, events conspire to make Bond go off on a self-appointed mission of his own, unannounced and without any authorization – and he’s fully prepared to take the consequences of his audacity’. Corrine Turner, managing director of Ian Fleming Publications Ltd, who commissioned Boyd to write the latest Bond adventure, said: ‘Ian Fleming had a great aptitude for naming his books and his Bond titles have become true classics. Solo is a simple yet striking title which fits perfectly alongside the other books in the Bond canon’.
While on the subject of 007 book continuity authors, one of the Bond discussion forums recently carried some interesting speculation about the possible sequel plans of author Kingsley Amis, who had penned the first post-Fleming Bond book Colonel Sun, under the pseudonym ‘Robert Markham’. Amis, who was a big Fleming and Bond fan, had shown his love of the character in two non-fiction books, The James Bond Dossier and the more light-hearted The Book of Bond, a guide for budding spies supposedly written by Bill Tanner. Amis was commissioned by Glidrose Publications to write the first Bond continuation adventure, which was published in March, 1968. The recent forum discussion focused on whether Amis had considered writing a second James Bond adventure, or whether this was just rumour. It would now appear that there may have been something to this, in the sense that Amis briefly contemplated writing not another novel but a short 007 story instead. Earlier in 1968, Amis had visited Mexico, travelling from St. Louis to Mexico City by train. Amis had remembered that Fleming had enjoyed placing his secret service hero on trains and, according to his correspondence (Amis was a prolific letter writer), Amis considered a short Bond story involving an incident on a train in Mexico, possibly with an assassination attempt on Bond’s life. Alas, there is no evidence Amis took this any further.
The highly-acclaimed playwright and actor Steven Berkoff, who played the devious and hawkish Russian General Orlov in Octopussy (1983), staged a fascinating exhibition in north London in April, entitled ‘East End Photographs’. Held at the Hendon campus of Middlesex University (which is not far from the Royal Air Force Museum at Hendon), the exhibition of Steven’s work was designed to tie in with his new book of the same title, East End Photographs, which has been published by Dewi Lewis Publishing Ltd. The actor, who was born in the Stepney area of London in 1937 and still resides in east London today, revealed to the media that he has been taking photos of his beloved London East End, where he was raised, since being given a camera at the age of 11. The keen young photographer went on to capture some truly unique visual scenes of social life in the East End, recording life as it then was some 50-60 years ago, including the streets, the shops, and – especially – the local people. In fact, it was clear from the exhibition that Berkoff has always been a keen observer of everyday London cockney ‘characters’, and much of this has arguably fed into his highly distinctive theatre and film work.
June, 2013, will mark the 30 th Anniversary of the premiere of Octopussy in June, 1983. The JBIFC has numerous fond memories of the making of the movie, and it seems a good time to share some of those in the run-up to the Anniversary. During the filming of Octopussy in 1982, for example, Steven Berkoff developed a good friendship with the actor Walter Gotell and they used to pass the time spent waiting between takes deep in conversation about the theatre, movies, literature, culture and social issues generally (German-born Gotell was also a talented businessman who could speak 5 languages). As Bond fans know, at one key point in Octopussy, General Orlov ran through the railway gates at a German border crossing post, desperately trying to stop the Octopussy circus train, and was shot by West German border guards after he failed to stop. Walter Gotell, as General Anatol Gogol, was in hot pursuit, and had to run along the tracks after him, only to witness Orlov being shot. Steven Berkoff (as General Orlov) filmed his death scene in Octopussy one Sunday morning in September, 1982, on the railway line just outside the Ferry Meadows station of the Nene Valley Railway, near Peterborough (Ferry Meadows had been re-named ‘Gutenfurst’ for the movie). This was the last day of Main Unit filming on the Nene Valley Railway, and was very carefully overseen by director John Glen. This was because filming of the sequence had been postponed from the previous Thursday as Walter Gotell, at one stage, had accidently slipped and hit his head on the metal railway track, and had ended up with five stitches in his cheek. Such are the hazards of trying to run down railway tracks!
Walter Gotell appeared in over 90 films, including seven Bond films. Walter Gotell’s final appearance as General Gogol, in Timothy Dalton’s first James Bond movie The Living Daylights (1987), was originally going to be a much larger part. In an early draft, the KGB General framed by General Koskov was to be General Gogol but, by then, Walter Gotell had become too ill to play such a major role, so the character of Leonid Pushkin (played by John Rhys-Davies) was created instead to replace Gogol. As Bond fans know, Gotell did still appear briefly as Gogol at the end of the movie, the General having been transferred to the Soviet diplomatic service. Although he continued with his acting career, Gotell began to devote more time to farming in Ireland, where he owned a countryside property. Walter Gotell sadly died in May, 1997, aged 73, after a battle with cancer. 


