Thursday, August 28, 2014
Wednesday, August 27, 2014
The Golf Club is Out on PC/Xbox1 & PS4
Posted on 3:20 PM by Barbara Thimen
Colinmafia @ The Golf Club cmarriott2.blogspot.co.uk
Available in the USA Playstation store Now Digital dlc only, UK next Tueday Sept. 1st.
The James Bond Fan Club Newsletter Summer 2014
Posted on 2:03 PM by Barbara Thimen
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Monday, August 25, 2014
Sheshan international, Shanghai, China
Posted on 4:44 AM by Barbara Thimen

Scorecard
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| Interactive Course Guide and 3D Fly Overs http://www.sheshangolf.com/en/holeDescription.html BlueGolf.com |
Sunday, August 24, 2014
Carnoustie Golf Links
Posted on 6:08 PM by Barbara Thimen
Home of the Open Championship 1931, 1937, 1953, 1968, 1975, 1999, 2007 & 2018Host of the Seniors Open 2010, 2016 and the Women's British Open 2011
Hole Fly Overs
Hole Fly Overs
1st. Cup
410 yards - Par 4 - Stroke Index 10
A reasonably gentle introduction to Carnoustie Championship golf course. The drive is played to a wide fairway with slopes which tend to take the ball to the right hand side, and should pose no real problems although the burn meandering in front of the 1st tee can intimidate the nervous golfer.The 2nd shot is one of the few blind shots to be played at Carnoustie and it is important to judge the distance correctly.
Caddie's Tip
"Ideally left centre of fairway off the tee which will allow you to see the whole of the green."2nd. Gulley
435 yards - Par 4 - Stroke Index 4
A long and straight drive is required to avoid the bunkers which will catch even the slightly miss-hit shot. Once the fairway has been found the 2nd shot is straightforward, but with a green measuring 60 yards from front to back the choice of the right club is crucial.Caddie's Tip
"Play to the middle of the green with your approach shot as most of the trouble is at the front of this green."3rd. Jockie's Burn
351 yards - Par 4 - Stroke Index 14
A short but very deceptive par 4, this hole does not place too many pressures upon the drive although the fairway bunkers will catch anything pulled slightly left.Jockie’s Burn, after which the hole is named, sits immediately in front of the green and awaits any approach shot that is under-hit.
Caddie's Tip
"Be aware of water hazard at front of green. Pay particular attention to the pin placement on this hole."4th. Hillocks
375 yards - Par 4 - Stroke Index 16
The hole dog legs slightly to the right and players must be cautious not to hook the ball as a ditch awaits just over the back of the fairway bunker.The green, the only double green on the golf course, is well protected by bunkers and the approach should be long if anything.
Caddie's Tip
"All trouble visible from tee, but do remember this is a double green. Play to the yellow flag on the front nine."5th. Brae
392 Yards - Par 4 - Stroke Index 12
A hole which dog legs to the right and which has a two tiered green. If the pin is placed on the top tier it can add as much as 4 clubs to the approach shot. Longer hitters must be careful not to run out of fairway as a narrow ditch stretches the entire width of the fairway at around 280 yards.Caddie's Tip
"Do not be too aggressive from the tee as a drainage ditch awaits too long a drive."6th. Hogans Alley
512 Yards - Par 5 - Stroke Index 2
The 6th hole on the Championship Course was officially renamed on Wednesday 24th September 2003 as Hogan's Alley by our 1999 Open Champion, Paul Lawrie.To commemorate Ben Hogan's feat in 1953, today's professionals were invited to take part in a longest drive competition using a 1953 driver and old 1.62 golf balls. The winner was Arjun Atwal with a drive of 251 yards. Other notable entries were Paul Lawrie 245 yards, Adam Scott 231 yards, Vijay Singh 219 yards, Colin Montgomerie 203 yards and Sam Torrance 200 yards.
Named after the immortal Ben Hogan who won the Open Championship in 1953, this hole is where Carnoustie starts to turn up the heat.
Normally played into the prevailing wind this hole can be a severe par 5. Bunkers and out of bounds await the miss-cued drive and although the best line is up Hogan’s Alley between the bunkers and the out of bounds fence, it requires a brave player to drive to that narrow piece of fairway. The 2nd shot is no less perilous with a ditch angling across the fairway and the out of bounds continuing to be a threat.
The approach is reasonably straightforward to an undulating green, particular care must be taken if the pin is located on the back right portion of the green.
A player should always be content with a five on this hole as it can be the ruin of many a scorecard.
Caddie's Tip
"Hogan's alley for the brave, but not for the faint hearted, who should favour the right of the centre bunkers on this very difficult par five. Care must also be taken with your second shot as once again Jockey's burn bites deeply into the right side of the fairway."7th. Plantation
394 Yards - Par 4 - Stroke Index 8
Again the out of bounds threatens on the left hand side and the fairway bunkers are cleverly placed to catch the drive pushed only slightly to the right. Care must be taken not to over hit the 2nd shot and run through the green where a difficult up and down awaits.Caddie's Tip
"A long drive on this narrow hole will be rewarded with a much simpler approach shot."8th. Short
167 Yards - Par 3 - Stroke Index 18
Carnoustie's first par 3 and well worth the wait. On par with the great par 3's in world golf with out of bounds left and bunkers surrounding an elevated green. Normally played into a cross wind it requires a good swing and no little courage to find the heart of this green.Caddie's Tip
"Take plenty of club as there is less trouble beyond the green."9th. Railway
413 Yards - Par 4 - Stroke Index 6
The drive is paramount on this hole with out of bounds left, a ditch on the right and numerous fairway bunkers. Finding the fairway always comes as a welcome relief to any player but then a long difficult approach to a well-protected green awaits.Caddie's Tip
"A long drive on this narrow hole will be rewarded with a much simpler approach shot."10th. South America
446 Yards - Par 4 - Stroke Index 3
The start of the back 9 and perhaps the most challenging 9 holes in golf await the player who stands on this tee.In order to reach the green in 2 a long and straight drive is required with particular care required to avoid 3 bunkers on the right hand side. Once the player has found the fairway, a decision is then required as to whether the Barry Burn which runs some 40 yards in front of the green can be carried with a 2nd shot or not. Unless the player is confident of his ability to fly the ball all the way onto the putting surface, it is often best to lay up and accept a 5, which is never a bad score on this hole.
Caddie's Tip
"Avoiding the three right hand bunkers is essential if you hope to reach this green in regulation."11th. John Philip
362 Yards - Par 4 - Stroke Index 15
The decision must be made on the tee as to whether to take on the fairway bunkers with the driver and try to guide the ball through a narrow neck of fairway or to lay up and thereby leave a longer shot into the green. The green is well bunkered and slopes quite significantly from back to front which can make putting tricky.Caddie's Tip
"Hitting the fairway with a reasonable length of drive on the slight dogleg assures only a mid to short iron approach to the green."12th. Southward Ho
479 Yards - Par 5 - Stroke Index 9
Played as a par 5 from the back tees and a par 4 from the other tees, this hole again challenges the player with an intimidating drive, whins and gorse must be carried and there are ditches on both the right and left hand sides. Two massive fairway bunkers on the right hand side eat into the heart of the fairway and will catch any shot that cuts slightly to the right. The approach must be played between 2 sets of bunkers positioned on the right and left hand side about 30 yards short of the green and it is often wise to lay up and rely upon a pitch and a putt.Caddie's Tip
"This hole should be treated as a three shot par five regardless of the tee in use on the day you play."13th. Whins
161 Yards - Par 3 - Stroke Index 17
A deceptively difficult short hole, particularly if it is played down wind when it becomes extremely difficult to stop the ball from running through the green. Bunkers surround the green and will catch anything which is not straight. Once in the bunker the high lips will test any players ability to get up and down. Caddie's Tip
"Heavily bunkered par three at which if you play for the middle of the green and find it you should not be too far away."14th. Spectacles
476 Yards - Par 5 - Stroke Index 1
Gary Player struck the finest shot of his life here in 1968 to make an eagle 3 which enabled him to go on to win the Open Championship. The drive is tough enough with out of bounds left and bunkers well in play. However the hole is made by the 2nd shot, where the player must decide whether he is going to carry the massive Spectacle bunkers or not. If a player goes for the green and lands in the Spectacles he can expect to be there for some time as these bunkers are huge and intimidating. Further bunkers closer to the green provide further protection and any player making 4 can feel justifiably proud of that score.Caddie's Tip
"Another hole where getting on the green in three is not a disappointment. An accurate drive is paramount and remember this is the second part of our only double green, you play to the red flag on this nine."15th. Lucky Slap
459 Yards - Par 4 - Stroke Index 7
As hard a par 4 as can be found anywhere in golf, this hole requires a long and accurate drive and then a powerful approach to the very well protected green. Into the wind the majority of golfers will not be able to get home in 2 and if a lay up is required it must be kept well away from the bunkers some 25 yards short of the green as getting out of these in one stroke is extremely difficult.Caddie's Tip
"Most exacting par four on the course. What is required is a drawn drive followed by a faded approach, but for the majority playing this hole for a bogey is not a bad idea."16th. Barry Burn
245 Yards - Par 3 - Stroke Index 13
A 245 yard par 3 often played into the wind. Tom Watson had 5 attempts to get a par 3 here during the 1975 Open Championship and was not successful in doing so. In 1968 Jack Nicklaus was the only player to get past the pin during the final round. This hole is really a 3.5 and a par is an outstanding achievement.Caddie's Tip
"Hit plenty of club on this lengthy par three. Just like number eight the majority of the trouble is at the front of the green."17th. Island
433 Yards - Par 4 - Stroke Index 5
Continuing with Carnoustie’s fearsome finish, the Barry Burn winds and twists it’s way down this hole. The drive must be placed between the island part of the hole and then the player is left with a long difficult approach to a green protected by whins and bunkers.Caddie's Tip
"The line from the tee is the gable end of the white house, which means you are aiming for the right half of the island. Water awaits the hooked tee shot."18th. Home
444 Yards - Par 4 - Stroke Index 11
No more difficult finishing hole will be found anywhere. The burn is in play for the drive to the right and left of the hole and also short. Fairway bunkers edge in to the right hand side and it was here that Johnny Miller lost the 1975 Championship when he took 2 to get out of the bunker. The Barry Burn crosses right in front of the green and it poses a huge obstacle for the 2nd shot. It was here that the hopes of Jean Van De Velde sunk in 1999 when Paul Lawrie went on to take the title.Caddie's Tip
The clock on the Hotel is the line off the tee. Remember the Barry Burn at the front of the green "and if you better a seven - reward yourself with a drink!" BlueGolf.com
Course GPS
Atlanta Athletic Club, Johns Creek, USA
Posted on 5:15 AM by Barbara Thimen
Scorecard
BlueGolf.com course GPS
http://course.bluegolf.com/bluegolf/course/course/atlantaathleticc/aerial.htm
Saturday, August 23, 2014
Gleneagles Centenary 2014 Ryder Cup Course
Posted on 4:43 PM by Barbara Thimen
Scorecard
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| Fly Over http://www.gleneagles.com/golf/golf-courses/pga-centenary-course/virtual-course-guide/hole-1-bracken-brae/ |
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| Fly Over http://www.gleneagles.com/golf/golf-courses/pga-centenary-course/virtual-course-guide/hole-2-wester-greenwells |
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| Fly Over http://www.gleneagles.com/golf/golf-courses/pga-centenary-course/virtual-course-guide/hole-3-schiehallion |
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| Fly Over http://www.gleneagles.com/golf/golf-courses/pga-centenary-course/virtual-course-guide/hole-4-gowden-beastie |
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| Fly Over http://www.gleneagles.com/golf/golf-courses/pga-centenary-course/virtual-course-guide/hole-5-crookit-cratur |
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| Fly Over http://www.gleneagles.com/golf/golf-courses/pga-centenary-course/virtual-course-guide/hole-6-mickle-skelp |
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| Fly Over http://www.gleneagles.com/golf/golf-courses/pga-centenary-course/virtual-course-guide/hole-7-larch-gait |
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| Fly Over http://www.gleneagles.com/golf/golf-courses/pga-centenary-course/virtual-course-guide/hole-8-sidlin'-brows |
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| Fly Over http://www.gleneagles.com/golf/golf-courses/pga-centenary-course/virtual-course-guide/hole-9-crook-o'-moss |
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| Fly Over http://www.gleneagles.com/golf/golf-courses/pga-centenary-course/virtual-course-guide/hole-10-sleekit-howe |
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| Fly Over http://www.gleneagles.com/golf/golf-courses/pga-centenary-course/virtual-course-guide/hole-11-laich-burn |
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| Fly Over http://www.gleneagles.com/golf/golf-courses/pga-centenary-course/virtual-course-guide/hole-12-carn-mairg |
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| Fly Over http://www.gleneagles.com/golf/golf-courses/pga-centenary-course/virtual-course-guide/hole-13-wimplin'-wyne |
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| Fly Over http://www.gleneagles.com/golf/golf-courses/pga-centenary-course/virtual-course-guide/hole-14-nebit-knowe |
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| Fly Over http://www.gleneagles.com/golf/golf-courses/pga-centenary-course/virtual-course-guide/hole-15-ochil-sicht |
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| Fly Over http://www.gleneagles.com/golf/golf-courses/pga-centenary-course/virtual-course-guide/hole-16-lochan-loup |
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| Fly Over http://www.gleneagles.com/golf/golf-courses/pga-centenary-course/virtual-course-guide/hole-17-ca'-canny |
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| Fly Over http://www.gleneagles.com/golf/golf-courses/pga-centenary-course/virtual-course-guide/hole-18-dun-roamin' |
BlueGolf.com
https://app.bluegolf.com/webapp/ Gleneagles GPS Guide
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There are strong indications that the next James Bond movie will at one point make dramatic use of the beautiful Austrian Alps for some snow-bound sequences. Since the last JBIFC Newsletter, various exciting news items have emerged about the possible themes and locations for the upcoming Sam Mendes-directed 007 movie, and it was recently suggested that a 3-day shoot has been scheduled in the small Austrian village of Obertilliach, with sets for another ‘village’ to be constructed nearby. Snow and ice have regularly played a big role in previous Bond movies (On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, The Spy Who Loved Me, For Your Eyes Only, The World Is Not Enough). Moreover, in Ian Fleming’s 007 books, the author gave the orphan Bond an interesting family history: Bond’s parents had been killed in the Alps. Fleming also described 007 as an expert skier. So, in a sense, Bond 24 will be tapping into some traditional Bond angles with a snow-bound location. Interesting rumours have also emerged (warning: possible spoiler alert here!) that a chase sequence will be shot in the area, involving skidoos (one-person snowmobiles).
As many Bond fans are aware, news emerged in the early summer that EON’s producers had hired the veteran screenwriters Neal Purvis and Robert Wade, who had stepped aside from Bond script-writing duties after Skyfall, to carry out some work on John Logan’s script for Bond 24, and provide it with more ‘punch’ and some extra interplay between 007 and the other characters. Although we have been unable to verify this, the JBIFC has been led to understand that Logan’s main focus in his original treatment had envisaged 007 lying low in a north European country after a mission had gone wrong, but the producers, along with Daniel Craig and Sam Mendes, felt the storyline needed to be widened out and given more action. Purvis and Wade, who worked in close collaboration with Craig and Mendes, have now finished their work on the Logan treatment and have delivered the script, and everybody is now said to be ‘very happy’ with the reworked treatment.
Since the rights to screen the James Bond films on TV in the UK were recently transferred back to the ITV network, after a brief spell with Sky, ITV have certainly been making the most of its screening opportunities, with regular showings of the movies on ITV4. And this has inevitably led to some interesting reviews and reassessments of the series by various film critics. One veteran writer on 007 is the BBC film critic Barry Norman, who has taken a close interest in the franchise ever since 1961-1962, when he first got to know the then relatively unknown young actor Sean Connery. Norman’s love of the franchise was on display again recently, when he penned one of his typical appreciations of a Bond film, Goldfinger, when ITV screened Connery’s third entry on Saturday August 2. Writing in the BBC’s listings magazine Radio Times, Norman argued: ‘Dr. No was a good start, From Russia With Love a strong follow-up. But it was the third 007 movie Goldfinger that truly established the never-ending franchise because it was here that most of the elements that characterised so many of its successors were first introduced’. He continued: ‘For a start there’s the pre-credits sequence with Bond performing heroic and sexual feats that have little or nothing to do with the action that follows. Then there are the gimmicks, the technological gadgets. The first two films were relatively free of those, but this time around Bond is equipped with such things as an Aston Martin with radar, machine guns and an ejector seat for unwelcome passengers. Add to that Oddjob (Harold Sakata), the Korean valet with a decapitating bowler hat, Shirley Eaton slain by being painted gold and a lethal laser beam that threatens to end 007’s womanising days for good, and you have the quintessential, albeit 50-year-old, Bond movie’.
There were some further fascinating (unconfirmed) reports in late August that a leading casting agency has been on the lookout for an actor to play a key henchman in Bond 24, a character provisionally named ‘Hinx’. The agency has indicated that the Bond 24 team are interested in equipping the new 007 movie with a memorable or quirky henchman in the tradition of Oddjob or Jaws, as this has arguably been absent from the last three Craig Bond movies. The agency has been looking for a ‘physically fit male between the ages of 30 and 45’, and over 6 foot 2 inches; the successful candidate will undertake stunt training for fights and also some driving duties. It is known that both Craig and Mendes are particular fans of Live and Let Die, and some sources have suggested to us that they may be keen to have a henchman like Tee Hee (played by Julius W. Harris) – a tough henchman with a peculiar physical quirk or ability, but still very believable and dangerous and rooted in reality. Make of all this what you will. Time will tell.
And here’s some more special Goldfinger news: to help celebrate the 50 th Anniversary this year of the iconic third James Bond movie, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) and Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment are to release an elegant Limited Edition gold Steelbook Blu-ray of Goldfinger. Available from September 22, 2014, this exciting new collector’s item will feature sketches of the Aston Martin by legendary Production Designer Sir Ken Adam on the inside of the case and will contain a variety of Special Features, some of them sourced from the archive of EON Productions. There will be Audio Commentaries by the Director Guy Hamilton and other members of cast and crew. There will also be special Featurettes on the movie’s locations, production, publicity campaign, and global impact. In addition, the Steelbook will include the Screen Tests of Theodore Bikel and Tito Vandis, an interview with Honor Blackman, and some notably rare stills. Special Interactive Features will also be available in the Steelbook. The Goldfinger 50 th Anniversary Limited Edition Steelbook will be priced £24.99 in the UK.
Fancy a trip to Sweden? Our good friend Anders Frejdh, who runs the notably comprehensive Swedish 007 website ‘From Sweden With Love’ (FSWL), has spent the last six months very busily organising a special ‘James Bond Weekend’ in support of the charity UNICEF. There will be exclusive film screenings with Q and As, autograph signings, a Bond exhibition, a charity gala and a live singing performance by none other than Robert Davi who, of course, so memorably played the main villain Franz Sanchez in Licence to Kill (1989). Yes, while Robert Davi still acts in films (he can be seen for example, in The Expendables III, currently in cinemas), he also has another huge talent: he can sing Frank Sinatra songs! Other guests will include director John Glen and stunt coordinator Paul Weston, to name just a few. The special FSWL James Bond weekend will take place September 19-21, 2014. Full details of the not-to-be-missed event can be obtained at:
John Cleese, former gadget master in two the last two Brosnan 007 films, speaking as his famous Monty Python team embarked on their final reunion stage shows in London in July, voiced some reservations about what he claimed has been the ‘humourless’ tone of the recent James Bond films. Cleese, who played a trainee assistant to ‘Q’ in 1999’s The World Is Not Enough and then assumed the full Quartermaster role in 2002’s Die Another Day (following the tragic death of Desmond Llewelyn in 1999), spoke to the BBC’s Radio Times magazine. The 74-year old comedy actor reminded readers of the magazine that he did two 007 films ‘and then I believe that the tone they needed was that of the Bourne action movies, which are very gritty and humourless’. He said that in his view the action sequences now go on for too long. Cleese has been hard at work recently working on his memoirs, and has just agreed to appear as the villain in The B Team, a new movie directed by Chris Cottam, which will (unofficially) reunite some of the stars from the old Baywatch TV series, but with a comedy and espionage storyline. The movie starts shooting in September. The Monty Python reunion shows took place at the 02 Arena in east London, near the River Thames; this was formerly the Millenium Dome and will be very familiar to Bond fans after it featured in the spectacular pre-credits river chase sequence in The World Is Not Enough. 

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