Monday, May 31st, 2010 at
2:14 pm
Cycling Is Considered The New Golf. 13 Million Searches A Month For Keyword ‘cycling’. Cyclists Spend 10k+ On Their Bikes And Are Obsessed About Their Performance. A Strain New Killer Product In An Untapped Market.
New Opportunity – Cycling Training – Massive Untapped Traffic.
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Monday, May 31st, 2010 at
2:27 am
Six months ago, Tiger Woods turned our (golf) lives around. The flashing headlines and intense accusations made us all a lot confused and a small dirty. We’d invested so much in the superstar, and what we all knew turned out to be fake.
Now, today, we know better. We have learned to take Tiger at face value and value the golfing public as a group of guys hellbent on making money, winning tournaments and gaining accolades.
And then there’s Phil Mickelson, the man that was supposed to rise from the Tiger ash a superstar. Not so much the best golfer in the world, but the man we could all stand behind, hoisting him when he won and backing him when he lost.
This week was supposed to be Phil’s bright moment. The family man at heart, Mickelson has worked his entire career to be the number one golfer in the world, and if Earl and Kultida had never conceived a child, Phil would have been there for years. But that is where the two are different.
This week was Phil standing on the final tee at Winged Foot, with a chance to finally take down those demons that have haunted him all his life. At Colonial on Friday, Phil made another very costly dual-bogey.
His missed cut in Fort Worth said a lot about where Phil is with his golf game. Always scary when he enters tournaments, he will never, ever, ever
Related Blogs
Monday, May 31st, 2010 at
12:29 am
Six months ago, Tiger Woods turned our (golf) lives around. The flashing headlines and intense accusations made us all a lot confused and a small dirty. We’d invested so much in the superstar, and what we all knew turned out to be fake.
Now, today, we know better. We have learned to take Tiger at face value and value the golfing public as a group of guys hellbent on making money, winning tournaments and gaining accolades.
And then there’s Phil Mickelson, the man that was supposed to rise from the Tiger ash a superstar. Not so much the best golfer in the world, but the man we could all stand behind, hoisting him when he won and backing him when he lost.
This week was supposed to be Phil’s bright moment. The family man at heart, Mickelson has worked his entire career to be the number one golfer in the world, and if Earl and Kultida had never conceived a child, Phil would have been there for years. But that is where the two are different.
This week was Phil standing on the final tee at Winged Foot, with a chance to finally take down those demons that have haunted him all his life. At Colonial on Friday, Phil made another very costly dual-bogey.
His missed cut in Fort Worth said a lot about where Phil is with his golf game. Always scary when he enters tournaments, he will never, ever, ever