Wednesday, August 13, 2025

“The Playing Lesson”, by Michael Bamberger ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ -1/2

A new book from Michael Bamberger is always an occasion to celebrate. The author of classic golf titles such as The Green Road Home, To The Linksland, This Golfing Life, and Men in Green has a unique outlook on the game of golf that is grounded in a depth of experience that you won’t find, I think, in any other writer in the modern game. There are a handful that approach it, including his fellow former-Sports Illustrated colleague and co-author of The Swinger, Alan Shipnuck, but Bamberger’s work has a certain feel, a laidback mellowness, if you will, that I haven’t found anywhere else in my 200-plus-volume collection of books on golf.

The Playing Lesson, the latest from esteemed golf writer Michael Bamberger, is the chronicle of a year embedded in the professional game, as a caddy, a tournament volunteer, and a pro-am participant.

I will admit that I was expecting something a bit different from this book, but that is more a failure of imagination on my part than a shortcoming in execution on the author’s part. The Playing Lesson was billed as the chronicle of a year’s immersion in the world of professional golf, and I was expecting more content relating to actual golf lessons – but Bamberger doesn’t do obvious. Sure, he got some swing tips, and putting lessons (more about that later) along the way, but the real learning experience involved him immersing himself in the myriad aspects of the world of professional golf for a year, learning about much more than just the actual playing of the game.

Not the Bamberger is a newbie to the world of pro golf, not by a long shot. His first book, The Green Road Home (1986), chronicles his start in golf at age 14 and his adventures caddying for an array of professional golfers while also starting his life as a writer. His second, To The Linksland (1992), about his adventures as a traveling caddy on the European Tour (with his very understanding wife in tow) is such a classic that a few years ago used copies were going for $100 or more; many a golfer’s dreams of striking it rich by selling a cherished first edition were trampled when it was re-issued in a 30th Anniversary edition in 2022.

In The Playing Lesson Bamberger takes to the road again, caddying, playing in pro-ams, volunteering at tournaments – essentially sampling the many sides of professional golf. It is somewhat reminiscent of the 1968 George Plimpton book Bogey Man, which chronicles the (mis)adventures of the author and editor of The Paris Review as he spends a mere month embedded with the PGA Tour, but Bamberger’s sojourn lasts longer and delves deeper into the many and varied aspects of professional golf.

Even a quick mile-wide/inch-deep synopsis of the ground covered by this book would turn this review into a much longer read than it has any right to be; all I can say is, read it. Michael Bamberger’s prose is smooth and a delight to read, and he gets into so many corners of the game that every golfer will find something interesting, something they can relate to, or something they never knew, in this book. I particularly enjoyed the section on his late afternoon round on the back nine at Pacific Grove Golf Links, a quirky but not-to-be-missed municipal course just down the road from Pebble Beach, Spyglass Hill, and Cypress Point. A golf trip to the Monterey Peninsula isn’t complete without a round at Pacific Grove.

As for myself, I would love to spend some time with Michael on a putting green and talk with him about that particularly infuriating aspect of the game. He carries a two-sided putter so that he can putt leftie because he often yips short putts right-handed, a concept that astounds me (and not in a good way.) My technical-side antennae went up at a couple of mentions he made of hooked or sliced putts, and putted balls rolling “end-over-end”; these are the sort of misconceptions that are unfortunately common among golfers, and even many golf instructors, and they’re aching to be laid to rest.

Questions of his dubious beliefs about putting aside – as can be said of pretty much everything he has published[1], The Playing Lesson belongs in every thinking golfer’s bookcase.




[1] I must confess that I didn’t care for his previous book to this one, The Ball in the Air. No knock on his writing; I just couldn’t bring myself to care about the three golfers who are the subject of the book.

Monday, August 11, 2025

NorCal well represented at 125th USGA U.S. Amateur Championship

If home field advantage carries any weight in a major golf event, the winner of this week’s USGA U.S. Amateur Championship, being played at the Olympic Club in San Francisco, August 11 – 17, may well come from the ranks of the fourteen Northern Californians in the field.

The local players hail from all around the Bay Area and the inland regions of the northern half of the state, from as far south as Salinas and as far north as Red Bluff. For one local player in the field the 2025 U.S. Amateur is an actual home game – Matthew Goode, of San Francisco, is not only a member of the Olympic Club, he is the current club champion. There is one more player with a connection to the Bay Area – World #1 Amateur Jackson Koivun, who was born and raised in San Jose, attended Laurel Springs High School in Ojai, California, but now, along with his parents, calls Chapel Hill, North Carolina, home since starting college at Auburn University.

Jackson Koivun plays his tee shot on the 16th hole during the first round of stroke play of the 2025 U.S. Amateur at The Olympic Club (Ocean Course) in San Francisco, Calif. on Monday, Aug. 11, 2025. (Eakin Howard/USGA)

The NorCal field ranges in age from Aston Lim, of Union City, at 15, to recent college graduates Matthew Kress of Saratoga, and Baron Szeto, of Moraga, both 22 years of age.

Overall the ages of the players in the field range from Lim, at 15 to Arizona resident Greg Sanders, 61. The oldest winner in the 124-year history of the event is Jack Westland, 47, in 1952; the youngest is Byeong-hun (Ben) An, who played one year of college golf at Cal-Berkeley – 2010-2011; An took the title in 2009, at age 17. The average age of the players in the field this year is 23, so this championship is definitely the province of young, but experienced, players.

The tournament opens with two rounds of stroke play on the Lake and Ocean courses at the Olympic Club on Monday and Tuesday to trim the field from 312 hopefuls to the match play field of 64. The field will be further whittled down over four days of match play, Wednesday through Saturday, with the two finalists contesting for the championship in a 36-hole final on Sunday, August 17th.

Getting to the first tee box at the U.S. Amateur is an epic journey in itself. To even enter a qualifying event a player must have a handicap of 0.4 or better. This year 5,245 players submitted entries, most of whom teed it up at 47 local qualifying sites hoping to advance to final qualifying at one of 19 sites, and from there to the U.S. Amateur. Various achievements in amateur golf during the year leading up to this tournament will earn a player a direct entry to the event, and six of the 143 exempt entrants are from Northern California:

  • Jackson Koivun (San Jose) – Qualified for 2025 U.S. Open; Top 20 points leaders in the World Amateur Golf Ranking as of March 26; Top 100 points leaders in the World Amateur Golf Ranking as of May 21
  • Jaden Dumdumaya (Benicia) – Winner of 2025 Pacific Coast Amateur
  • Jacob Goode (San Francisco) – Winner of 2025 California Amateur
  • Matthew Kress (Saratoga) – Top 100 points leaders in the World Amateur Golf Ranking as of June 25
  • Zachery Pollo (Rocklin) – Qualified for 2025 U.S. Open; Top 100 points leaders in the World Amateur Golf Ranking as of May 21
  • Clark Van Gaalen (Turlock) – Top 100 points leaders in the World Amateur Golf Ranking as of June 25

At the end of 18 holes of stroke play Jackson Koivun led the NorCal contingent, sitting T5 at 2-under. Koivun is the only local player who is currently under par for the tournament, but a handful look to be in with a chance to advance to match play if they carry on Tuesday as they began today. That group includes the youngest player in the field, Aston Lim; the 15-year-old shot a one-over-par 71 on the Lake Course today, as did Baron Szeto of Moraga; Avinash Iyer of San Ramon – a SJSU Men’s Golf team member; Sacramento’s Brady Siravo; and Clark Van Gaalen. Also currently within the Top 64 are Zachery Pollo of Rocklin and Jaden Dumdumaya, of Benicia.

Play resumes Tuesday morning at 7:00 a.m., with players switching from Lake to Ocean courses, or vice versa. Ties for 64th position at the end of stroke play on Tuesday will be decided by a playoff.