Officialsportsbetting.com Golf Betting “Caddyshack” book goes in-depth on the cult classic

“Caddyshack” book goes in-depth on the cult classic

The first draft of the script for “Caddyshackâ€� was 200 pages long – which was nearly twice the norm for Hollywood screenplays at the time. And believe it or not, the character named Carl Spackler, the wacky and wacked out assistant greenskeeper so central to the movie in its final form, was nowhere to be found. Oh, and what about that gopher? Well, Spackler’s nemesis started out as a mere sock puppet, appearing in just one scene where the rodent pops up and steals Al Czervik’s golf ball. Those are just two of the many interesting nuggets that can be found in Chris Nashawaty’s new book, “Caddyshack: The Making of a Hollywood Cinderella Story.â€� Nashawaty’s book came out in April of this year. It was born of a six-page oral history he wrote about the cult classic for Sports Illustrated in 2010, three decades after its release. The book is meticulously researched – witness the 27 pages of notes at the end of the book – and pays homage to a film that tops nearly every list of funniest sports movies. But Nashawaty, who has been the film critic for Entertainment Tonight for the last 20 years, does more than just take his reader behind the scenes of an 11-week shoot filled with drama and debauchery in south Florida. Nashawaty’s book also sets the stage, so to speak, for the movie by examining the friendship between Harold Ramis, who directed the film, and his co-writers and co-conspirators, Doug Kenney and Brian Doyle-Murray. Their bond had been cemented about a decade earlier when National Lampoon was at its zenith and NBC’s “Saturday Night Live” was turning traditional comedy on its collective ear. Kenney and Ramis were fresh off the success of “Animal House,â€� which they had written with Chris Miller, when they pitched a series of irreverent comedies to Orion Pictures and Jon Peters, who was married at the time to Barbara Streisand. The one that got the greenlight became “Caddyshack,” which had its genesis in Doyle-Murray’s memories of his teenage years spent caddying at Indian Hill Club on the north shore of Chicago. Once Nashawaty turns the focus to the movie, which comes about 100 pages into the narrative, the book gains momentum. And with comic geniuses like Chevy Chase, Bill Murray, Ted Knight and Rodney Dangerfield on board, there were plenty of stories for him to tell. When Murray was hired to complete the “foursome,â€� as Nashawaty puts it, his character still didn’t exist, despite numerous rewrites to the script. Not to mention, with SNL about to resume production, he only had six days to devote to “Caddyshack,” but his brother, Doyle-Murray, promised him everything would work out. Much of Murray’s oft-imitated performance was ad-libbed – most notably the iconic “Cinderella Storyâ€� monologue. All the script said was: Carl, the Greenskeeper, is absently looping the heads off bedded tulips as he practices his golf swing with a grass whip. After changing the flowers to mums at Murray’s suggestion, the cameras rolled. And he did the entire sequence in one take. “I was good back in those days,â€� Murray tells Nashawaty. “I could do something when they turned the camera on. I was wired into what I was talking about. Improvising about golf was easy for me.â€� Anyone who has seen his antics at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am would certainly agree. And while he only had that one scene with the gopher puppet, Murray was frequently filmed trying to flush the critter out with a firehose he dragged around the course. It wasn’t until after filming was complete that the gopher took on a life of its own – eventually being created by a special effects company and at Peter’s suggestion assuming a bigger “roleâ€� to help to tie together the movie’s many disjointed but funny scenes. Murray loved doing battle with the gopher. “It was a time when people were making movies like the Deer Hunter and Apocalypse Now,â€� Murray recalls in the book. “And that was my Vietnam movie. The ridiculously inappropriate firepower I used to kill a small rodent.â€� Speaking of firepower, there was plenty at Bushwood, aka Rolling Hills Golf Club, in Davie, Florida when the final scene was shot. Peters had taken the unknowing high-ups from the club to dinner and on an evening cruise as a diversion – but the proverbial jig was up when the explosions made the TV news and prompted a pilot to radio the nearby Ft. Lauderdale airport to report a crash. The damage to the Rolling Hills — which once hosted the likes of Jackie Gleason, George C. Scott, Johnny Unitas and Joe Namath — was minimal, though. Nashawaty’s book also delves into the complicated relationships between Chase and Murray, highlighting a fight between the two at 30 Rock during the SNL days, and between Knight and Dangerfield. Knight, a decorated war hero who won two Emmys for his work on “The Mary Tyler Moore Show,” wasn’t exactly thrilled with being the straight man to Dangerfield’s ribald style of comedy. In the end, “Caddyshack,” wasn’t the comedic blockbuster Ramis, Doyle-Murray and Kenney had hoped, that distinction, instead, going to the movie “Airplane.” As the years have gone on, though, “Caddyshack” has more than found its niche and this book is a tribute to its popularity.

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Vegas defends his title at RBC Canadian OpenVegas defends his title at RBC Canadian Open

OAKVILLE, Ontario – News and observations from the final round of the RBC Canadian Open where Jhonattan Vegas won his second-straight title north of the border in a playoff over Charley Hoffman. Vegas became the sixth golfer to defend at the Canadian Open, and the first since Jim Furyk in 2006-2007. Vegas credits family A year ago, Jhonattan Vegas was on FaceTime with his family back home in Venezuela, celebrating his win as best he could. This year, he got the real thing, as wife Hildegard and daughter Sharlene Marie were on site at Glen Abbey. “I would say it has to be the sweetest victory out of the three. Just having my family here, even my mom and dad… they were with me my first time I won. But having my wife and daughter, and especially my daughter, being with my daughter for the first win. It’s hard to compare that. It’s hard to put it in words,â€� said Vegas. “It’s just really fun, watching them really enjoy it in person and seeing how nervous they are when I’m on the course playing. Every time you get a chance to share these moments with your family, it’s just really grateful.â€� With his win, Vegas nearly locks up a spot on the International Team for this year’s Presidents Cup team, a feat he said would be ‘awesome.’ “It’s always a lifetime dream to be part of some of those great teams. I mean, not that many guys can experience what being on a Presidents Cup,â€� said Vegas. By his own admission, Vegas said he was in ‘great form’ heading to the PGA Championship in two weeks, stating he feels like he can compete on a major stage. “Obviously I’ve never put myself on a major stage to win, but I feel like my game is good enough,â€� he said. With the future of Glen Abbey uncertain, Vegas said he would be one of the biggest voices to make sure the course stays put. “Especially if I keep winning here,â€� said Vegas, laughing. “I’ll definitely make a statement on trying to keep Glen Abbey going.â€� Hughes finishes as Low Canadian For the first time in his career, Mackenzie Hughes won the Rivermead Cup as the Low Canadian at the RBC Canadian Open. Hughes, from nearby Dundas, Ont. (about 20 miles from Glen Abbey), had a robust crowd out following him all week. Although he finished with a bogey on the par-5 18th Sunday, the week overall was positive, he explained. “Obviously yesterday was a disappointing finish. But I wanted to come out here and finish strong and show some pride and try and be low Canadian,â€� said Hughes. “Last hole was a bit sour tasting and I’m probably going to think about that one for a little while. I had my sights set on three and I made six. That’s a pretty tough pill to swallow, but lesson learned… don’t get ahead of yourself. Overall it was a fun day and a really fun week.â€� Hughes finished at 10-under par and tied 32nd. He went to Kent State University in Ohio, and played Firestone Country Club – the host of next week’s WGC-Bridgestone Invitational – a couple of times while there. “It’s a really nice golf course, demanding, and you have to drive the ball really well there,â€� he said, as he prepares to make his debut at that event. “I’m excited for a major-type venue, and hopefully it’s a nice week.â€� And while it was a whirlwind week for Hughes – his family and friends hosted a baby shower Sunday evening for him and wife Jenna, as they are expecting their first child on October 28th, and the par-3 course he grew up playing was renamed in his honor Tuesday – he admitted he managed to make time to speak with Presidents Cup assistant captain Mike Weir about the prospect of making that team. “Obviously I know I’m a ways out from making that team, but you know, if I go out and win Firestone, then I’m obviously in contention to get on that team. (Weir) will be out there and hopefully I can put some good form together and a few good rounds and just see where that puts me. I’m not going to put any more pressure on myself to try and win. If I go out there and play the way I did today, I’ll like my chances,â€� said Hughes. “There will be more Presidents Cups in the future, but you never know what might happen.â€� Graham DeLaet fired a 1-under-par 71 Sunday to finish at 8-under. He was tied for 48th. Johnson confident into final major Dustin Johnson admitted Sunday he wasn’t satisfied with his score, but his tie for eighth gives him some positive vibes as he heads to the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational next week, where he defends, and the PGA Championship the week after. “I’ve really got a lot of positive things going into the next couple weeks. Got two big weeks ahead of me next week defending at the WGC, and obviously the PGA Championship. The game is in good form,â€� said Johnson. The World No.1 made no bogeys Sunday and shot a 5-under-par 67. But, he said he left a lot of birdies out there. “I hit it a lot better than my score,â€� said Johnson. “I just hit a lot of good putts that just didn’t go in the hole. But I really feel like the game is in good form. I feel like I played well every day here. Just didn’t hole enough putts.â€� Johnson flew home to Florida Sunday evening where he’ll have some family time before coming back up to Akron, Ohio for his title defense. With a big smile he said he was excited to see his kids. He also said he feels ‘comfortable’ over the golf ball right now, and is eager to tee-it-up for the next two events. “I’m hitting my irons good and hitting good wedge shots. I’m really looking forward to the next two weeks,â€� he said. Hoffman looking ahead Although it wasn’t the result Charley Hoffman was looking for Sunday at the RBC Canadian Open, falling short in a playoff against Jhonattan Vegas, his fifth top-5 finish of the year will help push him forward with good momentum moving into the FedExCup Playoffs, the PGA Championship, and of course the Presidents Cup. “The whole progress of going forward, and I’m doing that, playing well, and obviously you always want to finish these ones off. It’s going to be a little bittersweet but I’m happy with the way I played,â€� said Hoffman. “Obviously good momentum. Got a major championship and the FedExCup coming up, and looking forward to that and hopefully I can keep it going.â€� Hoffman admitted he hit a poor tee shot on the playoff hole, and that was ultimately his demise. Although Vegas also found a fairway bunker, Vegas had a line to the green, unlike Hoffman. “Just hit really probably the worst drive of the week for me down there and Jhonny caught a break by having a shot at the green. Hats off to him the way he played,â€� said Hoffman. “I played great. Just didn’t get the putts to the hole, which is probably going to be what I’m probably going to lose a little sleep over.â€� Hoffman is projected to move to 12th in the FedExCup standings, a career-high. Hagy makes big FedExCup jump Brandon Hagy made his professional debut in Canada at the Nova Scotia Open on the Web.com Tour in 2014, and things came full circle Sunday at Glen Abbey, with Hagy notching his best-ever TOUR finish north of the border. Hagy fired a 4-under-par 68 Sunday to move into a tie for fifth. Starting the week he was 129th on the FedExCup standings, but he’s projected to move to 108th, and the result, he said, will do wonders for his confidence moving forward. “It feels really good. I’ve worked really hard for this. I’ve played some good golf. I think some of my finishes haven’t shown how I’ve been playing. It’s kind of the rub of the green,â€� Hagy explained. “It’s tough out here. It’s all the best players in the world, but I knew I just had to keep staying the course… It feels pretty good.â€� Hagy said the key to his round was staying mentally focused on the task-at-hand, something he’s been trying to improve on. “I’m really proud of how I played. It’s nice to make that eagle on the second hole and kind of get it going. Made some good putts. Chipped in once. I’m just really happy with how I kept my composure out there and tried to stay as neutral as possible,â€� he said. “I’ve been working on that a lot this last year, too, so it definitely played off.â€� Robert Garrigus, who tied Glen Abbey’s course record with a 10-under-par 62 on Saturday fired a 3-under-par 69 on Sunday and finished tied with Hagy and Tony Finau for fifth. Garrigus, too, moved into the Top 125 on the FedExCup, from 131st on the 109th.

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Junior’s to serve cheesecake and more at THE NORTHERN TRUST’s ‘Taste NY Marketplace’Junior’s to serve cheesecake and more at THE NORTHERN TRUST’s ‘Taste NY Marketplace’

Old Westbury, New York – As attendees stroll the fairways at THE NORTHERN TRUST, the first event in the PGA TOUR’s FedExCup Playoffs, they will be able to taste a slice of New York, as the tournament announced today that Junior’s Cheesecake will be served onsite, along with some of its other famous items. Served at the tournament’s Taste NY Marketplace, an upgraded concession and fan destination, Junior’s is one of several new food venues meant to capture the unique, world-class food culture of Manhattan. Featuring fashion, food and do-or-die drama as the top 125 players in the FedExCup compete on a world stage, THE NORTHERN TRUST will be played at the prestigious Glen Oaks Club in Old Westbury, New York, from August 22-27, 2017. Founded by Harry Rosen in 1950 in Brooklyn, Junior’s landmark restaurant is known as the home of New York’s best cheesecake. Today, Junior’s has several locations, from the original on Flatbush Avenue in Brooklyn, to the theater district on Broadway in Times Square, and even at the Fox Tower Hotel at Foxwoods Casino in Connecticut. This August, Junior’s will add a new location during tournament week at THE NORTHERN TRUST, giving players and fans the chance to experience one of New York’s favorite traditions. “We look forward to showing PGA TOUR players and professional eaters from around the country what New Yorkers have known for over 67 years,â€� said Alan Rosen, third-generation owner of Junior’s Restaurant & Bakery. “We look forward to serving some of our signature items like Reuben’s, corned beef, pastrami and of course cheesecake at THE NORTHERN TRUST.” The recipe for Junior’s Cheesecake remains unchanged, featuring only the finest ingredients like premium cream cheese, fresh heavy cream, eggs and a touch of vanilla. In 1973, New York Magazine conducted a blind taste test and rated Junior’s the best cheesecake in New York, and since then, it has won several accolades and awards including the “Best Overall Mail-order Cheesecakeâ€� from the Wall Street Journal and “Best Food Gift NYâ€� from People Magazine. Junior’s will also be serving other items, like its famous Reubens, onsite. Junior’s will be available at THE NORTHERN TRUST in the Taste NY Marketplace as part of a partnership with New York State. Located in a shaded area adjacent to the 16th fairway of the Glen Oaks Club, Taste NY will sponsor the venue and feature menu items from various iconic New York restaurants that will be announced in the lead-up to the event. The area also features various other enhancements and is open to all fans onsite. New York State Agriculture Commissioner Richard A. Ball said, “We are proud to sponsor the Taste NY Marketplace and highlight all of the great New York restaurants and businesses who make some of the best food and beverages in the world. The Taste NY Marketplace will be an exciting destination for THE NORTHERN TRUST fans and spectators who are looking to sample locally made products and unique dishes from iconic New York restaurants.  We look forward to connecting even more consumers to New York agriculture and cuisine.â€�  THE NORTHERN TRUST will kick off the FedExCup Playoffs at the Glen Oaks Club in Old Westbury, New York, August 22-27, 2017. For more information and a behind-the-scenes look at the tournament, visit thenortherntrust.com or follow the tournament on Twitter and Instagram @TheNTGolf, and on Facebook at www.facebook.com/TheNTGolf. To purchase tickets, please visit www.thenortherntrust.com or call 844-868-7465.

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Billy Hurley’s naval path to the PGA TOURBilly Hurley’s naval path to the PGA TOUR

When Billy Hurley III played in the 2005 Walker Cup, his teammates included Matt Every, Brian Harman and J.B. Holmes, all players he now competes against regularly on the PGA TOUR. But his path to the TOUR decidedly different than theirs. He graduated from the United States Naval Academy in 2004 and had a five-year service commitment before he could even think about making his living playing golf. That Navy career took Hurley to Pearl Harbor as well as to the Persian Gulf, where he served aboard the USS Chung-Hoon, which is a 10,000-ton, guided missile destroyer that was charged with protecting Iraqi oil platforms. And often, Hurley was the man driving the ship, winning several handling awards along the way and even navigating the Suez Canal. Hurley, who competes this week in THE PLAYERS Championship, focused on a career at the helm early on in part because he thought his eyesight would preclude him from flying. Even when the Navy decided to allow pilots who had LASIK surgery midway through his stint at the Academy, Hurley stayed the course – literally. “We have ships at the Naval Academy that we use for training just there in the Severn River and Chesapeake Bay,â€� Hurley says. “And you know, the first time doing that I knew I was pretty good at it and just really enjoyed it. “It was just a lot of fun.â€� After graduation, Hurley was selected to be a surface warfare office – and learning to drive the ship was the first order of business. He says it normally takes nine months to a year, depending on sea time, to prove competency, which is followed by an oral examination by the captain, XO and other senior officers. “That usually consists of a lot of standard kind of questions and then some situational kind of questions and then some emergency procedures to kind of make sure that you know what you would do … in an equipment failure,â€� he explains. “There’s very regimented steps.â€� “It’s already laid out. It’s not guesswork. It’s if this happens, you do one, two, three, four. If that fixes it, great. If it doesn’t, then you do five, six, seven, eight. So you kind of have to have all that memorized and know that really like the back of your hand.â€� The destroyer, which in Hurley’s case was 509-and-a-half feet long, has two rudders and two huge screw propellers. The rudders can’t operate independently except in an extreme emergency. The screws are a different story, though. “So that’s obviously just like driving a speed boat on the lake, you turn the wheel to go left, you go left,â€� Hurley says. “But the unique thing about having two propellers is that you can operate those in different ways to, to kick the ship or back the ship up in a different angle. “So we call it twisting the ship where you could make one of the propellers go backwards and one go forward and the ship will kind of nearly just twist in place if you do it right.â€� Hurley, who picked up his first TOUR victory at the 2016 Quicken Loans National about an hour from Annapolis where the Naval Academy is located, says you can even make the 10,000-ton behemoth go straight sideways by twisting the screws and doing the opposite with the rudders. “It’s really cool,â€� he says. “It’s really cool.â€� The trip through the Suez Canal, according to Hurley, was more of a management situation “where you’re just kind of making sure you’re in between the buoys and stay in the middle.â€� Once, though, he was the man giving the orders as the destroyer got underway from Pearl Harbor without using any tugboats. “We twisted and twisted and kind of just came off the pier and then, and then drove out of the slip,â€� Hurley recalls. “So that was, that was one of the cooler things. “I think I made the captain a little nervous when I told him I wanted to try. Sir, I think I can do this without tugs. He’s like, y-e-a-h, I know you can. (And I was like) well, no, I can, like, we can do this without tugs. So we had the tugs obviously there … but we didn’t end up using any of their help. So that was really fun.â€� So does driving a car seem easy now that he’s maneuvered massive destroyers through the Red Sea and the South China sea? “Honestly, it’s very, very, very different,â€� Hurley says. “The thing about a ship is when you turn the wheel, it doesn’t just go. There’s a little lag time. So unlike driving a car where you can do nearly what you want immediately, you have to be constantly thinking ahead. “Then you have wind and you have current and you have all these other things that you’re paying attention to as well, that can help you if you do it right and can make it really, really difficult if you do it wrong.â€� Not that Hurley made too many mistakes.

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