NFL, NBA, and Olympic Athletes Explain How Golf is Unlike Any Other Sport

data-mm-id=”_ucdt2nl0j”>The week before the Fourth of July, a group of men and women with very different career journeys all gathered at Liberty National Golf Club in Jersey City, New Jersey. The resumes in attendance were impressive, to say the least. There were Olympic gold medalists and Super Bowl champions, baseball Hall of Famers and Wimbledon winners. This eclectic group of accomplished athletes was gathered for the ICON series tournament, described as, "a truly unique sporting event, bringing together the world's biggest sporting icons to compete in a series of competitive team matchplay format events." Set up like an amateur Ryder Cup of sorts, there were two teams comprised of 13 athletes each. The American team, led by Fred Couples, faced off against the Rest of the World team, captained by Ernie Els. Each squad was rife with star power. Pudge Rodriguez vs. Marshall Faulk. Ash Barty vs. Michael Vick. The teams battled over the course of two days in various iterations of match play featuring different combinations of athletes capped off by a final day of singles matches. For all of the walking examples of athletic excellence, though, only Couples and Els dedicated their lives to golf. There were a few athletes, like John Smoltz, who were nearly as good at golf as they were at their chosen profession, but the field was mostly comprised of athletes who played golf in their spare time. Because they are or were professional athletes, they're much better than your average Joe out there on the course. But golf isn't like football or basketball. It is a different beast entirely, even for men and women who made a living off their athletic prowess. Several of these athletes spoke to The Big Lead about how much different golf really is. Michael Phelps has been retired from competitive swimming since the 2016 Olympics and, to hear him tell it, has spent all his free time since on the golf course. The self-described golf junkie compared the mental aspects of swimming and golf during a press conference before heading out to the course. "I think when I was swimming, it was the preparation that made me do everything that I did, right?" said the 23-time Olympic gold medalist. "I’d just get off the block and basically fall in, be on that autopilot, be in that matrix field. For me, I probably haven't hit 50,000 golf balls to be able to do that, or 100,000 golf balls to be able to have that same kind of mental approach to do it as I did in swimming. Do I hope to get there? Yeah, one day. I don’t know when that’s going to be.More Articles About Golf:

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