The CSGA Links Volume 5 Issue 4 September, 2017 | Page 7

hands in gestures meant to explain that that we did not want to read or buy the newspaper. It lasted only a few seconds, ending as quickly and as unexpectedly as it began. And at the precise moment when we thought we had successfully repelled the attack, when the three urchins turned and darted down a nearby alley, I realized my pocket had been picked and my passport was gone. *** Standing in line at the US Embassy I met a Filipino man who knew nothing about golf, but a lot about his own country. He was a doctor, whose medical schooling in America had been paid for by the Philippine government on the condition that he return to serve his homeland for at least five years. I asked him about the country’s drinking water. We had received numerous warnings. Yes, housing and over-crowding were serious issues, but it was the lack of clean water and poor sanitation leading to widespread dysentery that was his country’s biggest problem. I filed the information away, reminded and appreciative once again of the quality of life we enjoy in the United States. *** Armed with a new, temporary passport that I kept well hidden for the next five days it was full immersion, sunrise to sunset at the Championship site, the Manila Southwoods Golf and Country Club. Andrea, an engineering student and an obsessive technician, had been working on hitting all of his wedge shots at less than 100%, a practice www.csgalinks.org I’d learned from Florida’s great coach, Buddy Alexander. No amount of analysis and discussion was too much for Andrea, and we spent time before and after every round on the driving range. For the Zimbabwe team, who still felt badly that I’d been mugged by a trio of children, I was mostly a cheerleader. In addition to Sergio there were two CSGA Links // September, 2017 | 7