GOLF's GLOBAL GOLD RUSH

GOLF's GLOBAL GOLD RUSH

GOLD PRICE


Gold price by GoldBroker.com

WORLD STADIUMS

WORLD STADIUMS

STADE de FRANCE

STADE de FRANCE
Paris, France

CAPETOWN STADIUM

CAPETOWN STADIUM
Capetown, SOUTH AFRICA

KHALIFA INTERNATIONAL STADIUM

KHALIFA INTERNATIONAL STADIUM
Doha, Qatar

TOKYO NATIONAL STADIUM

TOKYO NATIONAL STADIUM
Tokyo, Japan

SINGAPORE NATIONAL STADIUM

SINGAPORE NATIONAL STADIUM
Singapore

SYDNEY STADIUM

SYDNEY STADIUM
Sydney, AUSTRALIA

HONG KONG STADIUM

HONG KONG STADIUM
Hong Kong

NEW ZEALAND STADIUM

NEW ZEALAND STADIUM
Auckland, NEW ZEALAND

ZAYED SPORTS STADIUM

ZAYED SPORTS STADIUM
Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates

SHANGHAI NATIONAL STADIUM

SHANGHAI NATIONAL STADIUM
Shanghai, China

THE ROSE BOWL

THE ROSE BOWL
Pasadena, California

SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA

SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA

MOSCOW NATIONAL STADIUM

MOSCOW NATIONAL STADIUM
Moscow, RUSSIA

BEIJING OLYMPIC STADIUM

BEIJING OLYMPIC STADIUM
Beijing, China

LONDON OLYMPIC STADIUM

LONDON OLYMPIC STADIUM
London, United Kingdom

DUBAI SPORTS CITY

DUBAI SPORTS CITY
Dubai, United Arab Emirates

THE FUTURE OF GOLF

THE FUTURE OF GOLF

INTERGALACTIC GOLF IS FOR EVERYONE

INTERGALACTIC GOLF = Greatest Golf Competition & Party ....Ever!

We activate an extraordinary experience in order to raise substantial funds for our charity partners around the world.

INTERGALACTIC GOLF is in the form of a traveling golf and entertainment experience.

We are a Carbon Neutral, Green Technology Driven Professional Golf and Entertainment Tour featuring the greatest professional men and women golfers from all major tours around the world, plus celebrities, artists, world leaders, and world qualifying juniors/adult amateurs.

INTERGALACTIC GOLF events are located in mesmerizing locations around the world and providing optimal live, mobile, or at home experience.

THE INTERGALACTIC GOLF TOURNAMENT PURSE is $25 Million per event.

$10 Million has been set aside for Par 3 Tournaments under the lights.

A mandatory percentage of all Pro's Winnings will go to a charity of their choice. Events, Tournaments, and Festivities will take place for several weeks in each city leading up to the actual INTERGALACTIC GOLF WEEK.

INTERGALACTIC GOLF is dedicated to inspiring all people around the world by focusing on the fresh, fun, and cool side of life and golf. INTERGALACTIC GOLF is creating a world in which every young person is prepared to succeed, actively pursuing their dreams.

INTERGALACTIC teaches vital life skills needed for success through golf and arts programming found at our "INTERGALACTIC" branded facilities around the world.

INTERGALACTIC GOLF is simply a Utopia traveling around the world and
most often found in college and university towns or sports & entertainment capitals around the world such as: Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, Honolulu, Las Vegas, Dallas, Houston, Denver, Kansas City, Nashville, Louisville, Memphis, Atlanta, New Orleans, Orlando, Myrtle Beach, London, Berlin, Barcelona, Moscow, Budapest, Istanbul, Tel Aviv, Kuwait City, Doha, Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Mumbai, Bangalore, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Seoul, Kuala Lumpur, Jakarta, Karachi, Singapore, Cape Town, Sydney, Melbourne, and many other locations.

INTERGALACTIC GOLF

INTERGALACTIC GOLF

INTERGALACTIC GOLF FAST FACTS

1) INTERGALACTIC GOLF is in the form of a 7 Star Golf, Entertainment, and Empowerment Tour & League featuring the greatest DJ's, musicians, professional men and women golfers from all major world tours, the greatest celebrity and professional athlete golfers, the best youth golfers, and other VIP's and World Leaders who love golf and want to empower humanity by promoting golf in the greatest of ways. WE come together, united as INTERGALACTIC, to promote golf as a social and economic mobility tool, rather than using golf as a social and economic control mechanism as it has been for so many years.

2) INTERGALACTIC GOLF is among other things a massive global charity fund raising platform capable of raising tens of billions per year for 1,000 global charities dedicated to empowering and inspiring humanity, educating youth, teaching golf-arts-science, and much more.

3) INTERGALACTIC GOLF is a highly innovative television and live event marketing, advertising, and pr platform rooted in long term global grassroots development. Imagine a global golf tour promoting and supporting the greatest golf and entertainment talent in the world that travels to the most beautiful golf resorts in the world and features the greatest DJ's, Bands, Break Dancing Competitions, Go Go Dancers, Super Sport Car Shows, Fashion Shows, and more. INTERGALACTIC GOLF is this and much, much more.

4)INTERGALACTIC GOLF will connect with the emotional, social, physical, and psychological touchpoints of humanity, thus activating increased sales and Return On Investment for those cities, countries, sponsors, and investors, who fund our platform.

5) INTERGALACTIC GOLF is a very expansive vision layed out for THE FUTURE of GOLF, ENTERTAINMENT, and THE WORLD over the next 10 years.

6) Supporting INTERGALACTIC GOLF is a brilliant idea for any brand manager or equity firm with diversified investments looking for ways in which to market their artist, product, or service.

THE FUTURE of GOLF

THE FUTURE of GOLF

Monday, July 14, 2008

JULY14, 2008-GREG NORMAN's GOT IT GOIN ON





Hello Peoples.
As always, click on the title to get some good visual treats and education on The Shark.

The Aussie, who has 87 career world wide victories, has taken time off to pursue design and entrepreneurial activities.
But in July, he was back at it over a three week span playing in The British Open, British Senior Open, and The Senior PGA Championship.

He played extremely well and thanks to his wife, Tennis Legend Chris Everet, he is back out enjoying the game he is so great at.

I am looking forward to working with Mr. Norman on some level as I am certain he loves the idea of creating new product offerings for golf.

He is what you call a Super Golf Entrepreneur.
Following is some more information about The Shark.

Gregory John Norman AM (born February 10, 1955) is an Australian professional golfer and entrepreneur who spent 331 weeks as the world's number one ranked golfer in the 1980s and 1990s. He is nicknamed "The Great White Shark," or simply "The Shark," a reference to a shark inhabiting Australian waters as well as Norman's blond hair, size and aggressive golf style.

Norman was born in Mount Isa, Queensland, Australia to Merv and Toini Norman. His mother was of Finnish descent. As a youth, he played rugby and cricket and was a keen surfer. His mother was a fine golfer with a single-figure handicap. Norman began playing golf at 16 and within a year was playing to a scratch handicap. His professional career began as Charlie Earp's trainee in the Royal Queensland Golf Club pro shop, earning $A28 a week.[1] The first professional tournament he won was the 1976 West Lakes Classic at The Grange in Adelaide, South Australia.

Success on the European Tour and later the PGA Tour followed. Norman won The Open Championship twice, in 1986 and 1993, and also won The Players Championship in 1994 in record-setting fashion (averaging 68.81 per round for the year). Despite his huge success on the U.S. PGA Tour and his many wins around the world, Norman is sometimes regarded as an underachiever (given his talents), a characterization fueled by his myriad near-misses in The Masters, the U.S. Open, and the PGA Championship. He was equally a victim of his own bad luck and good luck on the part of his fellow golfers in major championships. He infamously lost a near-certain PGA Championship in 1986 after Bob Tway holed a greenside bunker shot (though Norman himself shot a 76 that day), and lost The Masters the following year in a playoff on an even more miraculous 45-yard chip shot by Larry Mize on the second play-off hole. In 1989, Norman played brilliantly in a final-round 64 to force his way into a playoff for the Open Championship, but on the final hole of the playoff (while leading) drove the ball into a fairway bunker that he thought was out of reach even for his prodigious driving length, and was unable to rescue himself, allowing Mark Calcavecchia to snatch victory; and in the 1993 PGA Championship he had a final green putt of around twelve feet for victory that lipped right around the hole and failed to drop, and lost the subsequent playoff to Paul Azinger.

In 1986, he led all four majors after the third round but won only The Open. This has been referred to as the "Norman Slam" or the "Saturday Slam," as he was leading after the third round on Saturday but lost in the final round on Sunday. He is one of only two players to have competed in - and, like Craig Wood, to have lost - play-offs in all four of the major championships. Perhaps the worst meltdown occurred at The Masters in 1996, where he blew a six-stroke lead in the final round and lost the tournament to Nick Faldo by five strokes, shooting a Sunday 78 to Faldo's 67. ESPN, as part of their "ESPN25" 25th-anniversary celebration, ranked Norman's 1996 Masters mishap as the third-biggest sports choke of the last 25 years. Despite the losses, though, Norman still has 29 top-ten finishes in the majors.

After a career slump in the early 1990s, Norman turned to Butch Harmon for help. Together, the two rebuilt Norman's game to top form (The Pro, by Claude 'Butch' Harmon Jr., 2006) by solving mechanical problems that had crept into Norman's swing.
With Jack Nicklaus past his best, Norman was regarded as probably the game's greatest long hitter. In his heyday, driving long and incredibly straight off the tee similar to that of Nick Price his contemporary with a persimmon (wood) clubhead, he intimidated most of his fellow professionals. However, with the advent of the "metal-wood" by TaylorMade and other subsequent advances in golf ball and golf club technology (especially the variable face depth driver), his dominance was significantly diminished, as the "new technology" enabled less precise ball-strikers to achieve equal or better accuracy and distance. Whether the cause was shaken confidence, the new technology, or the emergence of golf's next generation of young stars (including Tiger Woods), Norman was never the same after his final Masters collapse.

Since then he has focused more and more on business ventures and golf course design than on competitive play. He turned 50 in February 2005, but has kept his distance from the senior golf circuit. Partly this is because of his other interests, but also because of back and knee injuries. (He required knee surgery for the latter in October 2005 and February 2006.[2]) Norman believes his back injuries could have been averted had he been introduced to the concept of golf fitness early in his career.[3]
Articulate and with a friendly image, Norman has for years been a spokesman for companies including General Motors-Holden, which developed a Commodore model named after him. His own businesses interests include MacGregor Golf and Greg Norman Golf Course Design. He continues to play tournaments, his growing business interests take up an increasing amount of his time. His personal wealth is estimated to be in the hundreds of millions of U.S. dollars.

Norman's hobbies include offshore game fishing. He has owned a succession of increasingly large and luxurious boats (though his latest, called Aussie Rules, after the sport Australian rules football, may best be described as a small ship) for the purpose. He even described his "ugly" 1993 PGA Championship loss "[i]n fishing terms, this was a mackerel in the moonlight—shining one minute, smelly the next."[4] He became a wine lover in the 1970s while playing at tournaments in Europe.[5] During Norman's first trip to the United States in 1976, when he was chosen to represent Australia in the World Cup of Golf in Palm Springs, he soaked up as much of the culture as he could, including trying California's wines. In the 1990's, Norman partnered with winemakers from Berringer Blass to launch Greg Norman Estates wineries.[6] Based in Hobe Sound, Florida, he typically plays only one or two tournaments per year in his homeland of Australia.

Norman won the PGA Tour of Australia's Order of Merit six times: 1978, 1980, 1983, 1984, 1986, and 1988. He won the European Tour's Order of Merit in 1982, and topped the PGA Tour's Money List in 1986, 1990, and 1995. He won the Vardon Trophy for lowest scoring average on the PGA Tour three times: 1989, 1990, and 1994; and was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in 2001. His dominance over his peers (despite his comparative lack of success in the majors) was probably best expressed in the Official World Golf Rankings: Norman finished the season on top of the ranking list on seven occasions, in 1986, 1987, 1989, 1990, 1995, 1996 and 1997, and was second at the end of 1988, 1993 and 1994.

In May 2008, Norman played in only his third Champion's Tour event since turning 50, the 69th Senior PGA Championship at Oak Hill Country Club. Norman, having not played competitive golf regularly in the last several years, stayed in contention all week and wound up three shots behind eventual winner Jay Haas (+7), tying for sixth place. His new wife (as of 6/28/2008), tennis legend Chris Evert, has been a large part of Norman's consideration to enter events on the PGA and Champions tour. "I would doubt he'd go back full time," Evert said. "But for him to keep it up, one or two tournaments a month or whatever, would be great. I would 100 per cent support him if that's what he wanted to do."

In July 2008, despite not playing in a major for three years, Norman finished nine over par in a tie for third at The Open Championship after being the 54 hole leader by two strokes. He set the record in becoming the oldest 54-hole leader in a major championship and earned an automatic bid to the 2009 Masters. The following two weeks, Norman continued his strong play, finishing in a tie for fifth at The Senior Open Championship after a weekend 67-68 and fourth in the U.S. Senior Open after being the only player shooting 72 or lower all four days.

In 1986, Norman was awarded the BBC Sports Personality of the Year Overseas Personality Award, a feat he replicated in 1993 to join Muhammad Ali and Björn Borg as multiple winners (They have since been joined by Roger Federer). He received the 2008 Old Tom Morris Award from the Golf Course Superintendents Association of America, GCSAA's highest honor, at the 2008 Golf Industry Show in Orlando. Norman is a member of The Environmental Institute for Golf's board of trustees and also chairs The Institute's advisory council. He was the also the recipient of the Golf Writers Association of America's 2008 Charlie Bartlett Award.

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