Long
ball champ
is all about power
By Shane Sharp, Contributing Writer
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (Dec. 17, 2002) -- Brian Pavlet is almost
apologetic about the record-setting 435-yard drive he crushed
at the 1997 Re/Max Long Drive Championship. It was downhill, downwind
and rolled a country mile after landing on a driving range surface
with all the cushion of an airport runway, he says.
Hey, no one feels cheated when the wind is blowing out at Pac
Bell Park and Barry Bonds hits a 450-foot bomb into McCovey Cove.
Why should the 35-year-old Pavlet feel the need to justify himself
to us short-knockers?
His time would be better spent explaining how he hits
the ball so far that it looks a sunflower seed held up against
a bright blue sky before it plummets back down to earth like a
discarded Space Shuttle engine.
And this is exactly what he does when he's not competing in
long drive events. Pavlet owns and operates a successful corporate
outings company out of his west Phoenix home, appropriately named
"On.in.Two."
"My
golf swing is very standard," Pavlet says, much to the disappointment
of hackers expecting him to reveal some secret, long drive voodoo.
"I don't go past parallel and I don't have an irregular takeaway.
There are no little quirks in it that give me extra power."
The 6-4, 225-pound Pavlet generates most of his power by being
6-4, 225 pounds. His ball speed has been clocked at 196 mph. For
those scoring at home, Eldrick Woods caps out around 186.
All conditions being equal, could Pavlet take Tiger off the
tee?
"Let's put it this way," Pavlet says. "I would
wax him off the tee and he would wax me right off the golf course."
In addition to his size, Pavlet's power also comes from his
superhuman hand speed developed during countless hours on the
baseball diamond. He was a pitcher for the University of Nevada-Reno
until he blew out his shoulder hurling 90 plus mph fastballs.
Somehow, 90 doesn't seem so fast anymore when you can launch
a golf ball through a 1 inch piece of plywood.
Pavlet's sport has moved up the respectability scale a few notches
thanks in part to the Pinnacle Distance Challenge. He and six
of his closest Titanium toting friends traveled to ten sites around
the country this year to mix it up with amateur golfers.
The format was simple: the Pinnacle team member and the weekend
warrior each hit four balls and the longest ball won. If the amateur
caught one flush and came out victorious, he'd take home $10,000
and earn a trip to hit against John Daly in Mesquite, Nev.
Pavlet's record during the tour's inaugural year was 29-1, begging
the question, "Who in the heck was responsible for the '1'?"
"Some guy from North
Carolina, I think," says Pavlet, frighteningly unconcerned.
"I hit four bad balls and hit one pretty good one 340 yards.
That is all it takes. Some of these guys that show up at the Pinnacle
Distance Challenge are big hitters trying to make their way to
the championship."
In fact, when these not-so-sneaky-long amateurs did show up
at Si
Redd's Oasis driving range to hit against Daly, they stuck
it to Big John by taking nine of 12 matches.
"Daly
is the longest hitter on the PGA Tour and these guys that beat
him and qualified for the championship usually don't make it past
the first round against the professionals," says Pavlet.
"We swing that much faster than PGA players. But they have
their thing and we have ours. Theirs just pays better."
But Pavlet isn't just about the long ball. He doesn't fall apart
in the fairways from 150 yards in, or get the yips on three-foot
putts. He is a legit 3-handicap who enjoys finessing a 15-yard
chip shot to within 6 inches of the cup just as much as he does
ripping a 350-yard drive.
Yeah, right.
"My game is all about power and that is what I love,"
Pavlet says. "I play golf courses from as far back as I can
and I take driver on every hole that I can. There's nothing worse
than a par 5 that takes driver out of your hand. No one talks
about the 30-foot par they sunk for par at the 19th Hole. Guys
want to hit it a long way off the tee. You see what happened to
that putting tour a while back and why the Long Drivers of America
is successful."
Seeing, in this case, is believing.
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