[thenightwriterblog] The Night Writer: My best round ever
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notify at powerblogs.com
Fri May 11 15:05:02 EDT 2007
Posted by The Night Writer:
My best round ever
http://thenightwriterblog.powerblogs.com/posts/1178910285.shtml
I love golf and have certain positive (and selective) memories I like
to share with others. What I'm about to relate, however, details one
outing where I never took a swing or even saw a club swung.
I was fully intending to play, however, when I drove out to
Minneapolis' F.A. Gross public course a few years ago to play in my
company league. I wheeled my pullcart and clubs up to the clubhouse
door and went inside to pay my greens fee and change into a pair of
shorts. It took me five minutes, max. When I came outside my clubs
were gone. Since it was a company league, I looked around to see if
one of my "friends" might be playing a joke on me. There was no one I
recognized or who even seemed to be paying attention to me. Certainly,
if you were playing a prank on someone, you'd want to be where you
could see the look on that person's face, right? After double-checking
the immediate area to be sure my clubs hadn't been moved out of the
way I went back inside and asked the guy at the counter and the ranger
standing nearby if anyone had found it necessary to move my clubs.
The guy at the counter said that none of the staff would have moved my
clubs, but suggested that someone might have taken them and he asked
the ranger to drive me through the parking lot to see if we could spot
the clubs or anything suspicious. We jumped into a golf cart and began
a circuit through the lot.
I had a strange feeling as we patrolled; normally I might be more than
a touch upset by the situation, especially since I had just bought new
irons a few weeks before that and I knew my wife, The Finance
Minister, was unlikely to authorize another disbursement of that sort.
Instead, I felt calm and had a little talk with God. My point,
essentially, was that He knew I tithed and that I expected him to kind
of keep an eye on my things and finances. I stayed calm and when the
parking lot search turned up nothing I headed back to the clubhouse
where a thought came to me: if my clubs were stolen it certainly
wouldn't be because another golfer coveted them (new irons or not);
therefore the culprit's objective would be to sell the clubs. I
believe that if I had let myself get angry my blood would have been
pounding so hard in my head that I wouldn't have heard that little
thought, or wouldn't have paid attention to it until much later.
I didn't have a cell phone then (and if I did, it probably would have
been in my golf bag anyway), so I got a bunch of change at the counter
and went over to the pay phone and Yellow Pages and started calling
atll the Play It Again Sports and SecondSwing stores in the metro
(after I called the police, that is). I started with the ones closest
to the golf course and worked out to the 'burbs in case the thief was
clever enough to try to put some distance between the scene and the
sale. With each call I described my clubs and golf bag in detail and
then moved on to the next store on the list.
After about 30 minutes of this I was talking to a store out in
Burnsville when a police officer walked into the clubhouse and was
pointed in my direction. He approached and I hung up. "You might want
to hear this, " he said, pointing toward the radio on his belt. He
spoke into his microphone and said, "I'm with the guy now."
Someone on the other end of the radio said, "Ok. The suspects are
still in the store. We've got a unit out back, and we're about to pull
up in front and hit the lights." A few minutes later we got another
word: "We've got 'em. You want to bring the guy over to identify the
items?"
Great! I got to ride in the police car (front seat) over to the Play
It Again store in Roseville, the closest such store to the golf course
and the first place I had called. Apparently the thief and his buddy
had stopped off to pick up a girlfriend and then went to the nearest
Play It Again (no one has ever suggested thieves are smart). In the
interim the manager had received my call, took my club description and
probably thought to himself, "Fat chance." Lo and behold, a few
minutes later these three teenagers had come into the store wanting to
sell a set of golf clubs. The manager later told me his heart started
pounding when he saw the bag (a distinctive one).
He decided to stall the kids, so he said he had to go look up the
putter in his books to determine it's value. He went back to his
office and once out of sight had someone on his staff call the police.
He then went back out and started vigorously negotiating with the
kids, club by club, trying to stall. He was wondering where the police
were and concerned that the kids would get frustrated and leave, when
a squad car pulled up to the front door.
When I arrived on the scene the kids were sitting in separate squad
cars and my golf bag and clubs were laid out on the asphalt parking
lot, along with everything else that was in the suspects' car. One of
the cops was taking inventory and needed me to help place a value on
everything. He pointed to my driver; "What's that worth?" A few
negative thoughts came to my mind, but I said, "Hard to say. My
brother built that for me."
"Oh," said the officer. "Custom-made. That's gotta be $300 at least!"
On we went through the contents. We got to the putter. "Now that," I
said, "Is a known offender. Better take it in for questioning."
"Yeah," the cop said. "I had one like that."
When all was said and done I got my clubs back on the spot and had a
chance to talk to the store manager and the officers from St. Anthony
(where the theft occurred) and Roseville (where the arrest was made).
Everyone, even the police, was charged up about being in on busting a
case. I then got to ride in the police car again back to golf course,
where it was much too late to get my round in. I went back to the Play
It Again and bought pizza for the crew. (The criminal masterminds were
all under 18 and were later shunted into an "alernative justice"
program).
When I got home my wife asked how everything went. "Great," I said,
"Wait until you hear this...."
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