Calculus, golf and Francesco Molinari

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Posted by upbeat | Posted in International Education | Posted on October 24, 2010

The rather tenuous education link to this post is that the only positive memory I have of mathematics lessons at secondary school was that my maths teacher said his two great passions in life were golf and calculus, and that they were both very much related. Trajectory of the ball apparently. If what he said was true I just wish he’d given us some maths problems featuring golf shots, distances, power, force etc. to make interesting for me what I found to be an astonishingly dry set of lessons all those years ago.

Ryder Cup winner Francesco Molinari meets one of the fans!

Ryder Cup winner Francesco Molinari meets one of the fans!

With no thoughts of calculus or formulae for golf ball trajectory I made my way to the Oceanico Victoria Golf Course in Vilamoura. What a beautiful day it was in the Algarve, Portugal last Sunday for the final day of the European Golf Tour Portugal Masters. Great to see at close hand the fantastic play of winning Ryder Cup Team member Francesco Molinari shooting a 62. A very inconsistent few days for Francesco with a very unusual set of scores over the four days  –  74, 62, 74, 62.

Francesco claimed nine birdies and an eagle at the par-five 3rd for his second 10-under-par round of the weekend, giving him a share of second place. Also at 16 under were the Swede Robert Karlsson, the Spaniard Gonzalo Fernández-Castaño and Joost Luiten of the Netherlands. Robert Green of Australia won the tournament at 18 under. And I bet none of these brilliant golfers are any good at calculus.

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