I flew to Mexico for a golf lesson from a Frenchman.
That’s where Jean Van de Velde, the affable golfer who once nearly had both hands on the Claret Jug but let it slip away in dramatic fashion is living and working these days, heading up the Jean Van de Velde Golf Academy at Punta Minta, located on the southernmost point of the Riviera Nayarit, 30 miles northwest of the resort city of Puerto Vallarta.
Who can forget the way he squandered a three-stroke lead on the last hole of the 1999 British Open at Carnoustie and lost to Scotland’s Paul Lawrie in a three-man playoff?
Van de Velde kept his chin up and dealt with defeat with class and a smile on his face. In October, we met for a golf lesson and a talk about the game he loves. It could’ve continued for hours, especially if we started drinking a good bottle of his wine, but unfortunately he had pick up duty and had to run off to fetch his son. Suffice it to say, he’s still active in the game as an instructor, television broadcaster, tournament operator and wine merchant among other things. One of the more fascinating parts of our talk occurred when we talked about the golf swing as he tried to straighten out my penchant to hook it and more recent struggles with a block to the right — “That’s when you load too much on the left on the backswing,” he said.
“I’m a guy who looks at what the golf ball does to identify what system you’re in. Whether it is a draw or a fade, as long as you control that shot it’s OK. What matters is repetition,” he said. “Then you decide, OK, this is what you do, and maybe with a little effort this is where you can be. Do you want to embark on that journey or learn to control the system you’re already in? I’m not the guy who is going to try to transform you just for the sake of it just because I have one swing thought in my head. Do I have a few preferences? It’s like the salt and the pepper in a recipe. At the end of the day, you need to have the ingredients.”
During his playing career, Van de Velde worked with legends in the teaching world from John Jacobs to David Leadbetter to Butch Harmon.
“David tried to re-make a few things,” Van de Velde said. “We tried to work on my takeaway. I was bringing the club a little too inside, I was crossing the line, my body had completed the turn and my arms were still moving. It’s all fine as long as you have the right timing, but when things go wrong again, where do you start? How do you get back on track as fast as you can? He said, ‘This is what I think,’ but at the end of the day it was my decision. He didn’t burn me with an iron and you’re going to do it. I implemented a few changes so I could swing in a way that was going to be more reliable. I did believe and I still do that he and Butch and John Jacobs and a few others were a big influence on me and they were right in their analysis.”
He continued: “Technique and teaching, I’ve always been very interested and read a lot of things and been lucky to be around some great thinkers on the swing. I believe the swing is made up of little imperfections. If you look at me swinging, I always had my hands behind at address, but I always started with a forward press. Do you want to change that or look at what goes together and make it happen? In 1999, I had control of my system and I putted pretty well. That year you see what I did at the Open but the best golf I played was in 2000 — by a mile. I played 18-20 times in America and finished 60th on the money list. I played I think 10 times in Europe and was 20 or 30th. In my life, I tried not to reinvent things. I used what others had done and adapted to myself. I told Bernhard Langer that I was going to try to play both tours and he said, ‘Just be careful. I tried that and it was complicated.’ I knew playing in the U.S. was going to have an expiration date. My kids were already in school in Geneva. It was hard to say, you know what, I’m going to play in America. Who’s around me? Who do I rely on? It wasn’t easy. It’s different now. The guys start playing in college golf and they make their lives straight away in the U.S. They are already structured whether it is Viktor Hovland or Jon Rahm.”
Van de Velde suggested I do a drill where I held the club with the face a few degrees open at address. In his disarming style, he said, “you’re on the range. It doesn’t matter. Let’s see what happens.”
I swung and the ball flew right at the flag where I was aiming.
“It ain’t going to go left, Sunshine,” he said. “Not possible.”
In that moment, Jean Van de Velde became my latest golf guru. Here’s more from Van de Velde on the Ryder Cup, what went wrong with budding French star Victor Dubuisson and the time he stuck Jose-Maria Olazabal with the tab for a dozen or so bottles of fine wine from the Augusta National wine cellar.
JVV: I don’t think it would’ve changed anything. You could always argue the choice of the second shot but how about the first 71 holes that put me so far ahead. Are we going to argue any of those? Everyone was hitting iron off the tee. I was pretty much the only one hitting driver. You could argue I had the wrong strategy except I pretty much had the right strategy. I was ahead of everybody else. I looked at my friends’ hitting irons into the rough and realized I might as well hit the bloody driver in the rough because you’ll be 60 yards up ahead. It’s common sense. Instead of chopping out and still having a long third, I had a short iron in my hands.
JVV: I was living in Valderrama (Spain) at the time. I lived there for four years. I’m married to a Mexican woman from the north. I was getting bored in the winter. I love it but 3-4 months a year, I needed something different.
I broadcast a bunch in America for French TV, doing the majors, Players and Ryder Cup, wherever that is. Though I married a Mexican woman, she lived in Arizona for 25 years. She said, ‘Are you sure?’ I said, ‘We’re not getting married to the place. If we don’t like it, we can leave in six months.’ I needed a different stimulation. We came to Mexico, found a place and moved in and two weeks later COVID strikes pretty hard and the city basically goes on lockdown.
I have a friend who is like a brother and he has a place in Careyes, which is 2 ½ hours south. You feel like you’re in Italy. He said, ‘Why don’t you come down? What are you going to do in Mexico City? We spent 3 ½ months there. I called Carl. He had invited me here before but I’d never had the opportunity before. I said to Carl (Emberson, head of marketing for Punta Mita), ‘I’m down the road, can I come for a week or so?’ He said, ‘Yeah, stay for as long as you want.’ Months and half later, we were still here.
We worked out a deal. I really like the lifestyle. We have a 17-year-old who lives with us and is going to the American School. We found a place halfway between here and the school. I didn’t want my son to commute 3 hours per day and I’m on site. So this is how we started. I’ve made a commitment to be here for at least the next three years. When I’m here, I’m here and when I’m not, I’m not.
Sometimes you have commitments and you have to go and you put a smile on but I’ve reached a stage in my life where I want to settle down and put the suitcase down a little more.
JVV: When I turned 50, they sent me a bunch of invites. I stopped playing in 2011 and in 2012 I started my own company and did consulting and many different things. The French Federation had a joint venture with a company. They owned the Tour de France in cycling and ran the French Open. At the time they weren’t happy with the direction it was going and offered me the job to run the French Open for five years. That was a big part of my life. When I turned 50 in 2016, I had played golf casually no more than 10 times a year. Never went to the gym, never went to the driving range. I said, ‘Sure,’ and went and played for six weeks and it was a disaster.
I played at Pebble Beach in the First Tee event and after 45 holes I was in the top 10. I saw my name on the leaderboard and got stage fright. No, I didn’t but there’s an expiration date to everything.
Mentally, more than anything else, I needed different challenges and the French Open gave me that opportunity. We transformed it a lot and I was very proud of what we managed to achieve. We went from 10,000 spectators to almost 70,000. We had a more structured tented village and were enriching the experiences for the spectators. I liked that. I had been there and done that and that’s why I didn’t push. I’ve played about once a year on the Legends Tour. I played about four times this year and I’ve committed to playing a little more next year. I want to see where that tour can go. I promote the Legends French Open with my company. We take the financial risk. We can’t compete with the big boys but it doesn’t matter. We have a lot to offer, some of the guys still want to be out there. We just need to find the right model. We’ve been tip-toeing a bit. I also do an exhibition, like a skins game in the north of France. Jose-Maria Olazabal came one year, I bring one of the French guys like Thomas Levet. That takes up a bit of my time. I’ve got a wine business too.
JVV: It’s called Wines of Golf Legends. We launched it during COVID. We’re present in 65 duty frees of the world. It’s only friends and they must love sitting around a table and drinking lots of wine and then they must be legends of golf. I have Woosie, Olazabal, Michael Campbell, Constantino Rocca, Laura Davies, Nancy Lopez is joining as well. I’m talking to Lorena Ochoa and Craig Stadler. People who actually like this sort of thing. I was born in Bordeaux so there’s nothing like sitting down to a good bottle of wine. We’ll end up with 18 players male and female. The concept is good. We won the best innovative product in the world of retail. That was good. They think this can work.
Wine is my passion since I was a young kid. My dad took me to visit vineyards when I was 8-9 years old. Some memories stay in your brain. I still see it in my head. From that moment on, I developed a passion for the wines.
When I played in the Masters in 2000, I made the cut and shot 75 on Saturday. I was so pissed. A member said I know you love wine, you should go see the cellar at Augusta National. My coach and people with me said, ‘What are we going to do this afternoon?’ I said, ‘I’m going to go down in the cellar.’ We had four bottles of wine down there. I spent 2 ½ hours down there. I went back to my house with more wine and we had dinner that night. The next morning, I couldn’t get my tongue out of my mouth. The cellar has over 400,000 bottles. They used to sell it to the members at the price they bought it plus a little storage time so you could drink a 1952 Lafite (Rothschild) for $60. Hello, I’ll take a dozen, please.
I had rented three houses for the Masters and I had 15 people with me. At Augusta National, they said, ‘I’m really sorry, but we can’t let you take bottles with you.’ I said, ‘Why not?’ He said, ‘Only members can take wine.’ I was a bit smashed but still I said, ‘If you’ve won the Masters does that count as a menber?’ He said, ‘Yes.’ I, said, ‘Put it on Olazabal’s account.’ He was the defending champion. We grew up 50 kilometers from each other, born the same year and have known him since we were 11 years old. I saw him the next day and said, ‘Just so you know, I put a few things on your account.’ He said, ‘Were they any good?’ He smiled and said, ‘Forget it.’ True story.
JVV: In 2002, I get a phone call from the BBC, would you work with us? Peter Alliss was vocal about me when I lost the Open, he was a player and projected himself into what happened. We became friends. We all have scars. I said how much do I need to pay you? I’m coming. I felt like the new king in town. I worked with Sky for over 10 years. Now, I’m working for Canal Plus.
JVV: Victor is a genius. I’ve seen people more talented, but he’s in the top 5. He has his own way of doing the practice and play. You can have a lot of talent. His approach to the way he practices and trains needs to be reconsidered, but that’s just my opinion. The talent is still there. He hits it so far and has every shot in the bag but he’s his own worst enemy. He could’ve been a major winner and not just one time. Because his game is so complete.
JVV: There are quite a few. It takes time and we put too much pressure on them and they start reading how good they are going to be. The real thing is not to believe it. Believe it when you’ve done it. It like a Rodin diamond. Shape it up and make it a beautiful piece but before, it’s just potential.
My only concern is you have to push yourself. I went to America to get my ass kicked. I wanted to see if I could perform with a group of people that were by and large better than where I was coming from. I wanted to see how far I could push myself. Could I win there? Could I keep my card? Maybe you’re going to touch the sky. But when it doesn’t happen you’ve got to be thinking what do I need to do to bring myself to another level?
JVV: It hurt a lot. I qualified on the team on my own right. It wasn’t just me. Jarmo Sandelin finished second 10 days before at the Lancome Trophy. He wasn’t a guy playing badly. I think the strategy was let’s use the bigger names and the guys who are playing really well as much as we can and be so far ahead we won’t be caught. You exhaust the guys. Send out Coltart and Van de Velde or Coltart and Sandelin together. What’s the worst thing that can happen? You use two guys to lose one point. The last day you use two guys and you lose two points. At least they are going to get rid of the nerves, you get used to the nerves and you’ll be comfortable. Sure, we were 4 ahead going into the last day but you’ve lost three already unless something magical happened and it wasn’t going to happen. Coltart played against Tiger, I played against Davis Love. The luck of the draw and they needed points straight away. That was it. Bad calculation, terrible calculation. Have you noticed it’s never happened again? I was very vocal about it. I was highly criticized. I knew my value and what I could do. It wasn’t personal. It was common sense.
JVV: He never gave me one. The next captain, Sam Torrance, didn’t do that. It hasn’t happened ever since and it will never happen again. It’s match play. Anything can happen.
It was problematic because nobody had an idea going in. Some of the guys said on Saturday, ‘Replace me, I’m tired.’ That I know for a fact. I was there. (James) said, ‘No, I really need you to play.’ Not only did they lose on Saturday afternoon, they lost on Sunday.
I’ll never understand what he was thinking. Andrew Coltart didn’t play until Sunday, either. He was a pick. I thought the essence of a pick was to choose someone who is a red-hot chili pepper. He’s so hot he’s going to put the place on fire. You’re going to pick a guy and sit him down? The real question to ask is why did (James) take him in the first place if he never intended to play him? It wasn’t because you thought you were going to play him or that Andrew had a problem. If that was the case, no one has ever said that. So, why was he picked? I have a theory but I’m saving it for my book. Just to make sure nobody is going to like me after that.