Upon winning his first Asian Tour event tlastweekend, American pro golfer, Bryan Saltus, dedicated his victory to The Grateful Dead. Saltus, 38, celebrated with "This is awesome. I would like to dedicate this win to the Grateful Dead, as they have inspired me all the way," per an AP report. The Californian Saltus has seen over 150 Dead performances and enjoys similar improvisational music groups according to his rarely updated blog, BryanSaltus.com.
The site goes on to describe Bryan's swing as "reliable and self taught" as well as "completely unique to the game." While Das FanHaus recognizes that every golfer's swing is special and unique like a beautiful snowflake, we'd like to continue to hope that this guy is roaming the Asian Tour like some kind of Zen Master with a Happy GIlmore stroke and a penchant for ending conversations with "be excellent to each other." In absence of this, we would like him to dedicate his next victory to the early works of Phish.
The Asian Tour concludes this weekend with the Volvo Masters of Asia at the Thai Country Club of Bangkok.
The greatest name in all of sports belongs to the head of the World Anti-Doping Agency: the honorable and mighty Richard Pound, known to friends and potential dopers around the world of athletics as good ol' Dick Pound. The funniest things are those you do not have to make up, and Dick Pound's name--which happens to be Dick Pound--is definitely one of them.
church--a mostly chummy collection of very individual professionals who, when asked to cooperate for even a single event like the Ryder Cup, break out the diva behavior before a single ball leaves a tee..but do so very, very discreetly. 









