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Review of The Haney Project Debut

by Rush Limbaugh - Jan 12,2011

RUSH: Evansville, Indiana. This is Phil. I’m glad you waited, sir. Welcome to the Rush Limbaugh program.

CALLER: Mega 20-year listening dittos, Rush.

RUSH: Thank you very much, sir.

CALLER: Hey, just wanted to let you know that my wife and I enjoyed watching you on The Haney Project last night and look forward to the upcoming episodes.

RUSH: Thank you, sir, very much. I’ll say this: ‘Episode five. Focus on it. They’re all good, they’re all good, but don’t miss episode five.

CALLER: Oh, I won’t.

RUSH: What did you like about it?

CALLER: I just thought it was really entertaining. I liked, umm… You there, Rush?

RUSH: Right here.

CALLER: Okay. I thought it was really enjoyable from just the interaction between you and Hank and I can sort of relate to my golf game. I like to play each week, but some of the frustrations of the game,. Trying to knock it out of the bunker?

RUSH: Yeah.

CALLER: I can relate to that. Looking at the green from the standpoint of looking at the ball and trying to find out where to hit it.

RUSH: Haney has fixed the bunker problem. If you watched the show last night you heard me say, ‘I have no idea what I’m doing getting out of a sand trap, a bunker.’ Hell, I mean, I have no idea where the ball is going period any time I swung the club. You know, you want to try to change that. You want to have some idea where it’s going. You want to be able to go in the general direction you’re aimed, and the game is so seductive ’cause the ball isn’t moving. It looks like it would be one of the easiest things in the world to do. It’s not like somebody’s throwing that ball at you 90 miles an hour. But it is very hard because the movements that you undertake to hit the golf ball are really not natural and that’s why they have to be taught. Well, some people naturally inclined to them if they’re athletic. Most people aren’t, it has to be taught. But I’m glad you liked it, Phil. Thanks much. Next episode next Tuesday at nine on the Golf Channel.

BREAK TRANSCRIPT

RUSH: Mike in Long Beach, California, hello and welcome to the program.

CALLER: Sir, it’s an honor.

RUSH: Thank you.

CALLER: First off, happy birthday.

RUSH: Thank you, sir.

CALLER: It’s my birthday as well, and I think it’s a good idea what you’re saying earlier, just to reflect on the blessings you have in your own life, not only on Thanksgiving and Christmas but on your own birthday.

RUSH: Thank you, sir, very much, I appreciate that.

CALLER: But the reason I’m calling is the Hank Haney Project last night. Yours by far so far is my favorite. It was not only entertaining, but helpful. The best quote of the night actually didn’t come from Hank, it came from you, I’m not sure that you’re aware of that —

RUSH: What did you hear?

CALLER: What I heard was, you were on the range, and I don’t know if you had your driver out or an iron but your ball went left when you hit it, and you said, ‘Nothing good ever happens when you go left.’

RUSH: Oh, yeah.

CALLER: I just started busting up. It was hilarious.

RUSH: (laughing)

CALLER: It’s never good to go left in golf, but politically and morally, how much worse, you know?

RUSH: There’s no question about it. No question about it. Now, I’ve used that line a couple times. I remember I was playing at Pine Valley, one of the nation’s top five courses. I was a guest there. And I was playing in a group behind Tom Brady and Rodney Harrison, when Rodney Harrison was rehabbing from a busted knee that he had experienced in a game prior season against the Steelers. I had just met Harrison in the clubhouse and I’d talked to him for awhile about football. He was a safety and so forth, and he duck hooked his tee shot. We’re all in the tee box waiting behind him. And I said, ‘Nothing good ever happens when you go left.’ (laughing) And he looked back at me with sort of a glare and then a little bit of a smile trickled on his face. I happened to see him back in December the 19th up in Boston for the Sunday night game with the Packers and the Patriots, and we relived the moment. He’s a good guy.