T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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422.1 | For the morbid... | NHL::MARCHETTI | Mama said there'd be days like this. | Tue Oct 18 1988 14:56 | 6 |
| "Golfing Disasters" by Peter Dobereiner is a compilation of some
very humorous incidents in professional and top amateur golf. It
will make you feel a lot better about some of disasters we have
all had.
Bob
|
422.2 | we're all too human sometimes.. | TONTO::GORDON | | Tue Oct 18 1988 16:12 | 5 |
| re: .1
Agree...I have this book and after reading it some of my many
errors didn't seem to bother me as much...I could just shake my
head and laugh about them and move to the next shot!!
|
422.3 | Thanks | MTWAIN::F_MCGOWAN | | Tue Oct 18 1988 21:09 | 9 |
| Thanks for the tip. Any book that will make me feel better about
my game is right up my alley! Incidentally, I also managed to get
through Dave Hill's 1977 semi-autobiography, Teed Off. Among the
many interesting tidbits was his statement that the first (pardon
the expression) shank he ever hit was in the final round of a major
tournament (might have been the US Open, I don't recall), and that
all he thought about for the rest of the round is when he was going
to hit his second!
|
422.4 | | EUCLID::WARFIELD | Gone Golfing | Wed Oct 19 1988 19:01 | 19 |
| Re: .1
I enjoyed "Golfing Disasters" and would encourage you to read it.
(However the author did write that infamous article about the Irish
& TCC, so if you made a sacred vow not to read anything he wrote
you'll just have to skip it, or persuade yourself that he just wrote
down real events and read it for it's "historical" value!)
Re: .0
I've got Golf in the Kingdom and it's on deck behind my current serious
reading (a biography of Thomas Jefferson (so far no mention of him
golfing)). I have snuck a read of the first two chapters, but will
wait until I finish it for my book report.
I had seen Dogleg Madness at the same time. Given your recommendation
I'll pick it up for the winter.
Larry
|
422.5 | "Following Through" | ODIXIE::WESTCL | Gator Golfer | Thu Oct 20 1988 18:12 | 4 |
| Try "Following Through", by Herbert Warren Wind. Mr Wind has been
one of the great American golf writers over the last few decades.
Following Through is a compilation of some of his best work. I
found it extremely entertaining and informative. Good reading.
|
422.6 | Is me corned beef & cabbage ready yet? | MTWAIN::F_MCGOWAN | | Thu Oct 20 1988 19:36 | 12 |
| Yeah, I'm aware of Dobereiner's less-than-pristine reputation among
the Boston Irish (notable for having great senses of humor about
everyone and everything but themselves...speaking as one of Irish
descent and temper who was born and raised in Natick, and never
really considered himself "Boston"). I read the infamous article,
and thought it was pretty funny, and aimed at harpooning the blue-
bloods who founded The Country Club, not the poor paddies who had
to work there. But, as another Irishman found out (Jonathan Swift),
irony is the most misunderstood form of humor ("A Modest Proposal").
Frank Mc(pronounced "mick")Gowan
|
422.7 | Dead Solid Perfect | GRANPA::KVENEZIO | | Fri Oct 21 1988 14:20 | 13 |
| If you haven't read "Dead Solid Perfect" by Dan Jenkins ( notable
writer for SI ) you have missed one of the great non-fiction pieces
written on Golf. I believe the book is out of circulation so you'll
have to search the used market. It is considered a collectors item
due to it being out of circ. HBO has made a movie which will air
in Nov./Dec. I think Peter Jacobson will play the PGA pro. (A role
turned down by Ben Crenshaw). It is so funny and off color that
Deane Beamen would not have the PGA associated in any way.
It could be the next best thing to Caddyshack if it follows the
book script.
Ken
|
422.8 | Willard is back | NUTLET::RUBKE | | Fri Oct 21 1988 16:55 | 6 |
| "Dead Solid Perfect" is back in print. I bought a copy a couple
of months ago. It has been updated to reflect "today." I enjoyed
it so much that I loaned it to my tech. He doesn't play golf, but
he laughed his pitute off.
Bob
|
422.9 | Smoke One of Mine | BOSHOG::VARLEY | | Tue Oct 25 1988 09:58 | 17 |
| I'd recommend the following to anyone who appreciates golf humor,
history and architecture:
1. The Dogged Victims of Inexorable Fate - Dan Jenkins (his best).
2. The Story of American Golf - Herbert Warren Wind. Our finest
golf writer.
3. Anything by Bernard Darwin - the greatest golf writer in print.
4. Scotland's Gift-Golf - Charles B. Mcdonald. One of the founders
of the USGA, designer of the National Golf Links, Mid Ocean and
Yale, to name a few. Enormous figure in American golf, and by all
accounts, a world class jerk.
5. The Golf Course - Geoffrey Cornish and Ron Whitten. Until you
read this one, you don't know anything about golf courses. It will
amaze you to discover how many local courses were designed by the
masters.
Jack (the Skoal Bandit) Varley
|
422.10 | "Can I Take A Practice Swing?" | MTWAIN::F_MCGOWAN | Ci stiamo gi� divertendo? | Tue Oct 25 1988 12:49 | 8 |
| Thanks, 9, that's an excellent list. One I recall reading many years
ago that tickled me a lot was "Out Of The Bunker And Into The Trees,"
by Rex Lardner (at least that's the title/author I remember). Another
in the humorous vein (at least I think it was intended to be funny)
is "How To Shoot Double Bogey Golf" (don't remember the author or
authors).
Frank
|
422.11 | GOLF IN THE OZONE | SANFAN::GRANT_JO | | Wed Oct 26 1988 21:02 | 6 |
| I personally thought "Golf in the Kingdom" was better suited to
Shirley Maclaine or Mac O'Grady than to we hackers. But I have
seen it recommened by more than one touring pro. I did not
care for it. I liked Lee Trevino's "The Snake in the Sand Trap"
much better.
|
422.12 | Some more good ones | EUCLID::WARFIELD | Gone Golfing | Wed Oct 26 1988 21:43 | 24 |
| Here are several more that you may want to consider (no particular order)
Inside Golf, Quotations on the Royal & Ancient Game, Chieger & Sullivan - a
great collection of golf quotes. About 250 pages worth. A quick flip thru
persuaded me to pull it down & read it again.
The Green Road Home, A Caddies Journal of LIfe on the Pro Tour - Kid decides
to try to caddie for a year. You get a good feeling of what it is like to
be a pro caddie.
Picture Books:
100 Greatest Golf Courses & then some - Golf Digest - Short naratives about
some of the best courses ever, lots of great pictures. Great for cold February
days when you aren't sure golf season will ever return. Pictures definitely
show that all courses are not created equal.
Golf Courses of the PGA Tour - Narrative about each tour event, course layout,
and lots of great pictures. Great coffee table book. Also a great book for
February. It is also good to break out while watching tour event to get better
understanding of course, records, past winners, etc.
Maybe in the spring we can start discussing instructional books. However I
find that reading them when I can't go out & hit balls only screws up my game.
|
422.13 | Second The Golf Course | EUCLID::WARFIELD | Gone Golfing | Wed Oct 26 1988 21:52 | 25 |
|
RE: .9
I would like to second The Golf Course by Cornish & Whitten. It's
a good book for all those amatuer golf course architects that say
"I could have designed this better."
Should also be required reading for most New England Golfers since
Cornish has designed most of our good public courses. Some that
come to mind are Stow Acres, Captains, and Cranberry Valley, Ocean's
Edge. Helps you to understand what he was thinking.
In the book he says that he feels that the 9th hole on the North Course
may be unfair. However his reasoning is that it shouldn't be bunkered
that tightly around the green when you have to hit a long iron into
the green. I agreed with his conclusion, but not his logic. I always
felt that it was unfair to have to try to his a 5 or 3 wood carrying
the pond into the prevailing wind!
Larry
Trivia Question: What is the characteristic trademark of a Cornish
course?
Large, relatively flat greens.
|
422.14 | Book Report I | MTWAIN::F_MCGOWAN | Ci stiamo gia divertendo? | Wed Nov 09 1988 12:44 | 21 |
| I finished "The Book Of Golf Disasters," and found it to be fun and
entertaining. I particularly enjoyed the anecdotes about the poor
Spanish golfer at (I think) the Portuguese Open who shanked 11 balls
in a row out of bounds and took a 19 on the hole: I laughed so hard
I had tears in my eyes (knowing just how much pain the poor devil
was in); and the story of Mike Souchak getting mixed up with the
Irish taximan, who insisted they stop to visit his brother to sample
some of the brother's "poteen"; and, as well, the story of the attack
of the Killer Ants. To anyone who's never played the game, some
of the stories would be completely unbelievable, but to me they
had the ring of absolute truth.
Also tried to read Tommy Bolt's autobiography, "The Hole Truth,"
but found it hard to get into and surprisingly dull reading, con-
sidering the subject. Bolt told a pretty funny story about himself
on ESPN recently: Seems he got to the 15th hole, and faced a tricky
situation. After sizing it up, he consulted with his caddy. "It
looks like either a hard 7 or a soft 6," he said. "What do you think?"
Replied the caddy, "It's got to be either a 3-iron or a 3-wood,
Mr. Bolt. Those are the only clubs you've still got in the bag."
|
422.15 | More Books (less Cornish) | PIGGY::VARLEY | | Thu Nov 10 1988 13:46 | 20 |
| I left out a couple of other good books on my list (422.9):
- "Life at Happy Knoll" (J.P. Marquand) - Funny and realistic account
of happenings at a small private club. May have been based on the
Myopia Hunt Club, where he belonged. I've only been there a few
times, but - it could be the place. Where else do you find claw
footed bath tubs in the shower room?
_ "The Clicking of Cuthbert" (P.G. Wodehouse) - Great, understated
British humor.
- "Golfer's Gold" (Tony Lema) - Funny and insightful comments from
one of the great talents ever to play the game.
Re: Cornish - true, he's designed a lot of New England courses,
and redesigned many, but most of his stuff just isn't good. Nice
guy to talk to, and very knowledgeable, obviously. I think he got
the large, flat greens idea from A.W. Tillinghast...
--The Skoal Bandit (who is kind of a traditionalist...)
|
422.16 | Author Unknown | TOMCAT::BREEN | | Mon Nov 21 1988 13:37 | 12 |
| thank you #15 for mentioning Wodehouse who in my mind is the first
golf humorist.
the funniest golf humor I have ever encountered I cannot name the
actual article or author. I picked up a golf
magazine in a barber shop in early 80s and read a fictional account
of a pro-am with a hacker paired with Arnold Palmer and trying to
give Arnie lessons. I laughed so hard in the chair waiting for
a haircut that I literally had to get up and leave.
Can anyone remember the article I am referring to? Sorry I don't
even know the publication.
|
422.17 | Is a McGuffin like a Mulligan? | MTWAIN::F_MCGOWAN | Ci stiamo gia divertendo? | Tue Nov 22 1988 12:44 | 13 |
| Browsed through "Following Through" and enjoyed it immensely. Very
elegant writing.
Just started a mystery novel entitled "Dead On The Pin" (couldn't
resist the title), by Robert Upton, "starring" his primary character,
Private Investigator Amos McGuffin (wasn't "mcguffin" Alfred Hithcock's
word for "red herring"?). Besides being an entertaining read, the
book shows good insight into golfers' psyches. At one point, McGuffin
muses that at the end of each golf season he discovers the "secret
to golf," and then somehow forgets it during the winter. I can identify
with that!
Frank
|
422.18 | Book Club...? | MSEE::KELLEY | got to get the short game togther | Wed Jan 04 1989 11:37 | 12 |
|
Did anybody else get info on "THE CLASSICS OF GOLF" in the mail
resently? It is a book club, with books just on golf. They are
reprinting some of the classics and offerring one every other month
(you deside if you want to keep it when it arrives). The first one
they offer is DOWN THE FAIRWAY by Robert T. Jones Jr.
They have a list of 22 books that they have published so far.
Herbert Warren Wind, the famous golf writter and Robert Macdonald,
publisher, are the people behind the project...
Gene...
|
422.19 | Club, book list... | MSEE::KELLEY | got to get the short game togther | Wed Jan 04 1989 13:18 | 73 |
|
RE: .18
Since I just noticed that there is an extra order form
and I could make some copies if there is any interest
in joining the club, I thought I would also post the
list of books/author/year of print...
Down the Fairway/Robert T. Jones Jr. (1927)
autobiography
How To Play Your Best Golf All the Time/Tommy Armour (1953)
lesson
The Dogged Victims of Inexorable Fate/Dan Jenkins (1970)
commedy
Golf Between Two Wars/Bernard Darwin (1944)
history
A History of Golf/Robert Browning (1955)
history
Shape Your Swing the Modern Way/Byron Nelson (1976)
lesson
The Golf Courses of the British Isles/Bernard Darwin (1910)
64 watercolors of famout courses, plus
Hints in the Game of Golf/Horace Hitchinson (1887)
the first intruction book in the history of the game
The American Golfer/Charles Price (1964)
the best pieces from the magazine of the same name
Scotland's Gift-Golf/Charles B. Macdonald (1928)
couse design
Reminiscences of Golf on St. Andrews Links/James Balfour (1886)
one of the rarest books on golf
The Modern Fundamentals of Golf/Ben Hogan (1957)
Lesson
Golf Architecture/Allistair MacKenzie (1920)
course design
F.G. Tait-A Record/ John L. Low (1900)
Scotlands greatest hero
The Venturi Analysis/Ken Venturi (1981)
lesson
The Mystery of Golf/Arnold Haultain (1908)
a famous classic
The Clicking of Cuthbert/P.G. Wodehouse (1922)
golf fiction
The Methods of Golf's Masters/Ken Bowden and Dick Aultman (1975)
a study of the games greatest players
Mostly Golf/Bernard Darwin (1976)
essays
Thirty Years of Championship Golf/Gene Sarazen (1950)
autobiography
Golfer's Gold/Tony Lema (1964)
the tour
The Duffer's Handbook of Golf/Grantland Rice and Claire Briggs (1926)
commedy
|
422.20 | Pro "Classics" | BOSHOG::VARLEY | | Wed Jan 04 1989 14:42 | 12 |
| In answer to 422.18, I subscribe to "The Classics of Golf", and
find it terrific! Lots of the stuff they have can't be obtained
elsewhere, and they do a first rate job. Most books aren't cheap,
but Darwin's book on the British Isles is $ 35 from the USGA, so
if it can be obtained for $19.95 from them, it's a bargain. This
is not a book club for dilettantes; only those who are into history
and golf literature at a higher level would find this club worthwhile.
To me, once you read Darwin, and to a slightly lesser extent Herbert
Warren Wind, everyone else plays bass. I'll be happy to comment
on the books I have read, if anyone is interested.
--the Skoal Bandit
|
422.21 | Sure would... | MSEE::KELLEY | got to get the short game togther | Wed Jan 04 1989 15:51 | 9 |
|
RE: .20
I would like to hear your thoughts on any of the books from the
club that you have read...
Thanks
Gene
|
422.22 | Book Club Book | IAMOK::OCONNOR | | Wed Jan 04 1989 16:59 | 3 |
| I bought "Down the Fairway" without joining and enjoyed it immensely.
I would be willing to lend it to anyone who wants to read it. Let
me know. 273-5387.
|
422.23 | Treasure... | MSEE::KELLEY | Buy 8 irons get the 9th free... | Wed Nov 08 1989 12:30 | 14 |
|
I just found a must have book for all us golfoholics...
It is called GOLF GADGETS by Bill Hogan. It has all kinds of little
goodies in it (clubs, tees, videos, books, art, etc., etc.). And
on top of it all the goodies, it has the names, addresses and phone
numbers of the companies that carry them, plus names addresses and
phone numbers of the vast majority of the club companies and component
companies...
If you want the phone number or address for something to do with golf
just let me know, it should be in this book...
Gene
|
422.24 | moved here by moderator... | MSEE::KELLEY | Golfoholic - club maker | Tue Jan 09 1990 13:39 | 68 |
| <<< USER$1:[NOTES$LIBRARY]GOLF.NOTE;1 >>>
-< The Good Game >-
================================================================================
Note 843.0 SHANKS FOR THE MEMORIES...A MUST READING... 1 reply
SELECT::DEMERS 62 lines 8-JAN-1990 13:21
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subj: Golf Book For Christmas.......
I recieved a new Golf book for xmas from my wife and I would like
to recommend it to the notes file. It's called "The Golf Hall Of Shame".
It's a collection of Golf's wackiest moments from tee to green. Most of the
stories are from the professional ranks with alot coming from your everyday
golfers. The following is one example from Chapter 1 - Shanks for the memories.
For better enjoyment try to remember how hard it is to stop the shanks before
you read this story. Then I challenge all of you to get through this true story
without needing a trip to the mens/ladys room. Charlie Demers....
PHILIPPE PORQUIER
1978 FRENCH OPEN
In the worst case of shanks ever suffered by a pro golfer, Philippe Porquier
carded the highest score for one hole in the history of the European Tour-an
incredible 20!!!!
Playing in his first major tournament, the 1978 French Open at La
Baule, the young assistant golf pro was understandably nervous. But he managed
to shoot well enough to stay within a few shots of the leaders at the turn of
the first round.
At the 511-yard par-5 13th hole,which featured a dogleg to the right
up a stiff incline, Porquier impressed his veteran playing companions with a
long, straight drive and a nifty three-wood shot that left him a mere 40
yards short of the green.
Swelling with confidence, Porquier had visions of making a decent chip
that would set him up for a birdie. But he wasn't really psychic or he would
have forseen an impending disaster never before experienced by a pro on the
European Tour.
The harbinger of doom came on his pitch shot. Porquier carelessly
struck the ball on the hosel of his nine-iron, causing the ball to fly off the
inside curve of the blade at a sharp right angle. His ball rocketed
diagonally out of bounds.
Hoping against hope that this was some minor aberration to an other-
wise creditable round of golf, Porquier dropped another ball and tried again
to pitch onto the green. But to his horror, he shanked this ball, too, into
the rough by the boundry fence. With his mechanics all screwed up, his psyche
blew a fuse. He kept telling himself over and over not to shank. So naturally
he shanked his third staright shot, this time through the fence.
With the penalty strokes, he was now playing eight. But before this
nightmare ended, he needed a pocket calculator to keep track of his score.
After adjusting his stance, changing his grip, and making a silent vow not to
shank, Porquier swung again. He didn't shank this one. He topped it. The ball
rolled weakly a yard deeper into the rough. But then he returned to his old
form and shanked the next two, one of which went out of bounds again.
As Porquier was about to play his thirteenth shot, his caddie planted
himself out of bounds so that he'd have an easier time of retrieving the next
errant ball. Meanwhile, Porquier apologized to his playing partners for unduly
detaining them. Then he swung and shanked...swung and shanked.....
Suddenly, from the deepest regions of his tormented mind, sprang an
idea that he felt surely would bring him salvation. For his eighteenth shot,
Porquier took aim not at the 13th green, but at the next tee, which was off to
the left side of the green. Then he repeatedly told himself, "Do not shank...
Do not shank..."and when he swung, he did his damndest not to shank. Sure
enough, his idea worked. The ball shanked, darting sideways from his point of
aim, and landed on the green the feet from the cup.
Porquier smiled shyly as the spectators applauded his cunning strategy.
Two putts later, Porquier's name was etched in the record books as the holder
of the highest score ever for one hole on the European Tour.
|
422.25 | moved here by moderator... | MSEE::KELLEY | Golfoholic - club maker | Tue Jan 09 1990 13:40 | 13 |
| <<< USER$1:[NOTES$LIBRARY]GOLF.NOTE;1 >>>
-< The Good Game >-
================================================================================
Note 843.1 SHANKS FOR THE MEMORIES...A MUST READING... 1 of 1
USEM::VOUTSELAS 6 lines 9-JAN-1990 13:02
-< French numbers >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
That is a classic ! Well described, too.
I can think of 9's and 10's I made after being close in two
on par 4's and 5's. All due to that "S" word.
Ang
|
422.26 | | DUGGAN::GREEN | | Wed Jan 10 1990 12:39 | 5 |
|
Finally! A professional record that I can break!
|
422.27 | P.G. Wodehouse | MKNME::DANIELE | | Wed Aug 07 1991 10:57 | 65 |
| I just finished "The Golf Omnibus", by P. G. Wodehouse. It contains
31 fictional, very humorous short stories in which golf is the central
theme. "The Clicking of Cuthbert" which was mentioned in previous
replies, is included.
I had never heard of this book, or read anything by Wodehouse, until I
stumbled across this on sale for $8, so I took a shot. I don't
believe I've enjoyed a book more than this one.
For those of you unfamiliar with the Wodehouse style, I have taken the
liberty of appending an excerpt from a story called "The Letter of the
Law".
Mike
"You know the Wrecking Crew?" He was alluding to the quartet of golfing
cripples of which Joseph Poskitt was a regular member. The others were Old
Father Time, The Man With The Hoe, and Consul, the Almost Human.
"You know the way they dodder along and won't let anyone through. There have
been ugly mutterings about it in the Club for months, and it came even harder
on me than most of the crowd, for, as you know, I like to play quick. Well,
the other day I cracked under the strain. I could endure it no longer. I--"
"Drove into them?"
"Drove into them." Using my brassie for the shot. I took a nice easy stance,
came back slow, keeping my head down, and let fly-- firing into the brown, as it
were, and just trusting to luck which of them I hit. The man who drew the
short straw was old Poskitt. I got him right on the leg. Did you tell me he
got his blue at Oxford for throwing the hammer?"
"Throwing the hammer, yes."
"Not the high jump?"
"No."
"Odd, I should have said--"
I was deeply concerned. To drive into the father of the girl you love, no
matter what the provocation, seemed to me an act of criminal folly and so I
told him. He quivered and broke a tumbler.
"Now there," he said, "you have touched on another cause for complaint. At
the time, I had no notion that he was the father of the girl I loved. As a
matter of fact, he wasn't, because I had not met Gwendoline then. She blew in
later, having been on one of those round-the-world cruises. I must say I think
that old buffers who hold people up and won't let them through ought to wear
some sort of label indicating that they have pretty daughters who will be
arriving shortly. Then one would know where one was and act accordingly.
Still, there it is. I gave old Poskitt this juicy one, as described, and from
what he said to me later in the changing room I am convinced that any
suggestions on my part that I become his son-in-law will not be cordially
received."
I ate cheese gravely. I could see that the situation was a difficult one.
"Well, the only thing I can advise," I said, "is that you cultivate him
assiduously. Waylay him and give him cigars. Ask after his slice. Tell him
it's a fine day. He has a dog named Edward. Seek Edward out and pat him.
Many a young man has won over the father of the girl he loves by such tactics,
so why not you?"
He agreed to do so, and in the days which followed Poskitt could not show his
face in the club-house without having Wilmot spring out at him with perfectos.
The dog Edward began to lose hair off his ribs through incessant patting. And
gradually, as I had hoped, the breach began to heal. Came a morning when
Wilmot, inquiring after my old friend's slice, was answered not with the usual
malevolent grunt but with a reasonably cordial statement that it now showed
signs of becoming a hook.
"Ah?" said Wilmot. "A cigar?"
"Thanks," said Poskitt.
"Nice doggie," said Wilmot, pursuing his advantage by administering a hearty
buffet to Edward's aching torso before the shrinking animal could side-step.
"Ah," said Poskitt.
|
422.28 | Read any good books lately? | KOALA::DEFELICE | | Wed Jun 15 1994 17:30 | 20 |
| Anyone read any good books on golf lately?
I'm just nearing the end of reading 'Quantum Golf'. Interesting
approach to golf. I must admit that I have gleened a bit from this but
overall find it too mystical, ala 'Golf In the Kingdom'. Why is it I
seem to gravitate towards this type of book and then regret it
afterwards? Don't answer that question...
Anyway, on MY scale of 1-10, with 1 being a total waste of time:
Golf in the Kingdom - 1.1
Quantum Golf - 2.0
Interestingly, I recently re-read Hogan's 'Modern Fundamentals...' and
it actually helped me with an overswinging problem. This, I hate to
admit, was after 7 1-hour privates with two different pros. I was
working on a number of things but included overswinging, also. Got
really frustrated not being able to control it. Looked at all my mags
and a library of books. Picked up Hogan's book and there it was. And
it works! Thanks Ben.
|
422.29 | Harvey Penick. | ANDREW::OSTROM | ETP Engineering Mgr. | Thu Jun 16 1994 12:25 | 12 |
|
Just finished re-reading Penick's "Little Red Book" and then reading
the "Little Green Book." No other golf books needed:
1) Use a strong grip
2) Clip off the tee
3) Imagine swinging a bucket
4) Chip under a bench
5) The ball should "die" at the hole
6) Practice with a weed cutter
What more is there to golf?
|
422.30 | whazzat? | NOVA::FINNERTY | lies, damned lies, and the CAPM | Mon Jun 20 1994 15:35 | 6 |
|
re: -.1
Clip off the tee?
|
422.31 | re: .29 hitting the ball and GIR's... | TRLIAN::GORDON | | Mon Jun 20 1994 15:52 | 1 |
|
|
422.32 | Clipping The Tee. | SWAM2::WANTJE_RA | | Mon Jun 20 1994 16:12 | 15 |
| re: .30
Clipping the tee...
A training method recommended by Harvey Penick in his 'Little Red Book'
. It involves a plastic tee used with the mats at driving ranges.
There is NO ball to swing at - only the tee with the object being to
'clip the tee' where the teecomes out of the mat, .i.e under the ball
where you are suppose to aim your swing.
re: .31
What is GIR or was it GRI??
rww
|
422.33 | re: .32 Greens In Regulation - direct affect on score | TRLIAN::GORDON | | Mon Jun 20 1994 17:09 | 1 |
|
|
422.34 | Suggestions for Xmas gift? | TUXEDO::MAZZAFERRO | | Mon Nov 28 1994 09:47 | 11 |
| Hi,
Does anyone have any suggestions for books on golf (hard or soft cover)
that would be good for Christmas gifts? My husband is an avid golfer and
has a lot of the older golf books already. If there's a recent book that
someone found very interesting or one that's been reviewed highly, can
you offer the title?
Thanks for any suggestions.
Laura
|
422.35 | My sugestions | STOWOA::ODIAZ | Octavio, MCS/SPS | Mon Nov 28 1994 13:37 | 27 |
| Re: <<< Note 422.34 by TUXEDO::MAZZAFERRO >>>
Laura,
It seems that the end of the season (and probably also a lot of work)
is keeping away most of the regulars in this file, so I'll give you
some of my own sugestions hoping that more people give you some other
ones.
In the instructional space, the biggest all-time-seller in sports
book category is Harvey Pennick's "Little Red Book". It's cheap,
less than $20. There already have also a "Little Green Book" and
videos and cassettes.
If your husband is a book collector, The USGA catalog has some
reprints of old golf books. If you're interested I could find the
catalog and give you the info.
In the video instructional category, nothing more classic than Bobby
Jones' tapes, the don't come cheap; I believe The set of 3 plus a
book is over $200.
If you are interested in "Coffee Table" books then almost any good
bookstore has plenty of hard cover books with lots of beautiful
pictures in many golf subjects.
Hope it helps
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422.36 | dunno if this is available in USA | RDGE44::ALEUC8 | | Tue Nov 29 1994 08:02 | 13 |
| hi,
my fave golf book is "The Golfing Mind" by Vivien Saunders
deals with playing golf from a different perspective than "put that
there then do that then ... "
also deals with the shot-making aspects and how-to-put-together-a-score
techniques
i like it
richard
|