- Joined
- May 21, 2017
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I did not think that you could get any dumber than you obviously are.....Actually he may not be stupid, but we are all now dumber for having read what you wrote.
I did not think that you could get any dumber than you obviously are.....Actually he may not be stupid, but we are all now dumber for having read what you wrote.
LOL, and she blows a 5 shot lead, misses playoff
I use Irish Spring soap!I have some Dubliner cheese in the fridge.
Are you fascists going to take over?Yep Freedom... Enjoy it while you still have it
The PGA threw a competition caution.I was having a couple of cold ones with my buddy in an RI bar watching it and we said "this would be a great Sunday if Rahm wasn't playing." Little did we know!
Then he should prove that and ask for a waiver. Oh wait… no one can prove anything. Just go with someone’s opinions.Except that may carry greater risks for him than Covid does. Hardly stupid.
1.25 years into the pandemic and good golly the persistence of horrible takes by some folks about both the infection and the vaccine is simply awe-inspiring
All I can do at this point is to shrug my shoulders and laugh.
Mah Freedums!!Yep Freedom... Enjoy it while you still have it
I'm not sure why anyone needs to take any argument on the issue beyond this. Well said.Rules are rules. Period. Full stop.
Is there any evidence of golfers winning at a greater clip than normal in their "home town?"Lot of money going to be dropped on Cantlay, Morikawa, Schauffele and the other SoCal youngins at the US Open. Some fools will drop money on an oldin' from SoCal too
Anecdotal… sleep at home, familiar with weather, course, grasses, etc.Is there any evidence of golfers winning at a greater clip than normal in their "home town?"
And please don't point to TW
Is there any evidence of golfers winning at a greater clip than normal in their "home town?"
And please don't point to TW
There is a theory of horses for courses.
And yes, there are pros who have a large majority of their wins on certain courses with certain types of grass- winning on bermuda grass in Florida. Davis Love winning at Harbour town a bunch of times.
The California coastal courses like Torrey Pines have certain characteristics that change throughout the year- look at Pebble Beach when they play the Pro Am in the spring as compared to playing the same course in June for the US Open. Spring time has wet, heavy air and the ball doesn't go anywhere. Fast foward three months and it's dry air and lots of wind. Your Pebble Beach Pro Am notes are just about useless when figuring out wind, carry, roll, etc.
Knowing how to play in the kikuyu grass, especially out of the rough and around the greens, takes time. Greens are bent grass with Poa Annua which also tend to grow quickly and get hairy as the day gets longer. The leaders will be playing 10-12 hours after the greens were cut in the morning.
Golf is rarely a good sport to bet an outright winner as your only play. And many on this board are better at it than me, but putting some of these high level ball strikers, who also happened to have grown up on this stuff, is a decent move for betting on top-10's or stuff like that.
On the flip side a few years ago the Open Championship was played on a course Rory McIlroy basically grew up playing and people got all excited about it. He screwed the pooch big time on it and was out of contention by the end of day one.
I remember that year with Rory. There certainly is value to style and ability not just familiarity. If you were picking guys at The (British) Open back in the day, you'd never want to bet against Tom Watson, even though his home course was in KC (Mission Hills, KS). Of course the greats are just great everywhere. Palmer, Nicklaus, Woods.
Looking at guys who have recently been very good at Torrey Pines, Tony Finau stands out. Jason Day, Patrick Reed, both have done well there.
You mean playing like me....If only I'd learned to play in TexasIf you don't hit it pure you're either bouncing your club in to the ball or blading it thin.

But Watson grew up on wide open prairies with plenty of wind and hills.
You hear about west Texas golfers being such pure ball strikers because the ground is so dry and hard pan. If you don't hit it pure you're either bouncing your club in to the ball or blading it thin.