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Golf: The 19th Hole

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11 minutes ago, TomTomTelekom said:

Dow Finsterwald, the winner of the 1958 PGA Championship who had 12 career PGA Tour victories to his name, died at 93 years:

https://www.golfchannel.com/news/dow-finsterwald-1958-pga-champion-dies-age-93

 

Took a quick look to see if he and the recently deceased Peter Butler ever competed against each other at the Ryder Cup, hoping maybe Butler could piggyback a mention in an obit somewhere, but interestingly while they combine for 8 consecutive appearances in the event none of them overlap.  The lack of an obit for a Butler might be the difference on the DDP theme team leaderboard now that Dow is gone.

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8 hours ago, YoungWillz said:


It said winningest not most successful.  

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3 hours ago, Sir Cunto said:


It said winningest not most successful.  

 

Yes but most successful is the better, more appropriate phrase whereas winningest looks and sounds like it was made up by a 6 year old.

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1 hour ago, Sly Ronnie said:

 

Yes but most successful is the better, more appropriate phrase whereas winningest looks and sounds like it was made up by a 6 year old.

 

 

He's doing it on purpose.

He knows full well that winningest is an awful American construction of a word that sounds like fingernails down a blackboard and causes more than a few here to get a little annoyed.

It's mentioned in the grammar thread that I can't be asked to look up.

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5 hours ago, Sly Ronnie said:

 

Yes but most successful is the better, more appropriate phrase whereas winningest looks and sounds like it was made up by a 6 year old.

 

Problem is that, with golf, you can be "winningest" without being also most successful, due to how much weight majors carry.  Mickey Wright would be considered the greater player historically, despite 6 fewer regular tour victories.   This doesn't even factor in the money component.

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On 26/12/2022 at 09:43, Salmon Mousse said:

 

Problem is that, with golf, you can be "winningest" without being also most successful, due to how much weight majors carry.  Mickey Wright would be considered the greater player historically, despite 6 fewer regular tour victories.   This doesn't even factor in the money component.


Success is subjective.

Winningest is objective.  
 

They couldn’t be more diverse words.

 

Anyway the stupid cunt posted a quote then changes the wording and is called out by someone (apparently the only person around here)) that thinks words and their meaning and intended usage are sacrosanct.  And I shall continue to do so.
SirC

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2 minutes ago, Sir Cunto said:

Winningest is a ridiculous americanism.  It grates more than almost anything else those Columbus found fools have invented, well ok - Trump, but otherwise....

Buffoon.

There's a proper word.

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54 minutes ago, gcreptile said:

Brian Morris, the terminally ill golfer who was on one PGA tournament in late 2021 has now died:

https://www.royalgazette.com/golf/sport/article/20230130/professional-golfer-brian-morris-dies-aged-55/

I can visualise the funeral now and the cry going up “Get In The Hole”.

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Our annual form-spotting guide -the Masters Champions Dinner. We already knew Phil had lost weight, I don't believe it's anything like a Chadwick Boseman situation (despite the fact he's playing terribly). Tommy Aaron looks the most likely to go next, though will be interesting to see if Nicklaus can swing a club tomorrow morning. I don't think Crenshaw looks great for 71, but he played the par 3 contest. As did Gary Player. 

 

image.thumb.png.5380aa18a00a812014ee350d970d56e5.png

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Pre-Masters Press Conference with Tom Watson, Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player

 

 

 

 

 

Nicklaus really showing his age more so than Player who's a few years older than him. I think he'll go before Player

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Hedley Muscroft. who played in the Open Championship 16 times, with a best of eighteenth in the 1967 Open Championship, died last month.

 

Won the first (of only two) Classic International tournaments in 1970 and played on the European Tour. He died last month - https://www.pga.info/news/hedley-muscroft-1938-2023/

 

Another former Open Championship competitor, Scotsman Stuart Murray (Best place 40th in 1964, 3 times a competitor), who enjoyed a successful amateur career in the early 1960's, died in January - https://www.pga.info/news/stuart-murray-1933-2023

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