"TE -
well, Sean did imply that I no longer play other sports because I'm too old and broken down to compete successfully (which is probably true) and that I have no interest in beating my opponent out on the golf course (which is probably not true).
That's what golf can offer - TWO levels and kinds of competition instead of one."
Peter:
Of course.
In defense of Sean Arble and what he's saying----eg there is no actual competition with a golf course only with human opponents, he's perhaps half right but certainly no more than that.
I don't think anyone can even begin to understand what Behr was talking about unless it is first clearly explained the importance of what it really does fundamentally mean in golf that the ball is NOT physically vied for between human opponents as it is in almost every other game between human opponents that involves a ball and/or a ball and implements.
All those other games where a common ball is vied for between human opponents of necessity that puts the human opponents in a positon and in a context where they can and must supply physical opposition to one another using the ball as the medium of that physical opposition.
But this is not the case in golf; it can't be as that is not the way the game and its Rules are structured, unlike most all other games with balls and/or balls and implements.
And so if a golfer has any actual and physical contact between himself and the medium of his game (the ball (and his implements)) to physically oppose him it can only be one other thing---the golf course itself.
Looked at in that way Behr must be right.
But that is not to say that he denied there is and can be another competition going on with other golfers. That competition is only simultaneous in the context of a scoring system---it is NOT actually a physical opposition in the only scoring medium of the game---ie a single golfer getting his own ball in a hole via a scoring medium (a golf ball) unopposed by and unvied for with another human opponent.
Looked at this way it's pretty hard to deny the truth of what Behr said, but, again, he did not deny there can be competition with golfers, just that it isn't one of PHYSICAL OPPOSITION between human opponents like in most every other game involving a common vied-for ball and implements.
Also Sean Arble seems to think that the only possible time a golfer could be in actual physical competition against a golf course is when he's playing golf alone.
I mean, come on, how myopic and short-sighted can that idea possibly be? That's about the absolute height and extreme of unimaginative thinking that everything MUST BE an "Either" or an "OR".
If a golfer wasn't in actual and physical opposition and competition with a golf course whether he was playing alone or with other golfers competing for a score he would not even be playing golf in the context of the Rules and the structure of the game.