Patrick_Mucci writes:
Nelson stopped playing the PGA Tour because he had done it all, he had won over and over and over again.
He didn't stop playing golf.Isn't that the definition of retired? In your world does retiring from professional golf mean you never again touch a golf club?
Hogan wasn't semi-retired.
Nine years later, at age 53, he tied for 15th at the PGA ChampionshipHe was past his prime and semi-retired. He and Nelson were not the great golfers they were in the past. Hogan won at least 63 PGA events before 1956 and one after. Nelson won some 52 events prior to 1956, zero after.
Venturi and Ward were alreeady world class golfersI guess it depends on how you define world class. They were excellent amateur golfers, but their records weren't exactly stellar the times they competed as amateurs against the best players in the era.
They'd be playing the more benign tees, not the heroic tees.Unless you have another story, I've never heard that Hollins hit from the championship tees. All I've ever heard is she hit across the chasm to where the green would eventually be put. Do you have a story that says she hit from the non-existent championship tees?
It's a heroic carry, it's oceanside air, it was I&B circa 1926 and it was a woman amateurI'm no expert on equipment, so I generally rely on Mr. Jeffery Ellis for equipment info. As has been mentioned numerous times, the 1.62 ball would have been easier to get across the bit of ocean. In 1926 steel shafts were in reasonably widespread use in the United States (The R&A still didn't allow them.) I was thinking one of the changes was the bulge to the driver, something I have read credited to Nelson. But according to Ellis the bulged face driver was fairly common in the 1910s.
So what were these revolutions in driver design between 1926 and 1956 that allowed the four golfers to reach and wouldn't have allowed Hollins to reach?
I'm also no expert on the golf swing -- which anyone who has ever golfed with me can verify. Your better argument than I&B is the changes to the swing with the new popularity of metal shafts. I'm not sure if the change to the typical swing would have made the golf shots longer or were more for accuracy.
If that's the way you conduct your research and that's what you base your conclusions on, your work would be classified somewhere between academically unsound to intellectually dishonest to fraudulent.Please quote anything I said that was unsound, dishonest or fraudulent. If you can't you should apologize.
Why the blind attempts to perpetuate the myth ?When did I ever attempt to perpetuate anything about Hollins at Cypress Point?
If you can't prove the alleged story, if you don't have so much as one eyewitness to the event, how can you adamantly defend and declare it's authenticity ?I have never once tried to defend the Hollins story. It's possible the Hollins story is a myth, it is also possible it is true. You made an attempt to debunk the story, and as I have shown, you have failed at every step. You got to come up with reasonable reasons why she wouldn't have been able to do it. The fact that four other (very good golfers) could do it 30 years later doesn't prove she couldn't do it in 1926.
Cheers,
Dan King
The 1925 U.S. Open saw widespread use of metal shafts. Even Willie Macfarlane, the eventual champion, used steel shaft woods.
--Jeffery B. Ellis