Still waiting:
Patrick_Mucci writes:
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.
I think it's safe to say that Raynor had a fairly good understanding of distance and the golfer's abilities.
Which leads me to doubt the story even more.Nothing wrong with doubt. You said it didn't happen and then gave us your unsound reasons why it couldn't have.
But, here's the hole, if she didn't tee off from the current back tee, where did she tee off from that would force the carry over the chasm From near where the shorter tees are now. From right in front of the chasm. From up closer but still across the chasm.
Why do you think it was only possible for her to have to hit 220 yards to clear the chasm? What version of the Hollins shot said she hit the ball 220 yards from the center of what would eventually be the green?
It's NOT MacKenzie's story.
He's just repeating what he's heard, not what he witnessedAgain, which Marion Hollins story are you trying to debunk? Is it from Frost's book?
I reads the account in David Outerbridge's
Champion in a Man's World and he claims she hit the shot with a brassie. He references the story from MacKenzie but doesn't say why his story isn't the same as MacKenzie's.
I was also mistaken about how wealthy Hollins was in 1925. She was well-to-do but wealth wouldn't come to her until the oil strike in 1928.
Others say that the steel shaft wasn't introduced in America until 1925, including David Nicholls.Jeffery Ellis would disagree, and unlike Mr. Frost he has notes and a bibliography. The USGA legalized their use in January, 1925. Willie Macfarlane won the U.S. Open that year using steel-shafted woods. You have no way of saying either way what sort of club Hollins used.
Since Raynor DIED on January 23, 1926 we know she wasn't using clubs patented on July 6, 1926, roughly six months afer his death.
And, since Raynor DIED on January 23, 1926, the alleged event probably took place in 1925 or earlier ? ? ?
Which would diminish the possibility that steel shafts were employed. Ever heard of patent pending?
Steel shafts were in use in the early 1920s. Steel shafts were illegal for tournament play in the U.S. between 1919 and January 1925. Hollins would not have been playing a tournament. No cheating involved.
Your position does everything it can to dismiss the events of 01-11-56 and champion the event of 1925/6
To say you're neutral would be incorrectI know, you still haven't backed-up up your earlier claim I repeated in the first part of this post -- but I gotta ask you to back this up. Where have I dismissed the events of 1956 and championed the events of 1925/6? All I've ever done is laugh unmercifully at your attempted to debunk the Hollins story.
At the begining of your reply you question the scores shot by the participants, NOW, you're citing Venturi who claims that NOT a shot was missed, reaffirming what I maintained about the quality of golf shot that day.
Thanks for the assistYou know I like to help you as much as I can Patrick. You kind of need it.
I've played golf and not missed a shot. I didn't set the course record or get considered the greatest golfer in the world or have my shot compared to some other golfer who might have hit a similar shot in the vicinity in 1980.
Cheers,
Dan King
The big hitters certainly did not show the same enthusiasm as the short ones and some of them did not adopt steel for some time; Bobby Jones for instance won his four Championships in 1930 with wooden-shafted clubs.
--Bernard Darwin (Golf Between Two Wars)