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William_G

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Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #75 on: April 19, 2011, 06:17:30 PM »


William

Many thanks for that, say no more it proves my point and questions just how great were these Champions if they needed this type of help.

It has to leave a question mark.

Melvyn


Yes much like a sea captain who wanted to actually get into port safely or a pilot wanted to land without crashing, but if there is nothing to be lost, then one needs/ or should desire no aid of any type, more to your point.

thanks
« Last Edit: April 20, 2011, 07:23:03 PM by William Grieve »
It's all about the golf!

David_Tepper

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Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #76 on: April 19, 2011, 07:47:08 PM »
Greg T. & Colin M. -

What on earth makes you think that "he of the royal golfing pedigree" even plays golf?

DT

Scott Warren

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Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #77 on: April 19, 2011, 08:29:07 PM »
Melvyn,

How long ago was your last round of golf?

Bill_McBride

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Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #78 on: April 20, 2011, 11:58:27 AM »
Colin it was seeing the modern clubs reducing the quality of some of our great Holes and Courses.  Forcing the course to become longer, cost more and maintenance cost to keep rising, yet for what actual benefit, so a hand full now drive the Greens. Add to that that many an old club/course have very little room to expand. The consequence of their actions IMHO are destroying that which we on this site say we hold dear. Anyway why have our own Governing Body not stepped in and taken some firm action by now, that’s part of their remit.

Melvyn   



Very hard to disagree with this point of view.......

Dan Herrmann

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Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #79 on: April 20, 2011, 12:56:17 PM »
Bill - Aye, I too agree with Melvyn on that one...

Melvyn Morrow

Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #80 on: April 20, 2011, 01:50:52 PM »

OK Bill, Dan what’s going on? What are you after, you do not normally agree with me. Anyway this has been my stance from the start.

 Due to you both agreeing with me, I checked myself in with the Doctor this afternoon and was told the usual story, that I need more sex, less nagging, and mix with more younger women. So the Doc and I are going out on the ‘Pull’ tonight as he fancies a bit on the side too..

We have agreed not to use aids be they toys or little blue things you swallow, we have also agreed no carts because if we cannot walk our women to bed we might as well give up. As for distance aids who need them in bed anyway so I listen the a slow dripping tap – keeps you thinking about the wrong thing and if you maintain the momentum,  boy can you going on for hours, bloody need ones sleep afterwards – hope the wife never find out that my passion has been kept in tune by a dripping tap.

So sorry guys have not got anything you may want so you do not have to agree with me, but if you want to try the dripping tap instead of Viagra, please be my guest. ;)

Melvyn

William_G

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Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #81 on: April 20, 2011, 03:09:30 PM »
Colin it was seeing the modern clubs reducing the quality of some of our great Holes and Courses.  Forcing the course to become longer, cost more and maintenance cost to keep rising, yet for what actual benefit, so a hand full now drive the Greens. Add to that that many an old club/course have very little room to expand. The consequence of their actions IMHO are destroying that which we on this site say we hold dear. Anyway why have our own Governing Body not stepped in and taken some firm action by now, that’s part of their remit.

Melvyn   



Very hard to disagree with this point of view.......

+1
It's all about the golf!

Dan Herrmann

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Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #82 on: April 20, 2011, 04:14:06 PM »
Hey - I'm open minded, and you summarized the state of the game very well.  It's the ball and the club that's shrinking the game and has the potential to kill it.

Keeping that (IMHO) great argument separate from yardage device criticism serves you very well :)

Colin Macqueen

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Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #83 on: April 20, 2011, 05:04:03 PM »
Melvyn,

“...it was seeing the modern clubs reducing the quality of some of our great Holes and Courses.  Forcing the course to become longer, cost more and maintenance cost to keep rising, yet for what actual benefit....”

Thanks very much for your reply and, yes, I am very much in agreement with what you said above. Nonetheless without being too invasive I would still like to have a clearer image of you playing in your youth. Did you have the opportunity to play regularly with hickories? Now that I think about it my first putter was hickory shafted! And I dissected many a “grinning” Haskell to access the latex filled core through the highly wound rubber thread! Why did I do that??!

Your response to being agreed with was priceless, you old curmudgeon you, and if such shenanigans and houghmagandie resulted you surely must have the resilience to still be playing “the gemme”.

Yours aye,
Colin

I am afraid I am prolonging the hijacking of this thread but cannot help myself!
"Golf, thou art a gentle sprite, I owe thee much"
The Hielander

David_Tepper

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Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #84 on: April 20, 2011, 05:41:14 PM »
"Colin it was seeing the modern clubs reducing the quality of some of our great Holes and Courses.  Forcing the course to become longer, cost more and maintenance cost to keep rising, yet for what actual benefit, so a hand full now drive the Greens. Add to that that many an old club/course have very little room to expand. The consequence of their actions IMHO are destroying that which we on this site say we hold dear. Anyway why have our own Governing Body not stepped in and taken some firm action by now, that’s part of their remit."

I, for one, would question the applicability of these statements to the vast majority of golf courses and the vast majority of golfers. I seriously doubt there are more than one in twenty golfers who think their home course now plays too short or has become too easy. How many golf clubs in GB&I (that do not host professional tournaments) have actually added length to their courses in any meaningful way? I suspect the number is far fewer than the Cassandras would have us think.

For example, as best as I can tell, Brora has made no attempt to lengthen its course over the past 10 years. I seriously doubt the members and visitors who play there find the course less enjoyable or less challenging than it used to be. 

Clearly, length is a concern for courses that host play at the professional and top amateur levels. But, for the 98% or 99% or golf courses that don't, is this really an issue?       

     

Dick Kirkpatrick

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Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #85 on: April 20, 2011, 05:53:05 PM »
I would bet that Old Tom had his yardage aids. Maybe not a book but he knew the courses so well that he knew the yardage from every blade of grass, or hummock, or bunker or swale, or leading edge of dune or bern.
I played at the same private golf club for 25 years and a yardage book would have been of no assistance to me on that course.

Melvyn Morrow

Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #86 on: April 20, 2011, 06:16:36 PM »

David

Very good, but I believe that when I see my home course having regular balls escaping the valley of sin to end up on the Green, that should set off alarm bells in the minds of our Golfing Guardians.  The problem is this actual failure to notice that is actually undermining our great clubs and courses.

To hide behind percentages picked out of the air is a very cowardly enterprise that certainly does not protect the future of our great game of golf.

Preventive approach is always best in my experience, perhaps you prefer the Ostrich approach much beloved by our current  governing body. I believe 98% to 99% of those in power maintain that belief, although I have not undertaken a detail study so the figures like yours could be well fictional. 

But the purpose of your comment was simple to undermine my post to Colin.

I lay my head to rest but not in the sand.

Melvyn


Dick

Yardage and distance was not used in those days, there was no need to have any aids because they played a game called golf which back then required the eyes and brain to work together to decide the next choice of club and stroke approach - mad really, fancy relying on your own body sensors to play any sport. Then perhaps then knew more that we do today and enjoyed their game of golf. Don't think is todays requirement against thinking back in Old Tom's day.

Bill_McBride

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Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #87 on: April 20, 2011, 06:29:26 PM »

OK Bill, Dan what’s going on? What are you after, you do not normally agree with me. Anyway this has been my stance from the start.

 Due to you both agreeing with me, I checked myself in with the Doctor this afternoon and was told the usual story, that I need more sex, less nagging, and mix with more younger women. So the Doc and I are going out on the ‘Pull’ tonight as he fancies a bit on the side too..

We have agreed not to use aids be they toys or little blue things you swallow, we have also agreed no carts because if we cannot walk our women to bed we might as well give up. As for distance aids who need them in bed anyway so I listen the a slow dripping tap – keeps you thinking about the wrong thing and if you maintain the momentum,  boy can you going on for hours, bloody need ones sleep afterwards – hope the wife never find out that my passion has been kept in tune by a dripping tap.

So sorry guys have not got anything you may want so you do not have to agree with me, but if you want to try the dripping tap instead of Viagra, please be my guest. ;)

Melvyn


As I have said on many occasions, there are many elements of your general position with which I readily agree.   ;D

SL_Solow

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Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #88 on: April 20, 2011, 06:40:20 PM »
Melvyn;  The distance argument is a fine one; failure to regulate equipment has been a topic on this board since its inception.

Your suggestion that players did not consider distance to the target before the introduction of yardage books is incredible.  While they may not have spoken in terms of yardage but players had landmarks from which they would hit a given iron (say a mashie) in still air.  Based on that baseline, they adjusted for conditions and the type of shot desired.  Not that much different from knowing the yardage and making the adjustments.  The major difference would be in plays on unfamiliar courses where the yardage book speeds up the learning curve.

Melvyn Morrow

Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #89 on: April 20, 2011, 07:53:42 PM »

I do not know how to put it apart from saying that what we accept today was normal but not necessary back then. The mind-set of the 19th century golfer was totally different to our modern plays who eat sleep and drink distance.

Take a long hard look at distance mania, first point is that we do not need distance aids in whatever manner you want to throw up at a player. No matter how many times your book or distance aid tell you the distance, the fact that when addressing the ball to take your shot your own mind takes over irrespective of the information your toys have just given you. The moment you look up from the ball to the pin or your target, your body takes over utilising involuntary actions, one being the recalibration of the distance but not necessary in term of distance but of effort, then you take your shot. Distance is a modern fad that is effectively made slaves of golfers and some people very rich.

Do not believe me then try playing without any distance aids for a couple of weeks. Notice the slight decline in your game for a day or so until you get your eyes back, the watch as you get your game back. A bit of cold turkey and you are your own man again.

Why use aids when your body already has a great set of sensors

The simple fact is that we do not need these aids

Melvyn 


Dick Kirkpatrick

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Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #90 on: April 20, 2011, 08:29:20 PM »
Melvyn:

Are you saying the olden age golfers did not know how far they could hit each club?
If so, I strongly disagree with your statement that it was all in their eye-body calculation.
I would wager they knew exactly how far they could hit each club in still air, and also believe they could "hit it down" the same distance into a slight wind.
If you are inferring that they did it all by eye-hand-body co-ordination, would you also say they only needed one club to hit all distances? I have seen listings quoting the distances the better golfers of the 1800's hit each club.
I believe that in your argument that common sense is not so common after all.

SL_Solow

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Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #91 on: April 20, 2011, 09:08:14 PM »
Melvyn;  Although  I believe we have long since passed the point of diminishing returns , I cannot resist one final inquiry.  I take it from your most recent post that you believe individuals who do not use yardage aids play better than those who do not and additionally, you suggest that a player will improve by abandoning such aids.  Therefore, you are suggesting that every oustanding player since Nicklaus popularized charting courses has, by choice, chosen to employ a technique that makes him play worse and consequently win fewer titles and less money.  I suggest that such blatant disregard for their own self interest is impossible to accept.  I further suggest that they are far more expert in evaluating the most effective way to play than you or I.  I do not expect you to reconsider your argument but introspection is sometimes a good thing.

Now if you suggest that it is more fun to play unaided or that such play tests different skills, the former is a matter of taste and the latter proposition is undoubtedly true to a degree.  As to the "purity" of the golfing experience, again that is a matter of taste.

Michael Whitaker

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Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #92 on: April 21, 2011, 12:41:04 AM »

I do not know how to put it apart from saying that what we accept today was normal but not necessary back then. The mind-set of the 19th century golfer was totally different to our modern plays who eat sleep and drink distance.

Take a long hard look at distance mania, first point is that we do not need distance aids in whatever manner you want to throw up at a player. No matter how many times your book or distance aid tell you the distance, the fact that when addressing the ball to take your shot your own mind takes over irrespective of the information your toys have just given you. The moment you look up from the ball to the pin or your target, your body takes over utilising involuntary actions, one being the recalibration of the distance but not necessary in term of distance but of effort, then you take your shot. Distance is a modern fad that is effectively made slaves of golfers and some people very rich.

Do not believe me then try playing without any distance aids for a couple of weeks. Notice the slight decline in your game for a day or so until you get your eyes back, the watch as you get your game back. A bit of cold turkey and you are your own man again.

Why use aids when your body already has a great set of sensors

The simple fact is that we do not need these aids

Melvyn

Melvyn - I am old enough that I have played most of my golf without distance aids. When I first began this game over 40 years ago the courses I played had no markers of any kind... no 150 yd bushes, no plaques in the ground... nothing! But, I can assure you that we all knew how far we hit each individual club and what the distances were from various natural markers on the course... a certain tree or a rock, for example. We knew this information because we had worked it out over the years through trial and error. This was the method every golfer used to negotiate a course. Most golfers didn't travel to play numerous courses as many do today and this "local knowledge" was what made caddies valuable as they could advise someone new to a course on the proper clubs to use. But, don't kid yourself, every shot was based on the distance required... adjusted by slope, wind, temperature, etc. For you to say that distance was not a factor is poppycock. You might be able to pull the wool over the youngster's eyes, but I've "been there and done that."

You said: "... it was seeing the modern clubs reducing the quality of some of our great Holes and Courses.  Forcing the course to become longer, cost more and maintenance cost to keep rising, yet for what actual benefit, so a hand full now drive the Greens."
To which clubs are you referring? In your mind, which great Holes and Courses have had their quality reduced?

Also, I'll have you know that I recently returned from a trip to Australia, New Zealand, and Bandon Dunes where I played 25 rounds of golf in four weeks... walked every round but one... and, carried my bag for 60% of the rounds. Not bad for a 60 year old. So, don't lecture me on golf and walking.

When was the last time you actually played a round of golf? It's easy to preach from the safety of sitting in front of your computer... which is where you spend the majority of your time as best I can tell.

You have so many good points to make that it is a shame you foul your message with this constant whining about distance aids.
"Solving the paradox of proportionality is the heart of golf architecture."  - Tom Doak (11/20/05)

Melvyn Morrow

Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #93 on: April 21, 2011, 05:20:20 AM »

Dick

“Are you saying the olden age golfers did not know how far they could hit each club?”

No I am not saying that what I am saying is that distance was not as important back then as it is to golfers today. Today many think in yardages, I do not nor do many others, we judge the next shot not distances or yardage be it book, markers or electronic aids. It’s just numbers that are not put into the modern distance terms.

I have never been taught to judge golfing distances by yardage, my next shot was judged by looking, selecting what I consider the right club for my build, the lie of the ball, the part of the course I find myself in and to where I want to go. Yardage/distance was a constant, the ball had to be hit just right to get where I wanted it to go. We never had time to waste measuring something which was in fact incidental to what we were trying to achieve.

As for your argument. Sorry it does not hold water because you are not understanding the 19th Century approach to distance, you are allowing 21st Century thinking which is not the same.

In all the research on reports on matches I have read, none have any reference to the yardage we use today. There is no reference to marker, to points worthy of note re distance or anything vaguely connected with distance as we use the word today. The Great Matches of the 1860/70’s have no equal to distance references to our yardage sickness. The later opening Matches when courses we declared open by playing match between professionals, thinking along the lines of North Berwick 1877, Braid Hills 1888, Machrie 1891. Not one reference to distance as we use the term today. I can go on and quote you even more reports on big and small matches but no mention of distance, or markers or yardage books etc.

I do not go along with you regards one club, but they certainly used their eyes to judge distances. AS for common sense, your argument may have some but you miss the most important point of all, you are basing your comments on your 21st century mind-set and not that which prevailed in the Victorian Age.

SL

 No, your take is wrong on what I have said. If you have used aids and stop you game will fall away for a short time – that time depend upon how many games you play without aids. After a while (from a few days to two-three weeks depending upon the individual) ones game starts to recover as the eye tunes in again and you gain confidence in you own ability. Perhaps you may improve beyond your previous best, but that’s down to improving ones skill by practice. The problem here is that so many want to win and believe that yardage gives them that little advantage, yet in truth is actually restrict their game dulling it to a paper chase.

In the past on this site we have had one of two who use distance aids then decided to try not to use them. The result seems to mimic my findings above their game falls away for a short period before they recapture that which they have lost. The only real problem being that the test have not be run over say a 3, 6 or 12 month period for fear of losing money. And yes the game seem to be more fun for those who tried the old fashion way of letting your eyes judge distance via your body.

AS for purity, I also do not see it as purity, as I have played the game as I have always known it. There is nothing special, pure or fundamental in playing the game as it was taught to you, yet I see weakness all around me in that others wanting to have an advantage over the next player mainly due this need to win.  What I see as unforgivable is making the game easier, trying to minimise the need for skill and just as importantly the need to understand how to use that skill (shown so clearly at The Opens with G Norman & T Watson proving that point in the poor conditions).

Michael

Again it’s down to mind-set and the difference to past great golfers approach to the game. Yes I do accept that clubs had a distance range they play to and the past golfers knew the rating of said clubs, but that is not promoting this need the modern player has for distance. Today we have an industry looking after distance material and devices compared with club makers of the past. The whole thing is totally different, due to our own weakness we have created a Cancer that is taking enjoyment out of the game as we do not need any distance aid to play golf. It’s now so deeply embedded that is part of the game yet of all the modern extras it’s worth is so very debatable. The proof is to seek a skilled player who has used aids agree not to play with them for a fixed give period to assess if they achieve what millions seem to believe or what the likes of myself and other believe that distance aids are the golfing equivalent as the humble poppy – a needy habit yet of not real advantage to the golfer.     

If for no other reason why can’t players see that it’s an outside aid which should not be allowed as it may help the lesser skilled players. Let’s not forget that confidence is part of the skill process and so why accept help even outside help which will reflect certainly upon ones confidence.

60 years old and about 40 years in golf, you make that sound like a boast, yet I do hope it has been enjoyable and rewarding. Nevertheless without the freedom to think and walk the courses I wonder if the experiences would have been as good.

Michael they are outside aids and so should never have been considered let alone allowed in the first place.   

I wish you all well in your games whatever you call it and with whatever help you need to play it.
As for my game and health yes I am now home bound unable to escape to the outside much these days, spending more time on my golfing research than I do on GCA.com. How I would love to be in my father home in St Andrews or suffer the same fate of passing away on a golf course. I will be lucky to see a course let alone play one again

So please excuse me if I do not respond to your comment- even for you I think that’s pushing it a bit
“When was the last time you actually played a round of golf? It's easy to preach from the safety of sitting in front of your computer... which is where you spend the majority of your time as best I can tell.” 

It’s time to close my morning connection to this site.

Melvyn


Scott Warren

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Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #94 on: April 21, 2011, 06:15:38 AM »
Melvyn:

Quote
we have created a Cancer that is taking enjoyment out of the game as we do not need any distance aid to play golf.

The beauty of the situation is that those who want to know can know and those who don't want to know don't have to.

Everyone's a winner!

Kalen Braley

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #95 on: April 21, 2011, 01:03:50 PM »
Melyvn,

Give it up already, Wikipedia has exposed this lie you've been trying to sell us.

An excerpt on Old Tom on his wiki page:

"He introduced many novel ideas on turf and course management, including actively managing hazards (in the past, bunkers and the like were largely left to their own devices, becoming truly "hazardous") and yardage markers"

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Tom_Morris#cite_note-uscot-3

Scott Szabo

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #96 on: April 21, 2011, 01:04:09 PM »
Melvyn:

Quote
we have created a Cancer that is taking enjoyment out of the game as we do not need any distance aid to play golf.

The beauty of the situation is that those who want to know can know and those who don't want to know don't have to.

Everyone's a winner!

Finally, someone with a little common sense  ;)
"So your man hit it into a fairway bunker, hit the wrong side of the green, and couldn't hit a hybrid off a sidehill lie to take advantage of his length? We apologize for testing him so thoroughly." - Tom Doak, 6/29/10

Dan Herrmann

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #97 on: April 21, 2011, 01:54:42 PM »
Heck- I like my Sky Caddie, even though I stink and couldn't hit a 7-iron the same distance twice in a row if I tried :)

Matthew Petersen

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #98 on: April 21, 2011, 02:09:57 PM »
I actually have a lot of sympathy for Melvin's primary argument, which is that the game we call "golf" today can be said to have so little in common with what "golf" was a century ago that they are different sports entirely.

This may well be true, but ranting about what the game is today on even this message board, strikes me a bit like going over to a basketball message board and decrying the ongoing NBA playoffs because no peach baskets are in use and dribbling is permissible.

Terry Lavin

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Masters Yardage Book
« Reply #99 on: April 21, 2011, 02:55:59 PM »
Everybody should play with a blindfold.
Nobody ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the American people.  H.L. Mencken