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wsmorrison

Re:Walker Cup Scoring
« Reply #50 on: September 14, 2007, 07:34:59 AM »
Rich is.....correct!  Come to Philadelphia and collect your prize of golf at the course of your choice...as long as its a Flynn  ;)

Rich Goodale

Re:Walker Cup Scoring
« Reply #51 on: September 14, 2007, 07:43:56 AM »
Tres simple, Wayne--one of my uncles played for Massachusetts in the 30's, in the days when TE Paul was just a 2nd reserve for the PA team, and even before he played Royal Portrush with Gary Player.

I'll be in Philly next summer, but won't play any Flynn course unless the book is finished by then.  How else would I know if the course was any good or not?

Rich
« Last Edit: September 14, 2007, 07:52:49 AM by Richard Farnsworth Goodale »

TEPaul

Re:Walker Cup Scoring
« Reply #52 on: September 14, 2007, 07:49:16 AM »
"- we had to settle for the Valley course at Portrush as the Dunluce was fully booked -"

Ahh, I feel for you Bill, but that Valley course is one of the neatest little rumpled affairs I've seen. It also happens to be the course about which Gary Player said while standing on the tee of the 14th hole at Dunluce above:

"Now there's a mess that a team of bulldozers could easily fix".

I don't think the club will ever forgive him for that remark.  ;)

TEPaul

Re:Walker Cup Scoring
« Reply #53 on: September 14, 2007, 08:00:34 AM »
I spoke to the highly entertaining Skee Riegel (US Amateur champion Pebble Beach 1947) yesterday and he told me the US Walker Cup team invited him to Royal County Down as a special guest. Skee is apparently 93 but he was all ready to go over (had his passport etc all spiffed up) until he found out his little white poodle had to spend thirty days in quarantine. That killed the deal dead as a smelt because Skee can't go anywhere without his little white poodle. (Wayne maybe we should introduce Skee to Kittanset's old super as they would look like twins with their little white poodles in their arms).

Skee told me why he was invited---something about all the Walker Cup teams he was on pummeling GB after perhaps getting beat at RCD way back when. Sometimes if you're not concentrated 110% it can be a little hard to follow Skee as his incredible story telling rolls on along like an outta control freight train.  ;)

Mark_Rowlinson

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re:Walker Cup Scoring
« Reply #54 on: September 17, 2007, 06:59:04 AM »
Don't be too swift to criticise the spectators for their lack of tumultuous hollering, cheering and applause. One of the facts of RCD is that the sand dunes are large and when you are in the bottom of one of the valleys between them you can hardly hear a sound elsewhere on the course.  On many occasions we cheered loudly when a player from either side did something particularly special. Add to that the fact that there were very few scoreboards out on the course (and they were usally a hole or two behind the action) and it was impossible to know how exciting the match as a whole was if you were following your own particular match, so you had no idea how significant or otherwise a particular win or loss of a hole might be in the context of the match.

My wife and I followed David Horsey in each match, for the simple reason that he is a local lad, and has been tought at the local driving range (not a posh course) by the same chap who occasionally gives my younger son a refresher lesson.  I don't suppose there were ever more than 25 spectators watching his match with Webb Simpson on the Sunday afternoon until the last few holes, but we were all rivetted by the bravery of both players who each suffered nasty setbacks and somehow rallied immediately.  But we saw the US Captain only once during the course of this match (which could so easily have been pivotal) and never saw the GB&I captain.  So these young men seemed to be playing their own match unaware of the state of events in the match as a whole - just as we spectators were.  And it was not until Horsey reached the 16th green that he learned, by looking at the scoreboard, that he had to win his match in order to tie the match itself.  He did in fact win his match, but by then something extraordinary had happened in front of him, and it was to no avail.  Having watched all four of his matches, I have to say that his determination and courage are his greatest strengths - sure, he can hit a ball, but all these fellows can.  It was a priviledge to be able to be so close to such play.

And yet, did it matter?  I am reminded of the two or three paratroopers in the Normandy landings who found themselves holding out for two days and nights in an isolated cottage against superior numbers of surrounding German soldiers until eventually rescued by a force of allied infantry.  The newspapers referred to it as a skirmish.  It was rather more than a skirmish for them!
« Last Edit: September 17, 2007, 07:02:09 AM by Mark_Rowlinson »

Matthew Hunt

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re:Walker Cup Scoring
« Reply #55 on: September 17, 2007, 03:40:24 PM »
I was bunker raking on the final day from inside the ropes and the atmophere was amazing!

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