Perhaps my biggest pet peeve these days is when I'm reading something - it could be an article in a magazine, a book, or even a post on here - and the author chooses to make some remark, without putting it in some sort of context or perspective.
It happened to me last night while reading the new Golf T&L: Jim Finnegan, a wonderful writer, mentioned that one of David Kidd's associates spent "about a day and a half" shaping a green. Can someone put this number in perspective? What's normal? Is there even such a thing as normal? The implication was that this was a long time, but it doesn't seem long to me.
It happened repeatedly on the most recent Pebble thread - holes dismissed as weak, bad, ugh, etc - with little or no accompanying explanation. Can someone mention what specifically left them cold about the supposedly weak holes at Pebble? Bunker placement? Mundane greens?
I hate when people tell others how to post, so I'm just going to make a request here: please provide some sort of explanation that puts your remarks in perspective. And please, to all you golf writers out there, do the same - don't assume others automatically know something.
I've always said that is the moment that a med student or resident becomes a doctor: when he or she starts spouting medical jargon, assuming others know exactly what he's referencing. (Or is this simply showing-off?)