Here's another quote to ponder:
In over-all design the Augusta National is not intended to be a punishing golf course. It is, however, a course which under tournament conditions—that is, with the green surfaces firm, and keen—severely tests the competing player's temperament.
What does everyone think of the word choice of "temperament" and the phrase "severely tests the competing player's temperament"?
At first I kinda thought of it in a US Open sense but now it seems less about resoluteness and more like "balance" or "levelheadedness." It's about having a temperament along the lines of that Thomas Jefferson quote about a first-rate mind being one that can consider two exactly opposite ideas at the same time without going crazy.
A few quotes from the 1980s -- do they still hold?
"Everything is designed to mislead you, trick you into making an unwise decision. Then you're twice as mad as yourself." -- Lee Elder
"Every good course has a couple of holes where everybody talks about the tough decision to make in club selection. But here, there are thirteen or fourteen holes like that." -- John Mahaffey
"This is the ultimate psychological course -- it demands gambles, then plays with your mind." - Joe Inman
"I shot 41 on the back. And hit the ball as well as I ever have in my life." -- Lanny Wadkins (1981)
And two personal favorites relating to temperament:
"The problem is not whether to gamble, but where to gamble. And the answer is different for every golfer, depending on the parameters of his game, his nerves and his temperament." -- Tom Boswell
"If we had to play Augusta National in one hour, the best athlete would win the Masters. But as it is, they give us time to hang ourselves. Every swing is a 'thought shot.' So, instead of the best athlete, you end up with the best thinker as the winner." -- Joe Inman
Mark