Congratulations on the engagement Scott. I too got engaged last Wednesday.
Congratulations, Mark!
Are you able to forget/ignore your opinions when working on a newspaper like the Daily Mail? or do you find that sometimes it shapes your opinions?
On every paper I've ever worked, there have been stories that I don't personally agree with. Opinion pieces, it's common and you just accept it. If you think a news story is wrong, unfair or misleading in some way, you argue your case with your boss, sometimes they agree and it gets changed or pulled, sometimes they don't and you just have to suck it up.
I guess I just accept that newspapers are never going to be completely uninterested (as opposed to disinterested) in the news, which is why it's great that a city like London has so many opposing points being made.
Those inclined to can buy, for instance, the Guardian and the Mail and read the alternate views and make up their mind, or alternately - and most people are in this boat - buy the one they agree with and nod a lot while they read things that reinforce why they feel the way they do about certain topics.
I don't think there is anything wrong with a newspaper having an agenda - they all do - because it gives them individual character.
At Deal - which do you find harder 11 or 12 or 15?
12, no question.
11 has always set up pretty well for me, and I find the green one of the easiest on the course - though I played it from up on the sea wall during Buda and it was much more difficult. The fairway bunker feels like much more of the threat from there. I've watched a few people play from up there and almost all have finished in the right rough about 160m out, as opposed to having a 7i or 8i in.
12 just takes my lunch money more often than not, but I love it to death nonetheless. The positioning of the two bunkeres near the green is just perfect, I reckon.
15 is another one that just seems to set up well for me. I birdied it the first time I played it, and I think those first psychological victories and losses can really stick around. It might be because I love blind shots and don't really feel that intimidated by them, but the approach to 15 is one of the easier ones on the course, I think, especially once you realise that missing the green right is infinitely more pleasant than left.