When you come to think of it that is the secret of most of the great holes all over the world. They all have some kind of a twist. C.B. MACDONALD
"Dramatic N'wide Tour changes needed"
/Clinton Upholds Hope, Ford Legacy Of Engaging Fans Via Wayward Shots
/Captain Olly Just Two Back In South Africa
/Green Golf Carts Are Here, Sort Of
/Moore's 61 Comes With Navarro On The Bag
/Tiger On Technology: "Natural progression of golf"
/"We see slight improvement – just not every day."
/"The most refreshing thing was that for a change he could actually see his ball land in the fairway."
/Tom Dunne's excellent case for a shorter ball and downsized game was inspired in large part by a visit to Kingarrock, an experience he says "felt straight out of an episode of Downton Abbey." He makes a couple of key points for those who react in horror at the thought of hitting shorter drives on shorter courses...
After playing a few holes, I looked at a 300-yard par-four in exactly the same way I would a 400-yarder using all modern stuff. And on the one occasion that I outdrove my playing partner, I felt exactly the same way I would have otherwise.
And this point interested me because I was absolutely smitten with the noticeably shorter time between teeing off and reaching your drive, an element that dramatically improves the flow of a round.
Since my visit to Scotland, I've kept in touch with David Anderson, Kingarrock's proprietor. He told me a great story a couple of months ago. A South African touring pro (not one of the household names) visited and played hickory over the summer. After his round Anderson asked him if he'd enjoyed himself. The pro said yes, adding that the most refreshing thing was that for a change he could actually see his ball land in the fairway. That's the game they play. And we could play it, too, under Solheim's three-ball solution.
Here's my video diary from a day at Kingarrock:
Add Brandel To The Pro-Bifurcation List
/Podcast: Course Rankings, Hope and Clinton
/Aiken Billing Rhino Saving Campaign, Needs To Start With His Golfing Countryman!
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An unbylined IOL Sapa report reveals that South African Thomas Aiken, second in this week's Volvo Golf Champions event at the Links at Fancourt, is wearing a rhino on his hat as part of his effort to prevent rhinos in his country from being hunted into extinction.

