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A Good Walk Spoiled

Question: In which form of golf do two players compete only against each other?
Answer: In golf, there are two forms of play: match play and stroke (medal) play. In match play a player and an opponent play together and compete only against each other, while in stroke play each golfer competes against every other player in the tournament.
Question: Who was the first English professional golfer to win the British Open?
Answer: John Henry Taylor was the first English professional golfer to win the British Open, in 1894. Before his victory, the tournament, first held in 1860, had been dominated by Scottish golfers.
Question: For whom is the trophy for the best scoring average in professional golf named?
Answer: The Vardon Trophy, which is awarded annually by the Professional Golfers’ Association of America to the professional with the best scoring average, is named for British golfer Harry Vardon.
Question: Which of these entities is a rule-making organization in international golf?
Answer: The rule-making bodies for golf are the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews and the United States Golf Association.
Question: The Walker Cup is awarded to the winner of a golf competition between amateur men’s teams from the British Isles and which country?
Answer: The Walker Cup is awarded to the winner of a golf competition between amateur men’s teams from the United States and the British Isles. It has been held biennially since 1922 on sites alternating between the United States and the British Isles.
Question: What is the maximum number of clubs a player is permitted to carry in one round in golf?
Answer: In the average golfer’s set of clubs there are usually either 3 or 4 wood clubs and 9 or 10 irons. No more than 14 clubs may be carried during a round.
Question: Where was the earliest form of golf played?
Answer: For many years it was believed that golf had originated in Scotland, but evidence suggests that early forms of golf were played in the Netherlands first and then in Scotland. Golf in the Netherlands was, by the middle of the 16th century, a firmly established and sophisticated game.
Question: Who is considered the “father of American golf”?
Answer: Golf as an organized game in the United States usually is dated from the founding of the St. Andrew’s Golf Club at Yonkers, New York, in 1888. Its progenitor was John Reid, a Scot from Dunfermline who became known as “the father of American golf.”
Question: Which among these is the oldest golfing society?
Answer: The Honourable Company of Edinburgh Golfers, whose modern home is at Muirfield in East Lothian, is one of the world’s oldest golfing societies. Its origins can be documented to 1744.
Question: Who was the first golfer to win the Masters Tournament four times and the first to earn $1 million in tournament prize money?
Answer: Arnold Palmer was the first golfer to win the Masters Tournament four times and the first to earn $1 million in tournament prize money.
Question: Who was the first player to win consecutively the four major tournaments of golf—the Masters, the U.S. Open, the British Open (Open Championship), and the PGA Championship?
Answer: With his victory at the 2001 Masters, Tiger Woods became the first player to win consecutively the four major tournaments of golf—the Masters, the U.S. Open, the British Open (Open Championship), and the PGA Championship.
Question: Who was the first player in the modern era of professional golf to achieve a career Grand Slam?
Answer: Gene Sarazen was the first player to achieve a modern career Grand Slam in golf—that is, win the U.S. Open, the British Open, the PGA Championship, and the Masters Tournament, which are the four major tournaments of the modern era of professional golf, over the course of his career.
Question: Of what material were golf balls originally made?
Answer: Golf balls were originally made of wood. (In the early 17th century feather balls were introduced.)
Question: Who, in 1930, became the first golfer to win the four major tournaments of his time (a Grand Slam) in a single year?
Answer: Bobby Jones was the first golfer to achieve the Grand Slam—defined as the four major tournaments of his time—in a single year. He did so in 1930, when he won the British Open (Open Championship), the U.S. Open, and the British and U.S. amateur championships. Jones never became a professional golfer; he was a lawyer in Atlanta.