|
|
Golf is one of the few sports in which cheating isn't highly
acceptable, yet situations where people bend the rules are
fairly prevalent. Golfers who are so inclined to, say, poke their
opponents with a tree branch while they are about to play a crucial
stroke, number in the thousands. In addition, many golfers believe
that things like poisoning (yes, Dave, Zuderman's moonshine is
indeed just that) opponents is an effective way to come out on
top. Regardless of your tactics, chances are you too have schemed
ways to ensure that you are the only one left standing after it's
all said and done.
Other popular ways that golfers try to cheat include:
1. Employing Handicaps that fluctuate more than the NASDAQ
"Handicap Maintenance" is what my friend "Muzzy" (peckerhead) terms this.
2. Using illegal equipment
Golf clubs powered by gasoline engines will soon become the norm at your club.
3. Creative counting
"Plan B" is how my uncles refer to this technique.
4. Do-overs
Apparently, so my wife tells me, not considered cheating for pregnant women.
5. Fill-in-the-blanks approach to the Rule Book
"When a ball disappears in the middle of a water hazard
it is considered to be temporarily out of service. Seeing as I
paid good money to play and the guy with the hip waders and the
really, really long ball retriever should be present but isn't,
there is no penalty and the ball must be perched on a nice, fluffy
piece of grass much closer to the hole."
"Out of bounds markers are defined by the real or perceived
level of danger in venturing to play a ball from a non-golfy region
that may be protected by things like guard dogs or evil stay-at-home
moms wielding brooms.
In closing, I believe that it is the inherently difficult nature
of golf combined with a human's unquenchable desire to conquer
all is what encourages people to cheat at golf. Or, perhaps the
answer lies in a joke which ponders an age-old question. The question:
why do dogs lick their balls? The answer: because they can.
Andrew Penner is a 10-year member of the Canadian PGA. His upcoming golf humor book, titled "One Flew Over The Caddyshack," will be available this fall from Falcon Press.


More
on







