When Royal St. George's Golf Club, the host of the upcoming Open Championship, opened in the late 1880s, it looked a lot different than it does today. The earliest iteration of the course embodied the Victorian principles of its designer, Laidlaw Purves. Over the next few decades, those principles—and Royal St. George's itself—came under fire from a new school of golf writers and architects. Historian Bob Crosby joins Garrett Morrison to discuss this debate and its far-reaching consequences.
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Let’s Talk About the OWGR
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An Announcement from The Fried Egg
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Assembling Retro Sets with Nick Sherburne of Club Champion
Yolk with Doak 37: Scotland Travels, Restorations, and Listener Questions
Yolk with Doak 36: Tom’s New Projects (ft. the Return of High Pointe)
Golf’s Scientific Revolution
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Superintendent Series: Brendan Parkhurst of Cape Arundel
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First Impressions of PGA Frisco
Superintendent Series: Sandy Reid of St. Andrews
Mailbag: All of Your Golf Course Architecture Questions
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The Presidents Cup: Past, Present, and Future
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