As an appetizer for the upcoming Tiger-Phil (plus Manning and Brady) match, Andy and Garrett speak with golf historian Stephen Proctor about the history of challenge matches. They discuss the importance of rowdy, big-money matches to early golf culture in Scotland, the eventual ascendancy of stroke play as the dominant competitive format, and the ways that today's televised matches might recapture some of the magic of the past. Stephen is the author of Monarch of the Green, a biography of Young Tom Morris.
What to Know About Walter Travis (ft. Brian Schneider)
Let’s Talk About the OWGR
Why Golf?
An Announcement from The Fried Egg
Designing a Clubhouse
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
The Many Shane Bacons
The Players That the PGA Tour Can’t Afford to Lose to LIV
Superintendent Series: Brendan Parkhurst of Cape Arundel
What’s Next in Golf Course Architecture?
The New Yorker Goes Deep on LIV Golf
Sugarloaf Social Club Bought a Golf Course
First Impressions of PGA Frisco
Superintendent Series: Sandy Reid of St. Andrews
Mailbag: All of Your Golf Course Architecture Questions
Mailbag: Presidents Cup Reactions and Burgerdog Musings
The Presidents Cup: Past, Present, and Future
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