Badger''s Golf Compendium: The Essential Illustrated Handbook for Clubhouse Bores
English
By (author): Niall Edworthy
The older the sport, the richer the language and culture. Few sports can claim a heritage as ancient as golf, and few are richer in error-strewn comedy, spiteful asides and cruel jibes. My friend in the bunker, my enemy on the green...
Adolf Hitler, Airmail, Amen Corner, Army Golf ... Bandit, Brassie, Brazilian, Breakfast Ball ... Ferret, Flub, Flusher, Fried Egg ... Rabbit, Rickshaw, Ryanair, Rushdie ... Waggle, Whiff, Wise (Dennis), Wormburner... this exquisitely designed book contains over 400 curious and laugh-out-loud words and phrases from both sides of the Atlantic and beyond.
From St. Andrews to Augusta, Royal St. George's to The Royal Melbourne, Sunningdale to Sun City, Pebble Beach to Pine Valley... golfers share the same funny language, united in humour and exasperation by the same challenges, hazards, obstacles and duff errors.
This densely packed volume of hilarious terms is essential reading for every golf enthusiast and clubhouse bore ever to have found themselves on a Claggy Lie on a Goat Track, pulled out the Hand Wedge deep in the Cabbage or smashed a Ferret out of the Kitty Litter, the perfect gift from golf widows and widowers around the globe.
Sample Entries:
- Captain Kirk - Wild shot, going where no shot has gone before
- Cuban - Ball just short of the hole that needed another revolution to get in. See Corbyn, Jeremy
- Laurel & Hardy - Fat shot followed by a thin one, or vice-versa
- Mouth Wedge - A gobby golfer who talks too much and bugs hell out of his playing partners
- Salman Rushdie - A difficult read
- Son-in-law - Of a shot that you weren't really hoping for, but it will just about do.
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