Word: golfed
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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Coming into this weekend’s MacDonald Cup tournament at Yale, the Harvard men’s golf team had some questions to answer. Was it the improved team that began the season with a fourth-place finish at the Mid-Pines Intercollegiate or the one that faltered two weeks ago with a last-place finish at the McLaughlin Invitational? Feeling like they had something to prove, the Crimson golfers came out swinging and finished fifth in a 26-team field, marking a dramatic improvement from their last outing. “It was really good...
...Harvard women’s golf team made a strong showing this past weekend at the Yale Fall Women’s Intercollegiate, overcoming a famously punishing course with two top-10 finishes but ultimately taking home second place. The Crimson shot a combined 627 in two rounds, 314 on Saturday and 313 yesterday, closing out the tournament with eight shots more than first-place Yale and one shot less than third-place Rollins College. Coach Kevin Rhoads chalked Yale’s success up to home-field advantage under particularly difficult conditions. Wind complicated the course?...
...Jones Jr. Largely driven by growth in Istria and buzz around Croatia's imminent accession to the E.U., the World Travel and Tourism Council last year listed Croatia as the world's fastest growing tourist destination, a mantle to which the government responded by swiftly laying out 50 potential golf sites in a nation of 4.5 million...
Similar challenges face developers in Bosnia and Serbia, where all that remains of the Belgrade course opened by Prince Paul Karadjordjevic in 1936--and bombed a few years later--is a restaurant named Golf. A new course in Belgrade opened in 2003 and has since seen its membership quadruple. The game is part of a new experience, a new Serbia, in which bunkers are sand traps, not places to hide. "Another three or four years, and I'll go pro," local champ Ognjen Radovic, 14, said nonchalantly, as if planning for one's future was never a luxury in Serbia...
Back in Croatia, tourism officials report that along with wealthy foreign investors there are Bosnians and Serbs happy to cross borders and ethnic lines in search of a tee time. In a symbolic gesture indicative of golf's role in the region, the Croatian government said land used by the army will be donated for golf courses. In Europe's new century, finally dawning on this dark corner of the Continent, there is a reasonable hope that the military has no need...