Word: putt
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...particularly long course (6,672 yd.) but it is perilously trapped. The narrow fairways put a tremendous premium on straight driving. The thick-matted rough seldom fails to cost a player a stroke whenever he strays into it. The greens of Stolon Bent are smooth but tricky to putt...
...almost in alternation to the 18th. Both were slipshod around the green and unsure in the pits, with Tolley driving farther and hitting the ball harder, but taking many chances, as golfers usually do when playing Jones. Tolley could have won on the 18th if he had sent his putt down. On the 19th Jones laid him a dead stymie...
...playing lean, impassive George Voigt, best iron-shot maker of U. S. amateurs but a short driver, whose amateur standing was once questioned by the U. S. G. A. on the suspicion that he was giving golf lessons to his Washington, D. C. employer. Jones missed a five-foot putt on the 8th, another at the 10th and cut his drive into a whin at the 12th. Voigt was two up. Here Voigt began to slip. He drove out of bounds and lost the 15th. At the Railway Hole he played into Principal's Nose, famed bunker. Suddenly Jones...
...Richard Chapman of Pomfret school: the eastern interscholastic golf championship, with a 20-ft. putt on the last green in the finals, from Tommy Tailer, who goes to Browning, a private school in Manhattan, whose father, the late T. Suffern Tailer, Newport socialite, owned a private championship-calibre nine-hole course on Newport's famed ocean drive. In 1928, Tommy Tailer was beaten 1 up in the Rhode Island junior championship by an Italian caddy, one Joe Pezullo, playing with a set of borrowed clubs...