Club Captain's Messages

Best wishers and good luck to Travis Cook at the NZ Men's International in Tauranga, and to Lynda, Angela & Ginny at the Women's Interprovincials

Saturday 10th December - Closing Day Christmas Hamper

Men's Competition - 4 Ball best Ball Medal

Pennants 2023

The sheets are up for teamentries - please put your names down or speak to Dave or Steve

Thanks

Dave


WOMENS SECTION

Hi

Stableford for the next month

Cleaners are Rosie and Wendy

Have a great week

Lynda


AGM - Reminder
This is the penultimate reminder that the AGM is 7:30pm on Tuesday 6th December at the Golf Club
 
Please arrive in time to start then
 
Any items for the Agenda need to be with me by close of play on Weds 30 November
 
If you wish to send apologies, appoint Proxies then please let me know as soon as possible
 
The Agenda, and reports will be sent out proior to the meeting, and while I will print some off on the day (ignore the swearing at the *!#&*! printer when you arrive), it would be helpful if you could bring a copy yourself please
 
Many thanks
 
Steve

Results - Top Tens & Ties

Sat 19 Nov - Thu 24 Nov
Stableford R1 - Ladies 9 Hole (Top 3 & Ties)

22 K Taylor
18 C Newman
14 S Thompson

Barbara Angus Stableford - Ladies 18 hole (Top 3 & Ties)
37 J Rae
34 M Hogan
30 R Carruthers

Wed 23 Nov
Stableford (Top 10 & ties)

39 M Hervey; E Megaw
38 M Williamson; B McCully; M Mayman
37 D Switalla; M Ussher (Pleasant Point); S Young (Maungati); T Preen; M Goodhew

Fri 25 Nov
Stableford - Mens 9 Hole 

23 N Moore
19 G Morrison
18 H Smith
17 A Robert

Nearest The Pin:
Gavin Wilton

Sat 26 Nov
Stableford - Blue tees (Top 10 & Ties)

37 J McGlashan; M Sewell; S Keen
36 T Cook; P Bennett
35 T Moir; R Du Plessis
34 M Keen; D McEwing; F Ng; M Williamson; N Beatson; P Rodden

Twos for the week:
4th Hole: Michael Hobbs (Christchurch); Travis Cook
15th Hole: Don McLean; Dave Switalla; Mark Sewell


...and finally
My penultimate newsletter (and the second appearance in this newsletter of "penultimate")

Nominations for the Annual Awards are open, and all sensibly daft suggestions are welcomed - please send your nominations via email to timarugc@xtra.co.nz
 
This week I have been following the Jekyll & Hyde performance of the English football team, who started with a 6-2 victory over Iran and followed it up with  a 0-0 draw againnst those footballing titans, the US.
 
The World Cup, that global showcase of the most popular single sport on the planet, has provided a number of shocks already, with the minnows surprising the "bigger" fish and giving every underdog the glimmer of hope, that shred of belief, that produces fanatic followers.
 
Which begs the question, how ddo they do it?  How do they take on the greatest and triumph? And, are there any lessons for us mere sporting mortals?
 
To my mind, there are a couple of lessons to be learnt:
 
Lesson 1: Total committment - there is ineveitably a total, one hundred percent committment (there can't be more, ignore the commentators) to the cause, all 11 players literally put their bodies on the line (evidence Saudi Arabia's performance against Argentina)
 
Lesson 2: Belief - the teams believe that they can achieve their goals, the Japanese believed that they would beat Germany, and Germany started to believe that they were going to lose
 
Lesson 3 - The inequities of sport - sport throws up oddball results every now and then, it could be that the opposition are not at their best, it could be that a ball bounces the wrong way, a tad too high, a foot slips at the wrong moment, the wind gusts at just the wrong time and all of a sudden the momentum is going the wrong way, it is not going to be your day - a very common feeling on the average golf course
 
Lesson 4 - Enjoy the moment - all of the so-called minnows are still expected to go out of the competition early, and the competition is designed to get the bigger teams through to the final rounds (all competitions are - they are sponsored by companies that want to see the big teams in the latter stages so that there are more eyeballs on the advertising); the minnows rarely get very far, but they all live for that fleeting moment of pure unadulterated joy when it all comes together and they taste an unlikely victory
 
As golfers we are lucky in that we can have several (sometimes) moments during a round where everything just clicks, and we hit the ball in the middle of the club just how we want to, the difference between us and the pro's is that they will do it the shot before and the shot after, and the one after that.  We just get moments as minnows in the sun, so to my mind, just enjoy it when it happens, and don't worry about the rest, there is always another day
 
My range of self help books, "Bull for Balls"  will not be in any bookshops soon
 
Stay safe, stay dry (bloody weather) and have fun out there
 
Steve
 
 
 
 
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