I was always fond of the normal format: Meat for Breakfast, Empty the Bottle late at night and 24 hours of G.O.L.F. in between. Repeat three times.
Three days, or at least 2 1/2 sounds right to me. For example, a Thursday afternoon arrival (and dinner/get-together), all day Friday and Saturday, and leave Sunday afternoon after lunch. We definitely want to have some type of tournament format, maybe a two-day team event, e.g., Friday/Saturday with an Awards dinner or Saturday/Sunday with an Awards lunch. Also, at least one scheduled clinic each day and lots of individual work on the lesson tee after our rounds. Finally, I think the evening Open Forum Discussions will be priceless!
Three days, or at least 2 1/2 sounds right to me. For example, a Thursday afternoon arrival (and dinner/get-together), all day Friday and Saturday, and leave Sunday afternoon after lunch. We definitely want to have some type of tournament format, maybe a two-day team event, e.g., Friday/Saturday with an Awards dinner or Saturday/Sunday with an Awards lunch. Also, at least one scheduled clinic each day and lots of individual work on the lesson tee after our rounds. Finally, I think the evening Open Forum Discussions will be priceless!
Do I feel I helped take TGM off, yes I do. And I hope they feel the same. There was 5 of us - there was more I am missing - but we all posted. I am talking way back when the only other forum was David Laville's....I mean, TGM wasnt a pimple on anyones butt.
And I owe a ton to all of them - Chuck, MBC, Ecox, Randy - they were the gateway to my learning. Then, someone else joined the fray on TGM forum - and, you know him - I have spent countless hours with him on the phone - he, in my opinion is one of the 2 most knowledgable people in the world for TGM - then went to I believe 3 AI classes - and saw Lynn in his debut back.
Those were the days, weren't they, Patrick?
You did indeed do much of the 'heavy lifting' during that crucial period when TGM was earning its spurs in cyberspace. Including, I might add, educating me about the 'lay of the land' -- the various sites and posting personalities -- that populated this corner of the world. I had been away from golf for 20 years and knew absolutely nothing of the various golf websites, much less this funky thing called 'posting'. I, for one, am grateful for the many thankless hours you put in establishing the basecamp and keeping things humming along the way.
It's now been four years since my first posts on the old TGM site run by you and Randy. By then, Chuck had already started his own site (with Randy as Admin), and I was to learn of it a couple of weeks later. I posted on both sites until Bagger, Trig and I formed this site almost exactly one year later. By the grace of God, Bambam appeared during that first year, and the rest, as they say, is history.
It was Mike O who called out of the blue in December 2003 and told me about the TGM site. I logged on for the first time (and made my first post) on January 11, 2004. Ironically, I would later discover that this was 22 years to the day from when I stepped off the airplane in Seattle, Washington and came face to face with Homer Kelley.
In one sense, it seems all this happened only yesterday, and in another, a lifetime ago. In fact, for me, it has been a lifetime, because mine has so radically changed since then.
You did indeed do much of the 'heavy lifting' during that crucial period when TGM was earning its spurs in cyberspace. Including, I might add, educating me about the 'lay of the land' -- the various sites and posting personalities -- that populated this corner of the world. I had been away from golf for 20 years and knew absolutely nothing of the various golf websites, much less this funky thing called 'posting'. I, for one, am grateful for the many thankless hours you put in establishing the basecamp and keeping things humming along the way.
It's now been four years since my first posts on the old TGM site run by you and Randy. By then, Chuck had already started his own site (with Randy as Admin), and I was to learn of it a couple of weeks later. I posted on both sites until Bagger, Trig and I formed this site almost exactly one year later. By the grace of God, Bambam appeared during that first year, and the rest, as they say, is history.
It was Mike O who called out of the blue in December 2003 and told me about the TGM site. I logged on for the first time (and made my first post) on January 11, 2004. Ironically, I would later discover that this was 22 years to the day from when I stepped off the airplane in Seattle, Washington and came face to face with Homer Kelley.
In one sense, it seems all this happened only yesterday, and in another, a lifetime ago. In fact, for me, it has been a lifetime, because mine has so radically changed since then.
Who'da ever thunk it?
Yes, Even to this day- I get PM's accusing me, blaming me and even death threats- for releasing the powerful green thing! But that's normally just from the "competition" - to which I just PM back and say "You're no competition."
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Life Goal- Developing a new theory of movement based on Brain Science
Interests - Dabbling with insanity
Hobbies- Creating Quality
Yes, Even to this day- I get PM's accusing me, blaming me and even death threats- for releasing the powerful green thing! But that's normally just from the "competition" - to which I just PM back and say "You're no competition."
Mike O,
Start working on your boss now.
Your Frequent Yoda Miles account is heavy-laden, and I will personally spring for your roundtrip airline tickets from SoCal to God's Country!
The barbeque is on Bucket. Or maybe the barbeque is Bucket.
I won't eat until I see him in line!
You guys are too much . . . I just check in from time to time!
Thanks for everything, Mike. See you in North Carolina!