Scholarship table
I'm just stunned he didn't built it on/near/adjacent to Native American land so he could also include a personal private casino.
That’s me!
Big golf trip for me and some MU buddies. Going to Bandon Dunes March 29-April 2nd and then flying straight from Eugene on the 2nd to Augusta for the Monday practice round. Gonna be a hell of a week Oh, it’s also final four weekend and championship Monday so it could get even sweeter!!
I can’t wait to get out to Bandon. Tentatively on the agenda in ‘24
One of the guys on the trip (Nova grad, my enemy) lived in Portland for 5 years and swears this is the best time to go. We saved major bucks by going March/April rather than peak summer I’m still a little nervous it’ll be in the 40s with rain and wind but that’s the Midwesterner in me
PM Nads. Pretty sure he was fitted at one of them PGA stores like in the MKE airport, hey?
Morikawa with a collapse at the Sentry. Kapalua is not a course you expect to see someone cough up a big lead.
Anyone do club fittings in the Milwaukee area have any recommendations for fitting services?
LIV golf is paying the CW to show their tournaments. That deal was not done in a Flash. And it is hardly showcasing the Legends of Tomorrow.
Golfweek's Eamon Lynch's column on the LIV/CW deal:https://golfweek.usatoday.com/2023/01/20/eamon-lynch-liv-golf-tv-contract-cw-network-desperation/?env=Given his talent for recasting excruciating humiliations as bold victories, it’s surprising that Greg Norman doesn’t present himself annually at the gate of Augusta National wearing a green jacket and insisting that what happened in 1996 — or ’86, ’87, ’89 and ’99 — was actually a triumph worthy of a place setting at the Champions Dinner.“A momentous day for LIV Golf,” is how Norman described his league’s just-announced broadcast deal with The CW, the nation’s 25th most-watched network, or 29th if you’re chasing the 18-49 demographic who might be drawn to “golf, but louder.” (To be fair, the CW’s average viewer is 58, so they watch every show louder).Alert to an opportunity to impress his boss, LIV’s chief media officer, Will Staeger, conjured a version of events that would have even George Santos calling for narrative restraint.“Following a competitive bidding window with multiple U.S. networks and streaming platforms, the sports story of 2022 has just moved into pole position for the top story of 2023,” he wrote in a social media post.Staeger’s comment raises two questions for those among us predisposed to cynicism: did autocorrect change “begging” to “bidding,” and how does a competitive process among multiple parties result in giving away the product for free to the worst-case option? ...