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Happy Gilmore - Patreon Version

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Julian Calzada

I think Tin Cup is really good. I haven't seen any of the others, sadly .__.

Harold Wright

Man, if you want to watch another great Golf comedy... Caddyshack is an absolute classic comedy with an amazing cast. :) Love you guys, always enjoy your reactions.

Anonymous

If you want a serious golf movie, I highly recommend The Greatest Game Ever Played. High stakes. Lots of drama. Based off a true story. It's one of those movies that's written well enough that you don't need to be interested in golf to enjoy it.

Anonymous

If you hit the ball into the water, you take a penalty stroke and either reshoot or take a "drop". A "drop" means you drop a new ball behind the hazard (in this case, water) along a straight line from the hole to where the ball crossed the yellow or red boundary marking said hazard. Continue play from there. The "play it as it lies" rule was taken to a comedic extreme in this movie. No real life tournament would ever require you to hit a ball off someone's shoe. Also, if you feel like your ball is in the way of someone else's ball while they're trying to putt, you can mark your ball with a small, flat object (like a coin or designated marker) and remove your ball from the putting green so that it doesn't get hit by someone else's ball. "Par" is the ideal amount of strokes anticipated to finish a hole for a practiced player. So a Par 4 is intended to be finished in 4 strokes. Instead of keeping track of the total number of strokes for the whole game, a tournament will keep track of how many strokes a player is running relative to par. Let's say you hit a par 4 in 4 strokes. You're up +0. Let's say the next hole is a par 3, and you hit it in 4. Now you're +1. You hit a birdie (-1) on another par 4, you're back down to +0. You hit another birdie next hole. Now you're -1. The goal is to get as far below par for the whole game. So negative numbers means you're below par. +3 Triple Bogey +2 Double Bogey +1 Bogey +0 Par -1 Birdie -2 Eagle -3 Albatross -4 Condor Par 7's aren't standard, so there's no nickname for hitting a ball 5 under par. If you ever hit a ball 5 under par, you're already on a par 6 hole, and you just hit a hole-in-one, or an "ace." And anything more than 3 over par is just called "[X] over par".