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BASIS OF A BIRDIE.—The last of the 216 matches played during the Russell Grace interprovincial women’s golf tournament at Shirley was perhaps the most vital of them all. In it, Miss P. Harrison (Waikato-King Country) met Miss S. Grigg (Canterbury), and had Miss Harrison won, her team would have tied for the title with Thames Valley-Bay of Plenty. Miss Grigg is shown playing her fine approach to the eighteenth green, after which she holed her putt for a birdie and the match.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19640529.2.170.1

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume CIII, Issue 30453, 29 May 1964, Page 13

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82

BASIS OF A BIRDIE.—The last of the 216 matches played during the Russell Grace interprovincial women’s golf tournament at Shirley was perhaps the most vital of them all. In it, Miss P. Harrison (Waikato-King Country) met Miss S. Grigg (Canterbury), and had Miss Harrison won, her team would have tied for the title with Thames Valley-Bay of Plenty. Miss Grigg is shown playing her fine approach to the eighteenth green, after which she holed her putt for a birdie and the match. Press, Volume CIII, Issue 30453, 29 May 1964, Page 13

BASIS OF A BIRDIE.—The last of the 216 matches played during the Russell Grace interprovincial women’s golf tournament at Shirley was perhaps the most vital of them all. In it, Miss P. Harrison (Waikato-King Country) met Miss S. Grigg (Canterbury), and had Miss Harrison won, her team would have tied for the title with Thames Valley-Bay of Plenty. Miss Grigg is shown playing her fine approach to the eighteenth green, after which she holed her putt for a birdie and the match. Press, Volume CIII, Issue 30453, 29 May 1964, Page 13