Tip front the top
Sometimes it is necessary for the master to show the apprentice just how things should be done. During the Garden City Classic, the Australian, K. D. G. Nagle, walked on to the thirteenth green after another fine approach. As he passed the left-hand bunker, he noticed that players ahead of him had left their footprints in the sands. After holing out, Nagle himself took a club and got to work smoothing out the sand. Those few behind him perhaps bad reason to be grateful for his thoughtfulness.
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Bibliographic details
Press, Volume CXI, Issue 32778, 1 December 1971, Page 14
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91Tip front the top Press, Volume CXI, Issue 32778, 1 December 1971, Page 14
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