Herbert Warren Wind (August 11, 1916 – May 30, 2005) was an American sports writer noted for his writings on golf.
No golfer has completed his education until he has played and studied Royal Dornoch.
WHILE A MANS BATTLE against himself is undoubtedly at the heart of golfs abiding appeal, the setting in which it is played is, for most golfers, one of the most wonderful things about it.
Beyond the fact that it is a limitless arena for the full play of human nature, there is no sure accounting for golf's fascination. . . Perhaps it is nothing more than the best game man has ever devised.
In golf, as in no other sport, your principal opponent is youself.
According to the Captain of The Honorable Company of Edinburgh Golfers, striking your opponent or caddie at St Andrews, Hoylake or Westward Ho! meant that you lost the hole, except on medal days when it counted as a rub of the green.
Golf without Jones would be like France without Paris: leaderless, lightless and lonely.
John Nelson Darby
Jessica White
Catherine E. Pugh
Steve Schmidt
Gwynne Dyer
Marco Beltrami
Naftali Bennett
Denard Robinson
will.i.am
Mohsen Rezaee
Jessica Pare
Scot Armstrong