Global Sports: Funny Golf T-Shirts Or Funny Pants?

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Funny Golf T-Shirts Or Funny Pants?

By Aaron Bendis


The game of golf has always been a game of the upper class. This is a stereotype that has persisted for many years due to the way it is represented on television and in movies. That doesn't necessarily mean that golf really is for the upper class. I and my father are both solid, blue-collar middle-classers and we have played golf together since I was able to hold a club. The game is not about superiority, but rather about competition. The games has loosened up drastically recently, and you're apt to see more folks out there in funny golf t-shirts than ever before.

The fact that you see more middle class folks out on the green these days is most likely a sign of economics in motion. The courses learned a few years ago that everyone can love golf. It isn't something that should be held away from the reaching hands of the public, just so rich people have a place to go to feel special. The more the course let in people who wore funny golf t-shirts instead of polos, the more money they made. Now private golf courses are going extinct because they just aren't generating the revenue that public courses are.

A wonderful example of how this sport is for everyone is a man you all may heard of named Tiger Woods. Tiger takes that rich, white golfer image and tears it apart with tremendous drives and stunning finishes. His golfing skill elevates him above all others. If golf were as aloof as the television claims, someone like Tiger would never have broken out and became the star he is today and golf would have been deprived of witnessing his particular method of genius.

I may make jokes about wearing funny golf t-shirts and acting like a fool, but golf really is a gentlemanly game. It has rules that actually regulate the proper conduct between competitors. This aspect of the game teaches people forms of etiquette that they may never have known due to the level of their upbringing. Golf is not a game of the upper class, but a game that teaches the rules of the upper class. For many common folk, these are some invaluable lessons.

I only want to say that without golf, I wouldn't be the well-adjusted sportsman I am today. My formative years spent playing golf with my father has ingrained in me some grand traditions. Some say that the origins of golf are shrouded in mystery, lost to the annals of time. The only history worth my time is the history I see when I look at old photos of me and my father on the fairway; my father grinning with his arm around my shoulders, and me smiling back with my funny gold shirt on.




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