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Welcome to our Newsletter for December. This month I want to focus on the importance of honesty in relation to the game of golf. Last year I visited a course with an honesty box at the Isle of Seil Golf Club in NorthWest Scotland. If you have not already read about that trip and my experience you can do so by clicking here.
Also, we have introduced a new LIVE ADVICE service onto Frog related pages of our website. This is a way to get immediate access to help and advice you need regarding my Frog putter from a Frog Specialist. Simply click on the Frog Specialist button on those pages it appears to get answers to your Frog related questions. Also, more good news is that the Frog is now available in a heel shafted version for black and pink Frogs. Click here to create your own Frog with my help, and access a Frog specialist if you need one!
Have a very "Hoppy" Holidays and I look forward to talking to you in the New Year!
Frankly yours,  |
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The Honesty Box
Throughout the world, at modest golf courses where no pro stands behind his counter to sell you a shirt, you will find an enduring symbol of the true spirit of golf: the honesty box. The golfer arrives at a first tee where no starter is needed; the course is open, the fairways and greens are mowed, and all he need do to begin is to put his green fee in an envelope, tear off his receipt, put the envelope in the box, and off he goes.
What a great way to start a journey that is all about discovering who we are that day! And isn’t that the reason we play the game? The object of the game is to propel a ball into a distant hole, but that’s just an excuse: the real reason we’re there is to evaluate ourselves against our potential. After all, the ball is just sitting there, waiting to be hit, and there’s no defender charging at us or batting it away from the target. Only you yourself determine the result.
Think about the last time someone asked you for your handicap. Did you say, “My handicap is 12 (or 5, or 2, or 27)?” No, most likely you said, “I’m a 12.” And so you are.
We may not always acknowledge that this process of self-definition is why we play the game, and we may not be able to express it, quite, but our actions reflect it. When we’re in the woods and nobody sees us, we don’t kick our ball into an open spot; we play the ball as it lies. We don’t use those so-called “hot” balls that violate the rules and standards of the game, even though they look pretty much the same as all other balls and nobody else would know. We would know, and we would know that our results were a lie.
We want our scores to be an accurate reflection of what we’ve accomplished. We want to be able to feel pride in our pars, swell with our birdies, and keep our bogeys under control – and we can’t do that if we know we’ve skirted the rules to get there. We may think we want the new driving cannon that is guaranteed to launch the ball 270 yards to the middle of the fairway, but if we look deeper we’ll know that we wouldn’t want to play a game where we can buy our results. The rich have enough advantages in life; we don’t want to add another, any more than we’d go along with a rule that lets us pay $100 to lower our score five strokes.
True golfers understand that the game has to be a game of honor. We’re not playing for our livelihoods; this is our passion, our pleasure, and we enter and leave the field with a clear conscience – either that, or we’d be better off not playing at all. The ultimate honesty box is the one we write our scores in.
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Frankly What Do You Think ?
Honesty and honor have always been essential aspects of the game of golf. Players are expected to be self-regulating, to know the Rules and to police their own actions. The extent to which performance-enhancing drugs can help golfers is unknown, though they have posed a problem for many sports where strength is a benefit and workout-recovery is a factor.
Do you believe drug-testing has a place in golf, at any level of skill or competition?
Click here to take part in the survey
Here are the results of our November survey:
A huge majority, 89% of those who completed the survey, DO NOT believe that the USGA is properly representing the average golfer.

SIDE NOTE: I was very disappointed to learn that the USGA has a corporate sponsor (American Express) for the first time in the history of the organization.
©Frankly Golf 2006
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