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Really - what a surprise.
Excellent insightful input :thup:
Really - what a surprise.
I have to agree with you. I've been victim of the fashion gestapo and even been told I couldn't wear my FJ myjoys as the colours were too "bizarre". Went back to the pro shop, asked for a full refund of my nearly three figure green fee and left. Won't be back. How can wearing golf shoes contradict a code? Apparently they don't like anything more exotic of white, brown or black.
Got told by two members in the locker room and then by another on the way to the car to get my clubs. Having already paid my green fee I went back and got a refund and left. Wasn't prepared to stay and play in a place where I was constantly going to be inspected and commented on.
Fortunately have been back several times since without a repeat but left a very sour taste. In hindsight I should have discussed it in greater detail with the pro or the secretary but just felt so unwelcome as a visitor I wanted no part of it nor for them to have my hard earned. It was a fair while back and times and fashion have changed
So if they were conforming to the 'relaxed' dress code, what was your issue?Didnt say that at all
Theroll your eyes all day long
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i like dressing smart - i think it gives someone a sense of pride in themselves and i like that golf clubs have a sense of standards and a dress code.
I like the fact that golf itself has tradition and standards and people take pride in that .
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My thinking will always be the same - if you dont want to wear the standard of dress that some courses require then go and play on another course but if you wish to play at the courses that require a dress standard dont cry and bleat when someone pulls you up on your dress if someone has failed to wear the attire in the correct manner for that course.
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So if they were conforming to the 'relaxed' dress code, what was your issue?
Thewas about the taste - Loudmouth gear included!
But if a particular club has a 'relaxed' dress code and players are conforming to it, then it would certainly seem 'snobby/snooty' to criticise them for it! You may like dressing smart, but if others want to 'dress down' and the code allows it, then it really is 'snobby/snooty' to impose your 'likes' on others imo!
That's quite different - and I agree btw - to complying with a 'relaxed' dress code, but being 'looked down at by some 'snobby/snooty' guy who likes to dress smartly and thinks everyone else should too - even when the club deliberately has a 'relaxed dress code'!
You are the one that seems to be looking down on others!...if you want to make stuff up to allow you the belief to look down on others then away you go - its starting to bore me now.
I'm confused. You say the course in question has a "relaxed" dress code and people take advantage of that which implies you'd prefer them to be dressed in something that adheres to a stricter dress code. If the place has a relaxed dress code and no-one either deems it necessary to enforce anything different or polices it on the course then I can't see the issue and it certainly has no resemblance on their ability as a golfer. I've seen plenty of players dressed in proper attire that struggle to make contact and take divots and dig the course as you call it. I've also seen players in cargo pants and trainers play some good golf
That's a great story, a real heart warmer.
when being there i have witnessed them treat the golf course like a football pitch - digging up the fairways whilst trying happy gilmores , seen people take divots out of greens, hack the hell out of bunker whilst not even bothering to look for a rake - basically failing to show any sort of care towards the golf club and failing to show any sort of etiquette and its not a one off. if being snobby is not wanting those sort of people on a golf course then call me a snob .
As for the golf club in question - it has a relaxed set of rules - it allows shirts to be untucked , it allows cargo pants and its not monitored though so despite there being a dress code they allow people to go on to course with jeans and tracksuits and football tops and when being there I have witnessed them treat the golf course like a football pitch.
To quote the MD of the Centurian Golf Club in this months Todays' Golfer " We are more concerned with running a business than the length of someones socks. Telling people off for their dress shouldn't have a place when you are trying to create an inviting ambiance which encourages people to spend money".
And thus lies the problem with some golfers. You are lumping people together because of their dress? Which breaks no rules, creating an us vs them mentality. If i'm playing my clubs 9 hole on a hot afternoon I will normally play it in football shorts and a vest. I can also do that at the local muni (par 60 jobbie)
I get a fair few comments from people with the same opinion/snobbery as you when I play as a visitor somewhere. Despite breaking no rules. I'm 23, I am covered in tattoo's, I have a big beard and I love a smoke around the course . People such as yourself make assumptions and treat you differently, I won't bore you with individual instances. But i've even been moved into a sub room of the clubhouse bar at one club.
However at my club i'm well liked (I hope!), one of the few people that actually helps the groundsmen when it's needed. And i've made some great friends, some of whom are over 3 times my age.
Rant over.
i like dressing smart - i think it gives someone a sense of pride in themselves and i like that golf clubs have a sense of standards and a dress code.
I like the fact that golf itself has tradition and standards and people take pride in that .
I think that the MD of the Centurion Club is batting from a fairly safe wicket with that comment.
With all due respect, the price of joining and annual membership costs alone are going to deter the "great unwashed" so I hardly see flip flops/cargo pants/string vests being an issue.
Just pointing out the obvious
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And no one will stop you dressing smart. You can still dress in what you perceive to be smart/traditional which is the golfers uniform. As will the vast majority of fellow golfers. Including me. I may untuck my shirt a bit and not have white socks with shorts, but that's about it. It's called personal freedom and being treated as an adult. Which is what should happen to everyone.
I have no intention to wear a football shirt or jeans, but I'd like to think if I did see someone in that kind of dress I would not care a jot. I'd much rather follow a 4 ball in untucked tee shirts with no collar or cargo type trousers who are considerate than a 2 ball dressed in traditional golfers uniform playing inconsiderately. And the days where you could judge how people play by how they dress are long gone and attitudes like that seem stuck in the 1970s. You can tell a whole lot more about someone by playing 9 holes with someone then what they are wearing.
I also agree that golf has some traditions that should be maintained, along side some archaic attitudes that need to be got rid of, to help the game modernise and adapt to current societal norms to help it attract people in today. I do actually agree that some of the sense of tradition is a plus point for golf. But confusing tradition with a refusal to modernise in any way, and dress codes, like it or not, is one of the main and easy ways to do this, is in my opinion is not helping the future of the game.
If the odd visitor should turn up 'inappropriately' dressed so what - it won't spoil my enjoyment of my golf - I feel sorry for those who are so insecure they want everyone to comply with their view of the world.
Golf clubs and their members need to realise that a visitor is a potential member/customer!
I'm enjoying the fact that you 2 haven't realized that you're arguing 2 different points yet...
Carry on..
Ooh, and I've just realized that for the first time ever, I'm wearing golf attire to do something other than golf.. Except I'm wearing jeans obviously. I mean, who wears golf trousers socially?![]()