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ELK'S BIG SHOW STROKE PLAY TOURNAMENT

Thu, Jan 30 2014 12:52 AM (33 replies)
  • funnydave
    30 Posts
    Thu, Jan 16 2014 3:18 PM

     

    **"Residents of Australia are not eligible to enter or win the Sweepstakes and no Sweepstakes entries will be accepted from residents of this country, even if they have entered the Contest."**


    Just wanted to know why Australian residents are not Eligible for this tournament and most others, when so many of us Aussies play this game. United Kingdom is eligible but Australia is not !! Can someone please explain why this is so.

    Thanks

    Dave

  • SPINO1
    5,394 Posts
    Thu, Jan 16 2014 4:26 PM

    The flight costs too much i expect..

  • thebigeasy707
    5,885 Posts
    Thu, Jan 16 2014 5:06 PM

    What ever happened to the decent prizes...like playing the championship courses in real life. The last one was mid 2012 won by Bolly or  the trip Dan won to play Celtic Manor etc.

    It's went from playing decent courses to being the bag carrier & ball washer.

  • andyson
    6,415 Posts
    Thu, Jan 16 2014 5:16 PM

    Given Elkington is Australian it is quite odd an Aussie can't win.

  • thebigeasy707
    5,885 Posts
    Thu, Jan 16 2014 5:29 PM

    andyson:

    Given Elkington is Australian it is quite odd an Aussie can't win.

    oh the hypocracy of it all Andy :)

     

  • andwhy67
    2,816 Posts
    Sat, Jan 18 2014 3:23 AM

    Or just change your country of residence to qualify, been done in the past!!

  • PRStevenson
    842 Posts
    Sat, Jan 18 2014 4:20 AM

    maybe he doesn't want an Australian caddy? :p

  • Crazy3
    107 Posts
    Sat, Jan 18 2014 4:56 AM

    My question would be - unless I was going to be paid for carrying his bag, why would I want to? Sounds like work to me.

  • PaulH0070
    1,339 Posts
    Sun, Jan 19 2014 4:08 AM

    I only signed up in the hope of being the sweepstake winner, however being neither american or born into the WGT family I realise this will never happen, lol

    What a great experience though, I'd love to get on any pros bag for a round. I'd like to think I'd appreciate the experience more being a real life golfer, to see the game played properly from the players side of the rope would be awesome :)

    But I do wonder what the look on Elk's face would be if someone rocked up on a mobility scooter ;-)

  • GolfingJMan
    71 Posts
    Sun, Jan 19 2014 3:20 PM

    Hi thebigeasy,

    I do not intend to become GrinchMan, but I did want to say something in an effort to combat the spread of a popular misnomer.  

    thebigeasy707:
    andyson:
    Given Elkington is Australian it is quite odd an Aussie can't win.
    oh the hypocracy of it all Andy :)

    A lot of times I have observed people use the word "hypocrisy" when referring to subjects or topics that have nothing to do with what the standard definition of "hypocrisy" has been and is.

    I've seen the word "hypocrisy" (and its common misspellings) refer to concepts such as the concept of irony or to refer to someone who has made a mistake, learned better, and then alerted others to the better way.

    The main element of actual hypocrisy is intent to deceive, even if the intended deception is not accomplished by the deceiver. Not all intentions to deceive are hypocritical, but all actual hypocrisy has intent to deceive. The intended deception may not even be immediately related to morality; it could be a variety of other things such as sandbagging as Dictionary.com states:

    hy·poc·ri·sy [hi-pok-ruh-see]

    noun, plural hy·poc·ri·sies.
    1.     a pretense of having a virtuous character, moral or religious
            beliefs or principles, etc., that one does not really possess.
    2.     a pretense of having some desirable or publicly approved
            attitude.
    3.     an act or instance of hypocrisy.

    As to Australians being able to play but not being eligible for this event's prize while an Australian is hosting, perhaps that concept or idea is best represented by definition 5 at Dictionary.com of the term "irony"

    an outcome of events contrary to what was, or might have been, expected.

    Or,

    incongruity between what is expected to be and what actually is,
    or a situation or result showing such incongruity.

     

    Thanks,

    JMan

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