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2012 MLB post season predictions?


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I've always been a  A's fan, coming into the year like everyone else I figured at lest a .500 or below team. Now that they've made the playoffs and down 0-2 it sucks real bad. Hopefully if they don't sweep Detroit which is very likely, they don't blow the team up bad add pieces like someone who can hit .300! The A's have way too many Mendoza line players. It's not over till it's over but right now Detroit is proving D's are better than A's


It's too bad for both the A's and Giants. Both teams look like they're playing spring training baseball. Only 1 teams came from behind to win a best-of-5 series, but I highly doubt either team will accomplish that, especially with the Giants going on the road for the last 3 games. Not really a big fan of the "home field advantage" set up the MLB changed. Take the A's for example. Down 0-2 going home for the last 3 games. I feel like home field advantage is no longer an "advantage" when your backs against the wall like that.

Originally Posted by Lesterday

I've always been a  A's fan, coming into the year like everyone else I figured at lest a .500 or below team. Now that they've made the playoffs and down 0-2 it sucks real bad. Hopefully if they don't sweep Detroit which is very likely, they don't blow the team up bad add pieces like someone who can hit .300! The A's have way too many Mendoza line players. It's not over till it's over but right now Detroit is proving D's are better than A's

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Originally Posted by Golfingdad

We are going to see a rematch of the 1989 World Series ... but hopefully without all of the shaking.

WC preditions:  Atlanta and Texas both winning at home tomorrow.

LDS:  Yanks over Texas in 4.  Atlanta will beat the Nationals in 5.  Oakland over Detroit in 5.  SF over Cincinnati in 4.

LCS:  A's over Yanks in 7 (hopefully because of the benefit of a bogus 'out' call at the plate) and Giants over Braves in 6.

WS:  A's in 5.  (Maybe the Bash Brothers will throw out first pitches in game 3 in Oakland??)

When is the sequel "Moneyball 2: Electric Boogaloo" coming out??  Forget Cabrera and Trout, Billy Beane should be MVP this year!

Originally Posted by Golfingdad

BTW, if you are a betting man, you might be advised to do the exact opposite of whatever I say.

Originally Posted by RPMPIRE

It's too bad for both the A's and Giants. Both teams look like they're playing spring training baseball. Only 1 teams came from behind to win a best-of-5 series, but I highly doubt either team will accomplish that, especially with the Giants going on the road for the last 3 games. Not really a big fan of the "home field advantage" set up the MLB changed. Take the A's for example. Down 0-2 going home for the last 3 games. I feel like home field advantage is no longer an "advantage" when your backs against the wall like that.

I warned you!!  Yes, it's still early, but so far the only team I've picked to win that has even won a single game is the Yankees.  Yikes ... I'm actually worse than I expected.

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Originally Posted by ditchparrot19

No way you get a double play off a ball hit that deep. Not even with a Molina with two broken ankles running.

Originally Posted by Golfingdad

Perhaps not ... but that isn't part of the rule.  The umpire only has to make the judgement that the infielder is making the play with ordinary effort.  If you had to consider the possibility of whether or not a double play was actually turnable, then you'd never call the infield fly rule if Vince Coleman or Rickie Henderson were on the basepaths.

Originally Posted by ditchparrot19

Bottom line: It was nowhere near the worst call of even recent postseason history, but it was not a good call, and it's one that's not made under normal circumstances with umpires stationed only at the bases. The perspective was skewed.

I read on ESPN.com that there were seven infield-fly-rule balls that hit the ground over the past three seasons. Of those, the farthest one from the plate was 178 feet. The ball yesterday traveled 225 feet.

Originally Posted by Golfingdad

This is a really good point ... I had not thought of this.  A regular game without outfield umpires means it's up to the 3rd base umpire to make that call.  He's probably going to see that ball go so far over his head that there is no way he considers it an infield fly, even though by the definition of the rule, it can be argued as such.  (Which I have been doing)

Either way, solid point.

I realize it is a dead horse at this point, but with the help of a coworker I just realized something else.  The infielder peeled off because he quite obviously THOUGHT he heard the left fielder calling him off, but you can see from the video that the left fielder has no intentions of going after it.  There is only one other person in the stadium that might be close enough to the two of them to be heard ... and that is the left field umpire.  It's highly possible that his yelling "INFIELD FLY RULE!" is precisely WHY the infielder peeled off in the first place.  Hence, if he hadn't made the call, he wouldn't have jumped out of the way and it would have been caught.  Furthermore, his calling it late caused the runners to be further off their bases than normal, which further allowed them to advance once the ball hit the ground.  No call means the ball is caught, which means the runners retreat.  The next batter walked, but he was probably pitched to differently with one out and first base empty ... so really the call didn't hurt the Braves, it helped them.

So pipe down Atlanta!

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Normally I am a Red Sox fan (yikes this year!) but I am pulling for Baltimore.  They have been down so long, it would be good for them to have a good post season.  They need to fill the seats in that beautiful Camden yards park.  It is a gem.

I was a big Brooks/Frank Robinson fan as a kid too.

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Originally Posted by Golfingdad

I realize it is a dead horse at this point, but with the help of a coworker I just realized something else.  The infielder peeled off because he quite obviously THOUGHT he heard the left fielder calling him off, but you can see from the video that the left fielder has no intentions of going after it.  There is only one other person in the stadium that might be close enough to the two of them to be heard ... and that is the left field umpire.  It's highly possible that his yelling "INFIELD FLY RULE!" is precisely WHY the infielder peeled off in the first place.  Hence, if he hadn't made the call, he wouldn't have jumped out of the way and it would have been caught.  Furthermore, his calling it late caused the runners to be further off their bases than normal, which further allowed them to advance once the ball hit the ground.  No call means the ball is caught, which means the runners retreat.  The next batter walked, but he was probably pitched to differently with one out and first base empty ... so really the call didn't hurt the Braves, it helped them.

So pipe down Atlanta!

I've never seen an infielder "back off" just because he hears "infield fly rule." They still catch the ball.

Some of the "facts" (not really, but they're really difficult to argue IMO) of the matter are:

  1. It wasn't an infield fly. No way, no how. The guy wasn't camped under the ball, it wasn't a "routine" catch, etc. You can have an infield fly in the shallow outfield, that's not the question.
  2. The infield fly rule is designed to protect the offensive team from a player dropping an easy ball in order to get a double-play or get a faster lead runner out (by forcing).
  3. The Cards would not have doubled off two runners from where the ball fell to the ground, even if the left-fielder got it on the hop and threw to third right away. They'd have to throw from there to third and then back to second, by which time the runner on first would have easily advanced the 45-60 feet he needed to go.

It was a bad call. But I wonder what the stats are on the differences in run generation from 2nd and 3rd with two outs and bases loaded with one out. I don't know if the differential is two runs, though I suspect it's easily more than one run, I also suspect it's less than two.

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Originally Posted by iacas

I've never seen an infielder "back off" just because he hears "infield fly rule." They still catch the ball.

Some of the "facts" (not really, but they're really difficult to argue IMO) of the matter are:

It wasn't an infield fly. No way, no how. The guy wasn't camped under the ball, it wasn't a "routine" catch, etc. You can have an infield fly in the shallow outfield, that's not the question.

The infield fly rule is designed to protect the offensive team from a player dropping an easy ball in order to get a double-play or get a faster lead runner out (by forcing).

The Cards would not have doubled off two runners from where the ball fell to the ground, even if the left-fielder got it on the hop and threw to third right away. They'd have to throw from there to third and then back to second, by which time the runner on first would have easily advanced the 45-60 feet he needed to go.

It was a bad call. But I wonder what the stats are on the differences in run generation from 2nd and 3rd with two outs and bases loaded with one out. I don't know if the differential is two runs, though I suspect it's easily more than one run, I also suspect it's less than two.

Neither have I, but that isn't quite what I meant.  (Probably because they never make the call that late)  To clarify ... I wasn't trying to say he backed off because he heard "Infield fly rule."  I'm saying he backed off because he thought he heard the left fielder calling him off.  As an infielder, there is nothing that would make you jump out of the way of a pop-up like that other than hearing somebody with higher priority yelling "I got it!"  [Pop-up priority order: CF, corner outfielders, SS, 2B, corner infielders, C, P)  So he obviously thought he heard something, and if you only watch the left fielder in the video, you can see that he isn't saying anything.  So what did the SS hear then?  The umpire that made the call was 30 feet away or so, and nobody else was nearby.  I contend that it is very possible that when the umpire yelled "infield fly," the SS thought it was the LF calling him off.

Therefore, if it was, in fact, the call itself that caused the ball to fall, then the Braves can't really complain that it was a bad call, because they were better off because of it.  2nd and 3rd with one out, rather than 1st and 2nd with one out.

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Originally Posted by Golfingdad

Therefore, if it was, in fact, the call itself that caused the ball to fall, then the Braves can't really complain that it was a bad call, because they were better off because of it.  2nd and 3rd with one out, rather than 1st and 2nd with one out.

That's only true if the guy was guaranteed to catch the ball AND if he backed off because he heard the ump and mistook it for the left-fielder, despite:

a) the fact that the sound was coming from the wrong direction

b) the sound "infield fly!" sounds a lot like "I got it" (it doesn't sound similar to me)

c) the voice sounded similar enough to the left-fielder that he could mistake it

I think it's more likely that he SAW the left-fielder and thought he was going to get it. You're speculating that he heard something and backed off. I don't know about you, but I was taught to pursue the ball unless I heard the VERY clear signals (ours were "Mine! Mine! Mine!!!") we'd agreed to.

I also think there was a 20% chance he drops the ball even if he doesn't give up on trying to catch it.

P.S. Pirates fan here, and **** Sid Bream and Stan Belinda, so I'm not inclined to cut the Braves any slack either. This call sucked, though.

P.P.S. It was second and third with two outs, not one out. Infield fly = batter is out and runners advance at their own risk. Baseball stats will tell you first and second with one out beats second and third with two outs, though not by much.

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Originally Posted by iacas

That's only true if the guy was guaranteed to catch the ball AND if he backed off because he heard the ump and mistook it for the left-fielder, despite:

a) the fact that the sound was coming from the wrong direction

b) the sound "infield fly!" sounds a lot like "I got it" (it doesn't sound similar to me)

c) the voice sounded similar enough to the left-fielder that he could mistake it

I think it's more likely that he SAW the left-fielder and thought he was going to get it. You're speculating that he heard something and backed off. I don't know about you, but I was taught to pursue the ball unless I heard the VERY clear signals (ours were "Mine! Mine! Mine!!!") we'd agreed to.

I also think there was a 20% chance he drops the ball even if he doesn't give up on trying to catch it.

P.S. Pirates fan here, and **** Sid Bream and Stan Belinda, so I'm not inclined to cut the Braves any slack either. This call sucked, though.

P.P.S. It was second and third with two outs, not one out. Infield fly = batter is out and runners advance at their own risk. Baseball stats will tell you first and second with one out beats second and third with two outs, though not by much.

Watch the video again.

Starts at the :30 sec mark, then again near 2:10 mark.  There is NO WAY he saw the left fielder coming because he was coming from directly behind him.  I have no idea why he jumped but I have watched enough baseball to be able to say that the only times I've ever seen an infielder jump like that are when an outfielder calls them off.  But in the video, the outfielder is not saying anything nor trying AT ALL to get near that ball, yet SOMETHING caused him to jump.  What was it?  If

One piece of "evidence" I do not have is video showing when the umpire yelled in relation to when the SS jumped out of the way.  It's pretty clear that the SS jumped BEFORE the umpire pointed his hand in the air, but there is really no way to tell if he yelled simultaneously or prior to that.

Regarding your P.P.S. ... my mistake, I thought there were no outs prior to the play.  Regardless, he was right there ... look at his feet at :50 and compare to where the ball lands at :51 - I'd say major league SS will catch that ball minimum 19 out of 20 times.  Besides, I am still "right" in my comparison of 2nd and 3rd vs. 1st and 2nd with the same number of outs because my argument was that play ending in the batter being out either way.

EDIT:  Hmmm, I guess my video doesn't work.  OK, here's the link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SuuCD5IWchs&feature;=related

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The way this call is being discussed is as if it was THIS play that cost the Braves the wild card. IMO, it may or it may have not. There was only 1 out and what's not to say that the next batter could have GIDP? I do agree it was a bad call, but I'm getting tired of news outlets discussing how this call "cost" the Braves the wild card.

In other news, the Giants have the lead in the bottom 9th to force game 5. Go Giants!

Best Regards,
Ryan

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Originally Posted by RPMPIRE

The way this call is being discussed is as if it was THIS play that cost the Braves the wild card. IMO, it may or it may have not. There was only 1 out and what's not to say that the next batter could have GIDP? I do agree it was a bad call, but I'm getting tired of news outlets discussing how this call "cost" the Braves the wild card.

In other news, the Giants have the lead in the bottom 9th to force game 5. Go Giants!

Well, I certainly ain't one of those people.

But I agree that even if I could be convinced that the call was that horrible, or that it wasn't the call itself that actually caused the drop, then you are still down 3 with the bases loaded and 1 out.  If I was a betting man, I'd still have all my money on St. Louis at that point.

That said, I have embathy for Braves fans who irrationally believe that this call cost them their season.  I am a Padres fan and I will go to the grave "believing" that the blown strike three call on Tino Martinez (1998 world series game 1, 2-2, 2 outs, bases loaded, bottom of the 7th, score tied 5-5) cost them the entire world series.  There is no guarantee that they would even have won that game, and since they got swept, its doubtful they would have won 3 more.  But that still doesn't stop me from arguing that the entire series turned on that one pitch.  Dammit!

And don't get me started on the 2007 one-game playoff with the Rockies. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xtpUoVxX5j8 That mother-f-er Matt Holliday STILL has not touched home plate!

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Originally Posted by Golfingdad

Regarding your P.P.S. ... my mistake, I thought there were no outs prior to the play.  Regardless, he was right there ... look at his feet at :50 and compare to where the ball lands at :51 - I'd say major league SS will catch that ball minimum 19 out of 20 times.  Besides, I am still "right" in my comparison of 2nd and 3rd vs. 1st and 2nd with the same number of outs because my argument was that play ending in the batter being out either way.

I disagree.

And your comparison is wrong because you're assuming that the ump yelling is what caused the player to not catch the ball. For all you know a fan yelled something and it confused the player. Without the infield fly rule, it'd be bases loaded and one out. With it, we ended up with second and third and TWO outs. Big difference. Not the same number of outs. You're assuming he'd have caught it. He didn't catch it.

Bad call. And even if the player heard "infield fly rule!" that doesn't sound at all like "I got it" or "it's mine" nor is it coming from the right direction in the right voice.

You see this happen tens of times in an MLB season - outfielders and infielders just failing to communicate properly, the ball dropping between them. You see it almost as often as players running into each other for the same miscommunication reasons.

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I've never seen an infielder "back off" just because he hears "infield fly rule." They still catch the ball. Some of the "facts" (not really, but they're really difficult to argue IMO) of the matter are: [LIST=1] [*] It wasn't an infield fly. No way, no how. The guy wasn't camped under the ball, it wasn't a "routine" catch, etc. You can have an infield fly in the shallow outfield, that's not the question. [*] The infield fly rule is designed to protect the offensive team from a player dropping an easy ball in order to get a double-play or get a faster lead runner out (by forcing). [*] The Cards would not have doubled off two runners from where the ball fell to the ground, even if the left-fielder got it on the hop and threw to third right away. They'd have to throw from there to third and then back to second, by which time the runner on first would have easily advanced the 45-60 feet he needed to go. [/LIST] It was a bad call. But I wonder what the stats are on the differences in run generation from 2nd and 3rd with two outs and bases loaded with one out. I don't know if the differential is two runs, though I suspect it's easily more than one run, I also suspect it's less than two.

The odds of the braves winning with bases loaded, one out, down 3, in the bottom of the 8th would be about 22%. With 2 out first and third it was about 7.5%. Not sure if this will work....typing on my phone The Win Probability Inquirer The SituationWin ProbabilityRuns/GameInningBasesOutsScore DiffHome TeamVisitorsLI4.00Bottom of the eighthBases loaded1-30.22100.77904.474.00Bottom of the eighthRunners on first and third2-30.07570.92431.78 http://www.hardballtimes.com/thtstats/other/wpa_inquirer.php?view=compare&runs1;=4&runs2;=4&base1;=7&base2;=5&inning1;=16&inning2;=16&outs1;=1&outs2;=2&score1;=-3&score2;=-3

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Originally Posted by iacas

I disagree.

And your comparison is wrong because you're assuming that the ump yelling is what caused the player to not catch the ball.  You're assuming he'd have caught it.

Yes, that was my hypothesis, and the only reason I posted the original post that you commented on.  I am SPECULATING that the ump is what caused it, and have no proof admittedly.  It's just my hunch.  And, I am speculating that he would have caught it.  Can't prove that either.

Originally Posted by iacas

Bad call. And even if the player heard "infield fly rule!" that doesn't sound at all like "I got it" or "it's mine" nor is it coming from the right direction in the right voice.

You see this happen tens of times in an MLB season - outfielders and infielders just failing to communicate properly, the ball dropping between them. You see it almost as often as players running into each other for the same miscommunication reasons.

You said it yourself in a previous post:

I don't know about you, but I was taught to pursue the ball unless I heard the VERY clear signals (ours were "Mine! Mine! Mine!!!") we'd agreed to.

From the video, its pretty clear that A) The left fielder wasn't talking, and B) the SS wasn't looking.  SOMETHING caused him to back off and I am speculating that it was the call.

And regarding your argument that he couldn't possibly mistake the umpire's voice yelling "infield fly" for Matt Hollidays voice yelling "I got it," ... do you recall the game a couple of years ago (Couldn't locate a video on youtube of the play, but found this http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iErO9MZclDc ) where A-Rod caused a Blue Jays 3B to back off a pop-up?  Certainly A-Rod yelling "ha" from in front of him sounds nothing like his SS yelling "I got it" from behind but yet it worked.  Why?  Same reason as here ... its a yell coming from close by that you are half expecting/ready for and you don't have enough time to digest the actual voice or words.  Besides, there is no need to recognize the voice.  No player except A-Rod is dickish enough to even try that, and no umpire ever yells anything in the middle of a pop-up except for infield fly rule, and that is usually much earlier on so you can digest the actual words.

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SOMETHING caused him to back off and I am speculating that it was the call.

[ he probably heard footsteps.

Dan

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I've never had the chance to watch the bash brothers of Oakland. I'm only 26, but what I saw last night in Oakland was unbelievable, the bottom of the 9 th seem to happen so quick but I couldn't believe what I was watching. The A's wanted it so bad you could just see it. Anyhow it's a new day and Game 5 will be the hardest game yet, Just Verlander is on the mound that means runs will be at a premium, I've got my fingers crossed for a A's a win.


How about Girardi pulling one of the best home run hitters in the history of the game, in the bottom of the 9th, only to have Raul Ibanez hit the game tying and game winning home runs?

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Great performance by both Bay Area teams. I think the A's have a tough game ahead of them going up against Verlander. The Giants have Cain on the mound so hopefully he pitches as well as he did earlier in the season. He hasn't pitched that well in the later half.  Hope to see another Bay Bridge series.

I just saw the highlights of the Yankees game but that was a bold move by Girardi, but it paid off. Still don't like the Yankees though.

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    • Day 11: 2/16/2025 Rince and Repeat: Just like yesterday I spent several 5-10 minute sessions working on what I learned on Friday.   
    • Quick update. So, I got the PXG Secret Weapon and I have to say I like it... mostly. (see below) I spent some time with it on the range and I even gathered some data in doors. I'm not going to post data yet, as my swing is still a bit of a work in progress and I'd like to gather some more data after I settle down a little bit more. But here's my review.  First as a driver replacement. ... IMO it is not a replacement, it's clearly more of a supplement... for me anyway. Not long enough to really replace the driver. For me it's about 20 yards short of my driver. It is longer than my 30-wood off the tee. (15 yards-ish) I will say it is easier to hit off the tee than my 3-wood. I get some of my best shots teeing it low, but I also get some of my worst. If I tee it about a full inch off the ground I get very consistent shots. Super repeatable. Amazingly repeatable even with my messy swing. Off the tee, I find it draw biased just a bit. You can tinker with the set up if that isn't your personal cup of tea.  As a 3-wood replacement. For me it's about perfect. It's longer than my 3-wood off the deck (my data showed 10 yards longer) and it has a gentle fade to it, which I love. You do need a clean lie, but I never hit my 3-wood off anything but a clean lie anyway. I found it interesting that I hit a gentle fade off the deck and a slight draw off a tee. I'm sure that's not uncommon. Again, you can tinker with the set up to optimize that if you wanted to... I don't want to.  It's clearly a lot longer than my 3-wood off the tee. Easier to hit off the tee than my 3 wood, and off the deck it's also longer. So, it's a no-brainer 3-wood replacement for me. I will say that over the years I've learned to use my 3-wood for this low-flying-100-yard-punch-out-from-under-a-tree shot.  I'll have to see if the Secret Weapon can handle that duty. But it's going in the bag to replace the 3-wood.  I also turned my 5-wood down from 19 degrees to 17 degrees. ... Incidentally my 3-wood had been 16 degrees. I used to always hit my 5 wood and my hybrid about the same distance. This adjustment helps my gapping a bit at the top of the bag. I can clearly hit my 5-wood farther than my hybrid now.  Overall on the PXG Secret Weapon. The good: It's clearly longer and easier to hit off the tee than my 3-wood. It's a bit longer off the deck than my 3-wood.  It's super forgiving... surprisingly so.  It's uber adjustable. ... Although I do suggest getting fit for it. That will save you having to (or wanting to) buy a weight kit just to try out the infinite number of set ups. The headcover is super cool.  The maybe not so good: Shots out of the middle sound great. Shots off the heal sound great. Shots off the toe sound ... what's the work... clangy? It's very forgiving off the toe and the heal. The flight and the distance are incredibly consistent. But the sound off the toe isn't great.  For me I tend to draw it off the tee and fade it off the deck. You can set it up to be biased either way, but in my hands I think if I set up a draw off the deck, that might induce a duck hook off the tee. ... In fairness that could also be where my swing is at right now.  It's pretty spendy. ... If I really stop and think about it, I paid $450 for a new 3-wood. Granted it's a better performing 3-wood. But for me it's really a 3-wood replacement.
    • I've got my pain mostly under control and the meds are working.   I'd like to join. 
    • I would definitely attend if my calendar allows.
    • Finland: I've played Mid-Night Golf in Finland. Really cool. I looked at the schedule for my week out there and I saw that we were teeing off at 9PM... Feels weird, 9 PM tee time. But it was really great. We finished well after 1AM and sat around and drank on the golf course terrace. It was cool. It's really easy to loose track of time when the sun doesn't set.  Here's a picture of me in Finland hitting my approach on the final hole. It's roughly 1:30AM in this photo.  Egypt: Another cool experience was playing golf in Egypt. The entire course is sand. The greens are called browns, cuz they are just sand with oil poured on them and pounded down a bit. Your ball gets kind of oily when you putt, but the caddy cleans it for you after each hole. You carry around a little piece of fake grass (maybe 2 foot square) and place your ball on it each time before you hit. That is except when you go into a sandtrap. The sandtraps are just areas marked off where you don't get to use your little piece of astro-turf. Sometimes they are dug down a bit to make a bunker, sometimes not.  Spain: No special events or anything, but I played a bunch of golf in Spain in the mid-1990's. At that time Spain's economy wasn't doing the best and Europe hadn't quite switched to the Euro. So Spain was using the Peseta. The country of Spain has some incredibly breathtaking courses. (incredible scenery in general) But because of the conversion from the dollar to the Peseta (If memory serves it was 150 to 1), I got to play them for what I remember as being incredibly inexpensive prices. Gorgeous country and really nice people.  Holland or The Netherlands: I lived for a couple of years in what's called The Flevoland in Holland. It's one of the Dutch provinces and it's all land that was recovered from the sea. So, it's all under sea-level. One of the courses I played a few times out there had flags on every hole to show just how deep the water would be if it wasn't for the dams. 
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