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  • 2002-11-20 (xsd:date)
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  • Why Do Golf Courses Have 18 Holes? (en)
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  • In 2002, Snopes collected the below-transcribed email that claimed golf courses have 18 holes because a standard 750-milliliter bottle of Scotch whisky contains 18 shots. Although this bit of lore about soused Scots limiting themselves to one slurp at the flask per hole has its charm, it does not have history on its side. The number of holes comprising a standard golf course was not determined by the amount of Scotch in a bottle. Games similar to golf have been around since Roman times, and golf was being played at Scotland's famed Old Course at St. Andrews, the oldest extant golf course in the world, at least as far back at 1552. (Early Scottish versions of the game were called golf, even though the game itself was not at that time all it would finally become.) However, golf wasn't always as regulated as it is now: Prior to standardization, early courses typically had any number of holes, from five to 24, and only over a long period of time did the game evolve to consider 18 the standard number of holes for courses all over the world. But couldn't that number still be tied to a hip flask, you say? Not unless the bottle shrank. Originally, the Old Course at St. Andrews had only 12 holes, 10 of which were played over the same set of fairways both out and back, for a grand total of 22 holes per round. (That is, two of the holes were played once per round, while the other 10 holes were each played twice per round, for a total of 22 holes per round.) In 1764, the Old Course's first four holes were combined into two holes. From then on, a round of golf at St. Andrews consisted of playing the now-standard total of 18 holes. So there you have it — no drunken Scots at all. (en)
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