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Greg Norman


FlyerTon

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What a fucking dreadful thread.

Links should be used to justify the content of the original post not be the actual content itself, and your Topic Title needs a bit of work.

Poor Greg BTW.

That's quite a rant - who shat in your porridge this morning?

And that's a horrendous thing to happen. Always been a huge fan of Greg Norman.

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I fucking despise puns.

I'd quite happily drive every single person who makes them into a field, wedge a pipe up their arse and then use them to club the next one to death. Repeating this process until everyones gone

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I fucking despise puns.

I'd quite happily drive every single person who makes them into a field, wedge a pipe up their arse and then use them to club the next one to death. Repeating this process until everyones gone

Aye, they are like an albatross around our necks.

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Fucking amateur.

I once watched an Open play off between Tom Watson and Australian Jack Newton at Carnousie 1975.

Jack Newton there's a man that knew how to lose a limb, none of your namby pamby nearly losing it. No. Fucking right off. See you in the next life losing it.

Greg Norman. Good golfer. Shite limb loser.

On 24 July 1983, during the height of his professional career, Newton had a near-fatal accident when he walked into the spinning propeller of a Cessna aeroplane he was about to board at Sydney Airport; he was about to return to Newcastle having flown to Sydney that morning to see an AFL game between the Sydney Swans and Melbourne Football Club. He lost his right arm and eye and sustained severe abdominal injuries. A severe rainstorm was in progress at the time, and in addition, safety aspects near the plane were deficient.[3][4]

Immediately after the accident doctors gave Newton a 50-50 chance of surviving. He spent several days in a coma and eight weeks in intensive care.[5] After a prolonged rehabilitation from his injuries, Newton returned to public life as a television and radio golf commentator, newspaper reporter, golf course designer, public speaker and Chairman of the Jack Newton Junior Golf Foundation. He taught himself to play golf one-handed, swinging the club with his left hand in a right-handed stance. He typically scores in the mid-80s.[4]

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