A Quote by Ben Hogan

The only thing a golfer needs is more daylight. — © Ben Hogan
The only thing a golfer needs is more daylight.
Short of coming to their senses and abolishing the whole thing, we might expect that the rules for daylight saving time will remain the same for some time to come, but there is no guarantee. (We can only be glad there is no daylight loan time, or we would face decades of too much daylight, only to be faced with a few years of total darkness to make up for it.
I don't mind going back to daylight saving time. With inflation, the hour will be the only thing I've saved all year.
It takes six years to make a golfer: three to learn the game, then another three to unlearn all you have learned in the first three years. You might be a golfer when you arrive at that stage, but more likely you are just starting.
I started juggling a long time ago, but long before that, I was a golfer, and that's what I was: a golfer. And as a golfer and as a kid, one of the things that really sort of seeped into my pores, that I sort of lived my whole life, is process. And it's the process of learning things.
Am I a golfer? Do I look like a golfer? One hundred per cent, you will find me on the Xbox!
A golfer rarely needs to hit a spectacular shot until the one that preceded it was pretty bad.
When handling the ball, I always would look for daylight, wherever there was daylight.
A golfer needs a loving wife to whom he can describe the day's play through the long evening.
Ron Syriac, a golf writer and friend, was quoted as saying, "Annika is no longer a female golfer. She's a golfer." That's truly all I ever aspired to be.
In a ghost story, usually you've got to hang on until daylight, and you'll be alright. But if daylight's four months away, then you have a problem.
Rogers sees daylight. Campbell makes daylight.
For sleep, one needs endless depths of blackness to sink into; daylight is too shallow, it will not cover one.
My heart needs only one thing. It needs to be guided Along the age-old path Of life-blossoming self-awareness.
I have many golfer friends whom I play with, including my good friend Ian Poulter, a professional golfer who's coming to Asia to play in a few tournaments.
It is God, Who is merciful and grants everyone what he needs, Who is building him up when He gives him more than he needs; in doing so He shows the abundance of His love for men and teaches him to give thanks. When He does not grant him what he needs, He makes him compensate for the thing he needs through the working of the mind and teaches him patience.
We deceive ourselves when we fancy that only weakness needs support. Strength needs it far more.
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