Mulligan

[/QUOTE]
Original Staff Report

This from a pretty good article about many of Golfs terms from Golfweb.com :slight_smile:

Speaking of “mysteries that may never be solved”, was the report in question by Dex (as per the Straight Dope Home Page) or by Sam (as the byline to the actual article asserts)?

I’ll bet that just about every golf clup dating back to the early 20[sup]TH[/sup] century has some variant of the “David Mulligan” story floating around. When I was a kid, every summer camp I went to claimed to be the source of that “hook for a hand” story, too.

Rhapsody. That link to golfweb which you gave actually is a well-researched piece. I started out with my back up automatically, but when you realize the guy used the OED, it helps.

But his article about mulligan has no basis in fact that I can find. It is just another repeated proposed story.

Jon Lighter(Random House Slang) can only cite it from 1949, and from the dictionary which staff SAM cites. I would say that anyone making another claim has to come up with a cite.

I found another website http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/golf/events/1997/pgachamp/news/1997/08/12/huber_history/ which claims it comes from

Were both David Mulligans the same person? I found another cite which added that the earlier David Mulligan was a hotelier from Canada.

I’ll try to email the fellow who wrote the article referring to the 1937 David Mulligan at the Wingfoot NY course. It has the right time frame, but I’ll be surprised if anything exists in print.

here is something to consider…

Syllables: maul
Parts of speech: noun , transitive verb

Part of Speech noun
Pronunciation mawl
Definition 1. a heavy hammer, sometimes with a wooden head, used to drive stakes, piles, or the like.
Synonyms sledge2 , sledgehammer
Similar Words mallet , hammer

Part of Speech transitive verb
Inflected Forms mauled, mauling, mauls
Definition 1. to injure by beating, clawing, bruising, or the like.
Example The child was mauled by a tiger.
Crossref. Syn. savage , lather
Similar Words savage , injure , attack , wound1 , mutilate , maim , claw
Definition 2. to handle or treat (a person or animal) roughly.
Synonyms rough up {rough (vt 2)}
Similar Words manhandle , maltreat , beat up {beat (vt)} , knock around {knock (vt)}

Related Words trounce , disfigure , batter

Derived Forms mauler, n.

and then the definition of “mulligan” AGAIN

Maul-Again

:slight_smile:

Mulligan Golf Balls have a different explanation.

The report is by SDStaff Sam, the credit to me on the front page was a goof because I help with the administration and some editing of Staff Reports, so my name got stuck on the report duing the editing process. We’ll fix the typo. I don’t do golf, it’s a capitalist activity exploiting the masses, and I’m gonna organize some Indians to throw the tees in Boston harbor in protest.

Sam doesn’t do the Message Boards, he’s a big business typhoon who usually helps research for Cecil behind the scenes.

I have heard the term used in cards as well as golf.

In Sweden mulligans are referred to as Pilsner boll, that´s beer ball in english.

Anyone taking a mulligan/beer ball is supposed to buy a drink for his fellow players after the round.

I had heard the term “Mulligan” in referance to the game Magic: The Gathering. Basically, if you had a lousy starting hand (for those who know what I’m talking about, usually this means you can’t put out a “land” your first turn) the Mulligan rules allow you to recirculate your cards and draw a new starting hand, but with one card less than a standard opening hand. You can do this as many times as you want until you get down to only one card.

Of course, by the time that Magic: the Gathering was being played (and by the time that “no-land mulligan” caught on, which was even later), the term “mulligan” was already well-established in the golf world, and the use in Magic was clearly derived from that.

By the way, the “official” version of the no-land mulligan in the optional rules is that when you take a mulligan your opponent also has the option to do so, regardless of what his hand is, and you can do it only once. I think that you might also forfeit your turn, if you were to go first.