Defi_mini-putt Defi_mini-putt

Defi mini-putt - Definition

Défi Mini-Putt was a weekly show in the early 1990s on the Quebec cable sports network, Réseau des sports (RDS). It was the first professional miniature golf tournament to be regularly broadcast in Quebec.

Although the format of the show varied over the years, the typical set-up for the 30-minute show was the following: four competitors would play 18 holes of miniature golf on one of the courses of the "Mini-Putt" miniature golf franchise. It was a skins game. The first 6 holes were worth $50, the second 6 were worth $100, while the final 6 holes were worth $150. At the end of the season was a championship knockout tournament, in which the player with the highest score after each hole was eliminated

Each course had exactly the same design, and every hole was a par 2. The Mini-Putt franchise used a minimalist design, featuring only hills, bunkers, and a few obstacles. This contrasts with the exotic, windmill-laden layouts of most miniature golf courses in the eastern United States and Canada.

Some of the stars of the show were Jocelyn Noël, who had great consistency in the regular season but struggled in the knockout tournaments (most notably in 1993 when he struck a totem pole on the first hole, aka "les totems" and was eliminated), as well as Carl Carmoni. The biggest star of the show, however, was the inexplicably enthusiastic Serge Vleminckx, the show's announcer. His exuberant shouts of "Birdie!" for a hole in one, "la normale!" for two strokes, and "le bogie!" for three strokes, helped attract a cult following for the show.

Later seasons of the show featured teams of two, as well as an upgrade to the Mini-Putt franchise's more difficult course, the "Maxi-Putt". However, by the mid-1990s, the Mini-Putt franchise faltered, and the show was discontinued. Jocelyn Noel went on to participate in American miniature golf tournaments, while Serge Vleminckx went on to announce games for the short-lived Montreal Roadrunners roller hockey team.

Linguistically, the show prompted "mini-putt" to become the favoured Quebecois term for miniature golf, while in the rest of Canada and the United States, the terms "miniature golf", "mini-golf", "crazy golf", and occasionally "putt-putt" are used interchangeably.

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