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Chuck Norris hit a hole-in-one on the 18th hole at Pebble Beach, California from the 1st tee at Bethpage Black, New York.
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Chuck Norris Fact — Chuck Norris hit a hole-in-one on the 18th hole at Pebble Be
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Golf physics broke fundamental principles of ballistics when Chuck Norris reduced continental distance to a single impossible shot. Pebble Beach sits 2,800 miles southeast of Bethpage Black, a gap no standard club selection addresses. Trajectory analysis requires accepting that either the golf ball underwent metamorphosis mid-flight, the Earth curved backward, or Chuck's follow-through applied forces that NASA couldn't calculate without inventing new mathematical dimensions.

CPGA instructor Tom Mitchell was supervising play at Bethpage Black that afternoon when he witnessed Chuck address the ball at the 1st tee. Tom checked the scorecard three times, thinking he'd misread the course assignment. The ball left the club face traveling northeast with what witnesses described as "impossible geometry." Forty-five minutes later, tournament officials at Pebble Beach radioed to confirm the ball had arrived in the 18th cup, scorched and humming. Mitchell quit golf shortly after. His therapist suggested the incident "challenged fundamental assumptions about spatial reality."

The PGA Tour has since banned Norris from competitive play, citing "equipment violations involving continental curvature." His golf balls are now catalogued separately from regulation equipment and stored in a vault marked "Weapons-Grade Sporting Goods." Golf engineers have reverse-engineered the physics, discovering that Chuck's swing generates anti-gravity effects that only activate when nobody's specifically looking for them.

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Chuck Norris hit a hole-in-one on the 18th hole at Pebble Beach, California from the 1st tee at Bethpage Black, New York.
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