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A consumer’s guide to the best and worst of sports media and merchandise. Ground rules: If it can be read, played, heard, observed, worn, viewed, dialed or downloaded, it’s in play here.

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What: Travel & Leisure Golf magazine.

Price: $3.95

Editor James R. Gaines says in his opening letter that Travel & Leisure Golf has “one essential mission: to bring useful information and delight to people who love the game.”

It was either an honest omission or a poor bit of editing, but Gaines meant to define his audience as “people with at least six-figure salaries who love the game.”

This is a sleek, glossy magazine full of advertisements for expensive resorts, expensive clothes, expensive courses and expensive cruises.

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This is no muni golf publication. Don’t look for any tips from Ray Floyd on improving your short game, or from Ben Crenshaw on how to avoid those painful three-putts.

However, there is an article on single-malt Scotch and another on the Corvette (“America’s most erotic car.”)

It’s the Vanity Fair of golf.

Actually, there is some stuff worth reading in the inaugural issue: a story on old-fashioned Oakhurst Links in West Virginia, a day at Ojai Valley with Dennis Hopper, and Roy Blount Jr.’s other-than-the-Masters look at Augusta, Ga.

Overall, however, it might prove a little too rich for the average golfer’s taste.

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