Issue No. 267 | October 31, 2025 | Read Online

Greetings!
I have greatly enjoyed this week of working on our Rory-2025 Masters book this week. We republished a 2025 Masters piece for Tuesday’s newsletter, and while we have a few new bits and pieces for today’s, some of it will also be republished Rory stuff from earlier this year.
We don’t have a release date yet for the book, but we do have a title —> The Weight of Rory. One thing I want to call out before I show you a few screenshots from our current iteration of the book is how important our membership is to projects like this.
The support of our members allows us to have space to cook a bit in the background and to not have to produce an unreasonable amount of content to keep the machine running. We are grateful for that and would love for you to join Norman’s Army right here.
Here are three fun screenshots from the book as we edit our way through it (it has also been hilarious to footnote the book eight months after it took place).



Today’s thoughts are brought to you by our friends at Seed Golf.
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OK, now onto the news.
1. The Data Golf contest we did last week was so much fun that we decided to do it again. This time, though, instead of responding to this email and absolutely obliterating my inbox, we are asking that you put your guess right here.


First one to get it gets a $25 gift card to our pro shop.
2. I haven’t been reading enough over the last few weeks as we’ve been working on some of the business aspects of Normal Sport, but I did catch this from KVV on the Old Course and the improvements that are currently being made to it.
1. Subtle tweaks every five years in preparation for the Open cannot mask the underlying issue. Think of the Old Course like it is the face of the most handsome actor or gorgeous actress who has ever lived. A little plastic surgery — a face lift, some forehead Botox, some filler in the cheeks — can maintain the illusion that everything is the same. But not forever. Eventually, time is going to tip the scales, and the surgery required to keep up appearances will begin to make the original face unrecognizable.
KVV | Fried Egg 
I thought it was both lovely and quite sad. It is, of course, what is required given the unwillingness of the governing bodies to rein in the distance plight that threatens to render the following illuminating question moot: “Do you still want to go to St. Andrews"?
3. We dropped Episode No. 5 of the Normal Sport Show on Thursday, and it’s a fun one. Jason and I jamming on how Normal Sport started and why we started it.
If you ever find yourself struggling to explain to someone why you spend time reading a golf newsletter that’s barely about golf, just send them this. Hopefully it will help you.
Subscribe at the following places.
4. I wrote the following on Rory for our short-lived blog (which I realized was going to be just too much to keep up with). I imagine it was missed by most people for that reason (among others), and in keeping with the theme of republishing Rory pieces in the newsletter this week, I wanted to post it here.
It’s on his Irish Open victory …
A couple of weeks ago, I stumbled into this wonderful quote by C.S. Lewis. It is about bicycles, but it is barely (and I mean barely) about bicycles.
I think there are these four ages about nearly everything. Let’s give them names. They are the Unenchanted Age, the Enchanted Age, the Disenchanted Age, and the Re-enchanted Age.
As a little child I was Unenchanted about bicycles. Then, when I first learned to ride, I was Enchanted. By sixteen I was Disenchanted and now I am Re-enchanted.
C.S. Lewis — Talking about Bicycles 
There are other — probably better — ways to describe the career and life of Rory McIlroy, and I have explored many (maybe even most) of them.
But on Sunday, after he went eagle-birdie-birdie-birdie to win the Irish Open for the second time, this was the one that stood out to me. The one I immediately thought of.
Watch this.
Rory kind of stumbles through his first quote in an interview with Sky, unable to look at the person interviewing him and to really engage the questions.
You can always tell when he’s about to fall apart.

Here’s what he said.
“I feel just so lucky that I get to do this in front of … these people. The support has been absolutely amazing all week. I thought it was going to be a nice homecoming, coming home with a green jacket and all that, but this has been absolutely incredible. This has exceeded all my expectations.
“So happy I could play the way I did this week for all them and get the win.”
Rory McIlroy 
But that wasn’t even the best thing he said. That came in the next quote when he summed up the way I feel about golf, which is that, yes, wins matter and history matters and strokes gained and championship putts and all of that matter. But ultimately, they are shadows of the moments that matter most.
“Moments like this, these are the things you’re going to remember well after your career’s over. This is a really special day.”
Rory McIlroy 
There are innumerable things I have enjoyed about covering Rory McIlroy’s career. The list is lengthy and could legitimately take up a book (and literally is taking up a book).

But the through line for me — and the one I have written about quite often — is the preservation of his own joy. For the game, for the sport, for the life he gets to live, for the world he inhabits.
Success in adulthood dulls even the most exuberant youthfulness. Even the highest levels of achievement become normalized.
Think about your own life.
When you were 17 — if you were anything like me — making even $1,000 at a job made me feel I was a millionaire. And now, probably all of us are beyond that, have gone on to some category of thriving, whether that’s financially or in other areas of life. And yet, how rarely do we think about, consider, recognize and state that fact out loud.
How often do we exude gratitude?
For me, the answer is … not as often as I should. For Rory, it seems, the answer is … more frequently than most.
I asked him about this once. How does he maintain his love for a game and a career that just constantly beats it out of you? He said that this has not always been the case but as his career has gone on, he’s tried to get better at it.
This was from the summer of 2022.
"Even that game with Tiger at Ballybunion a couple days ago, that's just a lot of fun to me. I think maybe, when I was younger, I wouldn't have thought that. It was almost like, 'No, I'm too cool to enjoy whatever it is, just going and playing a fun round of golf. That's beneath me.' But I really like that, and there's nothing wrong with that. It's nice to be able to enjoy things like that."
CBS Sports 
In his 30s, Rory's disenchantment and re-enchantment with the golf has consistently ebbed and flowed. Winning helps, certainly. But winning — unlike that ubiquitous Nike ad — does not take care of everything.
There is something in his heart, though, that receives the re-enchantment, even if he is sometimes quick to forget it (just as he was in the months after winning the Masters). It is — we all know people like this — easier to harden one’s heart against such things. The harder you get, the less complicated life becomes because to be re-enchanted with anything is to once again risk being heartbroken.
Rory undoubtedly lives a charmed life. And yes, there are missteps. There are mistakes. There are moments and seasons I’m sure he’d love to have back. But the through line has always been joy. Delight. Genuine gratitude. That he gets to be Rory. That he got all the gifts. That people still, even after all those years, are there to see him and to watch that.
Cynicism with the world seems to be a natural drift for us all. I feel it. You likely do too. Re-enchantment with this place and these people? It seems silly, maybe even foolish at times. But what joy it leads to. What depth it brings about.
Let’s wrap it up with another Lewis quote. One of my favorites of all time. One that seems to apply here and probably to some other places if we think about it long enough.
It is about stories and people. It is about Rory, and it’s also not.
“A children's story that can only be enjoyed by children is not a good children's story in the slightest.”
C.S. Lewis 
We all had dreams as kids. Most of them probably never came true. Not as many as Rory realized. But some of them did for us, too.
The question I am asking myself today: Am I enjoying the wonder of the world as much as my childhood self thought I would have?
I have lost the enchantment, sure, because enchantment belongs to children.
But the re-enchantment?
That belongs to us all.
Thank you for reading our handcrafted, algorithm-free newsletter about golf. We put everything we have into every newsletter we write, which is why they are frequently 1,801 words. Everything you read and consume was created from scratch by two humans who are absolutely obsessed with the game.
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Kyle sees golf in a way that no one else does—and we're all fortunate to get to share in that view through Normal Sport!

Few make the sport feel as fun and as thought provoking.

Kyle's content is a product of a sick sense of humour, a clear passion for golf and unquestionable dedication to hard work. That's not normal!

Normal Sport is exploratory, ometimes emotional, always entertaining. It also has one of my favorite writers in the biz at its foundation.

There’s been no one else in golf that has tickled my funny bone as often as Kyle Porter does. He’s been instrumental in ushering in a new era of golf coverage and it’s been a pleasure to be along for the ride in that.

Kyle approaches coverage of the game with both conviction and curiosity

Kyle is a perfect curator of the necessary moments of levity that accent a sport that will drive most of us insane.

The way Kyle has been able to mold a silly Twitter joke (normal sport) into a must-read newsletter on the weekly happenings in our silly game gives a great look into why he's one of the smartest people in golf.

Kyle is one of the best in the golf world at finding and synthesizing the absurd, the thoughtful and the fun things that make being a golf fan worthwhile.

I’ve always enjoyed your love for golf. So often I see favoritism showed to golfers in the social media world, but I enjoy reading you telling a situation how it is regardless of the person.

Kyle is the best columnist in sports. That he has channeled those talents through strokes gained and Spieth memes is a blessing to golf.

It's a treasure trove of the important, the seemingly important, and — importantly! — the unimportant stuff. It's an asset in my inbox.


