If both players were complete newbies and had never played before the hole in one would be reached first.
how can you possibly say that when there are pro players who do nothing but play golf all day who have never hit a hole in one?
I can say it because it's an opinion. There are no cold hard facts or science that can sway this argument one way or another.
My thinking was along the following lines:
I'm assuming that pros don't practice hole in ones very often as it's pretty pointless. If this is wrong I apologise.
A round of golf takes about 3 hours? Again this is a guess?
I'll assume a max of 3 rounds per day. Assuming 4 par 3 holes that's 12 goes at a hole in one every day.
If he plays every day of the year that's 4380 goes per year.
I think I've gone way over the top here and that the pros won't really have this many goes. Therefore they just don't have that many goes at something which is apparently a 12500 to 1 shot anyway.
If there were controlled confitions you could have 1 go every minute or so. I don't think it would take long before you were hitting the ball in roughly the right direction. It then becomes a case of luck more than skill.
There is much less luck involved in achieving a 180 as you have to be much more precise. It would take many more goes before you were getting anywhere near the 60 never mind 3 of them at the same time.
There is much more chance of achieving a fluke hole in one than achieving the level of competence necessary to hit a 180.
This is all just my opinion of course.