The PGA Tour Wives 1 Cent Sale
/Scottsdale is rolling out the red carpet for the PGA Tour player wives this week!
Thanks to reader Sean for the heads up on the 1 cent sale!
When you come to think of it that is the secret of most of the great holes all over the world. They all have some kind of a twist. C.B. MACDONALD
Scottsdale is rolling out the red carpet for the PGA Tour player wives this week!
Thanks to reader Sean for the heads up on the 1 cent sale!
...but forgot? Ran out of time? Simply didn't care?
Nice going guys! It's okay, we don't care either.
But, if you have absolutely nothing to do, here are the standings.
And yes I'll say what needs to be said. It's tough to address these things, but someone has to do it.
If the FedEx Cup playoffs started today, Todd Hamilton would not be in them.
But just think of the storylines!
Kudos to Peter Kostis for slipping in the "where will we see you next" question of Tiger in his post-final round Buick interview. Word has been quietly filtering out that he's likely not going to play at Riviera, and this was seemingly confirmed by Tiger's absurd answer about the long trip to Dubai and needing time to rest (though it did set up a nice zinger from Faldo about the trevails of traveling on a G5!).
Look Tiger, whether it's the traffic, the lousy weather, the poa greens, the lousy threadcount on the sheets at the Malibu beach house you rented, it doesn't matter. But don't claim fatigue with a week off after Dubai. You are more creative than that!
But it also seems one of the writers (who!?) was pretty skeptical of Tiger's reasoning for likely skipping Riviera, and judging by the answer he received, the question hit a little too close to home...
Q. If you don't play Nissan for whatever reason, if you're not ready or what-have-you, there will probably be some speculation like at East Lake where you're now at a point where you're trying to protect your streak, especially at a place like Riviera where you've never come close to winning; what would your answer be to that?
TIGER WOODS: People can say whatever they want. That's their opinion. They are entitled to it.
Besides Nick Faldo's debut, CBS introduced new graphics and going to one commercial, Jim Nantz plugged everything imaginable, and some cool Killers music reminiscent of an ABC telecast briefly appeared (but lots of tired Yanni for the most part).
The only highlight was the pairing of those two lovebirds, Tiger Woods and Peter Kostis. I'm not sure what exactly gave the love-hate away. The lack of eye contact? The distance between the two, or the general feel of a dentist office conversation?
Well as promised, Kostis delivered pat questions.
Your thoughts on today's round?
How did you feel in terms of your competitive spirit with three rounds under your belt this year?
How do you feel about the overall state of your swing and game?
Thoughts about tomorrow?
Credit for Kostis for not asking any pending fatherhood questions. Those are getting really old. And we have 6 months to go!
There's another donation for charity!
From Rich Beem's post second round press conference at Torrey Pines, courtesy of reader Scott:
Q. Do you think kids will be wanting to win the FedExCup as much as the Masters or U.S. Open?
RICH BEEM: To be honest with you, this is an honest answer, I sure hope not. Because I think that that would be demeaning towards the majors and what everybody grows up -- I mean when I'm out practicing, when you see kids out there practicing, you know, seven-, eight-, nine-year-olds, even 15-, 16-year-olds, "I've got this putt to win the U.S. Open. I've got this putt to win The Masters."
I sure hope there never comes a day where a kid says, "I have this putt to win the FedExCup." I hate to say that because it sound like I'm bashing on the TOUR and the FedExCup and I'm not. I really hope that the kids are dreaming about winning a major championship and winning a title instead of winning something else. I just sure hope not.
JOE CHEMCYZ: Thanks, Rich.
RICH BEEM: Wow.
Thanks to reader Scott for noticing this fun exchange between Brandt Snedeker and the scribblers. He's talking about how excited his parents were at his play and that they were watching it on The Golf Channel GOLF CHANNEL (thanks ASAP for reminding me it goes in caps). Snedeker is staying at the Hampton Inn where, well, he couldn't watch with them.
Q. You keep on talking about your dad; is he here?
BRANDT SNEDEKER: He's not. He's at home watching on TV probably more nervous than I will ever be. He's sweating it out at home.
Q. Did you talk to him? What did he say?
BRANDT SNEDEKER: I talked to him last night. He's giddy as a school girl on cloud nine, could not be happier, just loving every minute of it. He and my mom are watching it on TV, they were watching the replay last night and I don't get the GOLF CHANNEL so I didn't see any of it. They said, give me play-by-play, and it's like, I was out there -- (laughter).
It was a good experience. They are excited and it's great to see them that fired up.
Q. What are their names?
BRANDT SNEDEKER: Larry and Candy. Staying at Hampton Inn. I'm not going to be Will MacKenzie and give you the room number. (Laughter.)
Larry Bohannan nabs a rare sit down with Commissioner Tim Finchem to talk about the demise of the once great event known as the Bob Hope Classic, and it's nice to know that the MBAspeak isn't confined to press conferences.
On the move to The Classic Club:
"If you are not moving forward, you are moving backwards. This tournament for a long time sort of set the bar in a lot of ways toward charitable giving, going back to the 1970s," Finchem said. "They need facilities that they can use to effectively market the tournament in today's world.
"You see all the other sports building new facilities. These facilities allow us to give the customer, the fan, a better experience."
Yeah it really looked like it the last two years!
And regarding the pro-am...
"I'm not so sure that the experience for the amateurs here can't be even more effectively marketed. It has been effectively marketed through the years."
Today's key phrase, effective marketing. As opposed to mere marketing. This man makes $7 million a year!
On the Nationwide Tour caliber field...
"From a field standpoint, you always have in a multi-day pro-am, whether it is here or Pebble Beach, you've got some players who like that format and some players who don't," Finchem said. "That is always going to continue."
But Finchem said it's important to look at the field as a legitimate PGA Tour field even if some stars are absent or avoid the event.
"The tour as a whole continues to get stronger and stronger. The fan base is getting bigger. We've got more stars. Here you've got some international players sprinkled in, I'm glad to see Phil make his debut after five months off this week."
Yep, stronger and stronger, that's why there were more world ranking points available in the Persian Gulf than Palm Springs. Fan base bigger? More stars? Uh huh.
On The Golf Channel GOLF CHANNEL and the new TV deal:
"We are going to learn more after the first couple of years of this new schedule.
First couple of years? More like first couple of months.
We see good underlying trends with the Golf Channel. We like their presentation. We think it is getting better."
One key to the new deal is the potential for growth for Golf Channel, which currently reaches about 75 million homes.
"We like the way their distribution is going. We think we are on track for them to be in 90 million homes by '09," Finchem said. "By that time, all of the fan base of the sport will understand where the Golf Channel is. And that creates a really good base for us."
It's all about the base!
Brian Hiro in the North County Times points out that the Buick Invitational features "only four of the top 20 players in the world rankings: Woods (No. 1), Mickelson (No. 4), Vijay Singh (No. 6) and Jose Maria Olazabal (No. 19)."
Now, if I'm not mistaken, this is the final year before the 2008 U.S. Open when the South will be played three of four days. Isn't the North supposed to be the weekend course next year? Or did that idea fizzle out?
Do the players hate it that much, or are they just not that interested in understand local knowledge anymore?
Another interesting note from Doug Ferguson:
STAT OF THE WEEK:@ More world ranking points were available last week at the Abu Dhabi Golf Championship on the European Tour than the Bob Hope Classic on the PGA Tour.
The transition of Torrey Pines to kikuyu grass probably could not have come at a worse time, what with our super dry and cold fall here in Southern California. Ed Zieralski talks to Torrey director of operations Mark Woodward...
“On the North, we didn't really have the focus we did on the South Course because of the U.S. Open being played there,” Woodward said. “The North is going to be set up for tents. We also had some irrigation problems on the North, and the rye grass overseeding didn't take. Those are the big spots that are off color.”
Woodward said more problems came when a chemical used to kill clover stunted the grass even more after it was applied.
“It was a situation where, it wasn't a bad decision, but under coastal conditions and at this time of year, we should have used a different product out there,” Woodward said.
A PGA official refused to comment yesterday on the course's present conditions. Wilson was asked if the PGA was disappointed with Torrey's off-peak conditions.
“We're going to suffer this year and not have that lush rough that we had in the past, but it's going to help in the future (to) provide a challenging course for many years to come for the Buick Invitational as well as the U.S. Open,” Wilson said.
Bill Dwyre in the L.A. Times makes up for Saturday's Phil Mickelson column (Phil remembers the names of his pro-am partners!) with a succinct indictment on The Classic Club course, which frequently delivers winds like Sunday's.
Many said it was the worst wind they have experienced, and those were the former mountain climbers. The weatherman put the winds at 15-20 mph, with gusts up to 40. Mostly, there were gusts.Now keep that number in mind when reading the next bit. First, Larry Bohannan in the Desert Sun:
It was an ominous question at best.And here's where it gets fun...
"Are they going to play this course again next year?" Phil Mickelson asked after his windy Sunday round on the final day at Classic Club in the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic.
Yes, Phil, they are going to play this course again. They own the course.
"Who?" Mickelson asked.
The Bob Hope Chrysler Classic, came the response.
With that, Mickelson turned and walked away to sign some autographs without a response.
Mike Milthorpe, the Hope tournament director, said he certainly hopes Mickelson and other players won't make decisions about whether to play in the Classic in the future simply on one horrible day of weather.I wonder where they would get the idea that it blows?
"I don't know that (Mickelson) questioned the course," Milthorpe said. "He may have questioned the conditions. It's a tough day today, no ifs, ands or buts. If anything, he may have just questioned the day."
Milthorpe said Classic Club isn't fighting a bad perception about wind among the PGA Tour players. The perception, he said, comes from media reports about wind and the so-called wind belt on the north side of the freeway.
The trees lining the railroad tracks? The thousands of wind turbines? The fact no one in their right mind would build anything out there until the last few years?
That biased, negative, liberal elite media!
Last year's final round, for instance, was described as a blustery day, making it tough on the final groups down the stretch. But Milthorpe said the official tour report on the final day listed a wind speed of 17 mph.
Tod Leonard in the San Diego Union Tribune offered this:
Perhaps because he knew he would get queries, Milthorpe said he checked with the other three courses in the Hope rotation yesterday and said the wind conditions were similar.
“The perception is the media's perception,” Milthorpe said. “We had firemen gauging the wind today, and it didn't get above 25 mph. We got a tour report from last year for this golf course and the winds Sunday were 17 mph. But if you listened to the commentators and what the media wrote, it sounded like it was huge wind.”
They say the camera adds 10 pounds. Maybe it adds 10 mph too?
Either way, you have a new 7,600 yard course that is so massive in scale that the amateurs clearly don't enjoy walking and playing it.
You have a final round that took just under 6 hours (based on my TiVo calculation) and an event that drew only one player in the world top 30.
Those short, harmless little old desert courses like Indian Wells, Bermuda Dunes and El Dorado aren't looking so bad are they?
Oh that's right, they're dated because the guys are working out too much. I keep forgetting!
Reader Clive forwarded these comments in Tod Leonard's piece that I missed. They come from Mark Calcaveccia and Nick Watney after Sunday's wind event and would seem to refute the notion that the wind severity was a media-driven concoction.
Calcavecchia is in his 26th full season on the tour, and he said after shooting 3-under 69 yesterday that he couldn't remember playing in wind conditions so severe.
“The good news is it wasn't raining,” said Calcavecchia, who jumped 28 spots to tie for eighth in the final round. “If it had been raining, it would have been like the round at Muirfield (in the 2002 British Open, when Tiger Woods shot 81). It probably wasn't as windy there, but it was raining and it was colder.
“It was pretty nasty (yesterday),” he said. “It was close to having to call it out there. Nick Watney's ball caught a gust of wind (on the green) and it rolled down a hill. I had a 4-footer on 6, and it was a right-center (of the hole) putt. The second I hit it a gust blew it six inches off line. It was unbelievable.”
Tod Leonard in the San Diego Union Tribune also had this from Phil Mickelson after Sunday's final round:
“It was hard, but today I didn't want to try to fight it too much,” Mickelson said. “I don't want to get in the bad habits, which is the main reason why I don't play Kapalua (for the season-opening Mercedes-Benz Championship)."
Ohhh...the FedEx Cup schedule may be starting a week later for Phil next year.
Thanks to reader Noonan for noticing this Chris Johnston story on the Canadian Open's struggle to find a sponsor, and the PGA Tour's Ty Votaw's condescending rebuttal (to their faces!):
The 'For Sale' sign hanging on the title sponsorship of the Canadian Open is beginning to fade with age, but the PGA Tour isn't worried about the lingering vacancy.This is the fun part...
Tour executive Ty Votaw believes it's only a matter of time before a company steps forward and pays the $6-million (U.S.) a year needed to get its name on the event.
"The PGA Tour brand is strong," Votaw said yesterday after speaking to the Royal Canadian Golf Association's board of governors. "The history of golf in Canada is strong. I think the event itself is a selling point. It's a question of finding the right [fit]."
Votaw, however, believes the tournament's place in the run-up to the new FedEx Cup playoff system should boost the field and sponsorship interest.
"It's not less than ideal, it's not lousy and it's not between a rock and a hard place," said Votaw, the PGA Tour's executive vice-president of international affairs. "We want to build a crescendo to the end of our year.
"You should be proud that you are within that group rather than bemoaning that you're in that group."
Geoff Shackelford is a Senior Writer for Golfweek magazine, a weekly contributor to Golf Channel's Morning
Copyright © 2022, Geoff Shackelford. All rights reserved.