Bay Hill Will Be New To The Players...Again

Jeff Shain on Arnold Palmer's latest redo of Bay Hill.

"We've literally done something to every hole," said Palmer, who has made Bay Hill his winter home since 1965 and acquired the club 11 years later. "It'll be new to most all [the players]."

Bedecked with an old-school par. After three editions as a par 70, it reverts to 72 as two long par-4s are returned to their original state as par-5s. One of those comes at No. 16, which should help inject some risk/reward thrill to the closing stretch.

"I think it's going to be more fun for the players and a lot more entertaining for the fans," said rookie pro Sam Saunders, who as Palmer's grandson has more familiarity with the new look than anyone else in the field.

Like an aging house, every golf course gets to a point where it needs some maintenance and upgrade. Greens and bunkers tend to shrink as rough slowly overtakes the edges; new technology requires some modification.

Or some committee guy or benevolent dictator jacks around with it to the point that no one really likes it anymore!

Whew. Glad Bay Hill doesn't fall into that category.

On a serious note, wouldn't it have just been cheaper to mow the rough down and change 16 back to a par-5?

2010 WGC CA Championship Final Round

I'm proud sad to say I haven't watched one second of Doral this week between work duties and some Zenyatta viewing yesterday, but with Ernie Els in contention the finale should be interesting. Your comments are mostly appreciated...

"We will have a statement after the tournament."

Jeff Shain looks at the likelihood of Doral losing CA as its sponsor and the Tour having to find someone willing to put up the, gulp, $12 million or so necessary to sponsor a WGC event.

Without someone to pony up the approximately $12 million price tag each year, Doral could get stripped of its WGC status. One pessimistic view suggests the Blue Monster could fall off the schedule altogether. PGA Tour brass, however, rejects that scenario.

"I'm confident there will be a PGA Tour event here," tournament boss Eddie Carbone said at last month's CA media day.

Ty Votaw, the tour's executive vice president, was quick to stress that CA can't be counted out yet. He said the two sides will sit down after the event to discuss an extension to their four-year deal.

However, CA communications chief Bill Hughes didn't leave much room for optimism. "We will have a statement after the tournament," he said.

Well at least he didn't say they were looking to spend more time with the families.

Y.E. Yang And TPC Scottsdale's 17th

In this week's Golf World I penned a story (not posted online) about the strategic joys of the 17th hole at TPC Scottsdale. While I spent much of the week out on the tee or green, the beauty of the architecture and pressure of a final round tour event all came into focus when Y.E. Yang arrived at the tee with a two shot lead. The following sequence, as seen from behind the tee, pretty much tells the rest of the story...

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Stricker Commits To Bay Hill...Therefore Tiger Must Be Playing!?

One joy in the otherwise messy Tiger saga will arrive in the form of watching mainstream news media and sports blogs attempt to cover golf. For example, there's today's hilarious SportsByBrooks.com post suggesting that a Tiger appearance at Bay Hill is looking more likely after Steve Stricker committed to the even for the first time in years. They even went to the trouble to make a snazzy graphic to commemorate this great moment in utterly comical dot-connecting.
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