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
Cheyenne Could Beat Tiger Right Now
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Q-School Re-Evaluation, USGA Politics At Heart Of Walker Cup Player Apathy?
/"I don’t know how long it will take to sink in. Eight months? Nine months? A couple days? I don’t know. I’ve never done this before."
/I've been hearing from reader Rob Matre about amateur Russell Henley, winner of Sunday's Stadion Classic on the Nationwide Tour over his home course at the University of Georgia. Rob posted a gallery of images from Sunday's round.
From an unbylined AP story on the win:
“I can’t even feel my arms,” Henley said. “I was nervous all day. I don’t know how long it will take to sink in. Eight months? Nine months? A couple days? I don’t know. I’ve never done this before.”
The three-time All-America selection finished at 12-under 272 on the University of Georgia Golf Course.
If you want to experience what golf highlights were like in the silent era, here's a B-roll with graphics of the final round in Athens.
Amateur Leading Nationwide Event
/Russell Henley is tied for the lead with Troy Kelly on his home college course in Athens, Georgia.
NCAA's Match Play Dates To Change...
/...I'm sorry, I meant the U.S. Amateur is moving starting in 2012 to accommodate the fall academic calendar.
USGA CHANGES FUTURE DATES OF U.S. AMATEUR AND U.S. WOMEN'S AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIPS
Far Hills, N.J. (March 9) – Beginning in 2012, the United States Golf Association will shift its schedule for future U.S. Amateur and U.S. Women’s Amateur Championships to help avoid conflicts between the competitive golf season and the fall academic calendar.
“Starting in 2012, our goal, for the most part, will be to end the Women’s Amateur on the second Sunday in August and the U.S. Amateur on the third Sunday in August,” said Jeff Hall, USGA managing director of Rules and Competitions. “Our intent is to give a large majority of the players who are still students a chance to compete in the national amateur championship and begin their fall class schedules on time.”
The 2012 U.S. Amateur at Cherry Hills Country Club in Cherry Hills Village, Colo., was originally scheduled for Aug. 20-26. It will now be played Aug. 13-19. The 2013 U.S. Amateur at The Country Club in Brookline, Mass., will be conducted Aug. 12-18. In some instances, the final day of the U.S. Amateur will not fall on the third Sunday in August.
"Patton was the swashbuckler of the bunch for whom no recovery shot was impossible."**
/"There is not 20 percent growth in the game of golf to be had in the U.S. or U.K., in my humble opinion. Out here there is."
/"The IGF could’ve instituted a 36-hole cut instead of shortening the tournament."
/Sean Martin takes issue with the lack of an on-the-spot call by the International Golf Federation to prevent a virtual washout day of weekend World Amateur Team Championship golf, but what really scares me about this episode is that it's precisely the kind of thing that they use to justify the dead-on-arrival 72- hole individual stroke play format for the Olympics.
There’s nothing the IGF can do about the weather. But its insistence on emphasizing participation over competition in a tournament billed as a “world championship” has frustrated many players and coaches.
"It might well have been the firmest course in championship history, certainly American championship history."
/Tony Dear follows up with Chambers Bay superintendent David Wienecke on the setup and conditions.
Letter From Saugerties: Amateurism Edition
/Following Sunday's U.S. Amateur at Chambers Bay, former USGA Executive Director Frank Hannigan shares these thoughts on the state of amateur golf.
August 31, 2010
The annual USGA pre-professional championship concluded on Sunday. Of the 64 players who made it to match play only 11 were 25 years of age or older.
One of the 11, Skip Berkmeyer, actually won a match before succumbing in the second round to a student athlete from Stanford.
The last time an adult won the event was in 1993 when John Harris of Minnesota prevailed. Harris had been a pro, was reinstated, then turned pro again to make serious money on the senior tour. But the ultimate adult golfer of our time was Jay Sigel, who beat all the college children in both 1982 and 1983, a feat so unlikely it warrants his enshrinement in golf's Hall of Fame.
My point is this: what is called the Amateur Championship is not an equitable competition because college golfers have an inordinate advantage in that they play golf nine months a year at someone else's expense and then milk their parents for money to play the other three.
Some pick up the semblance of an education in the process. Many do not. Only a minority of PGA Tour members who enrolled in college obtained degrees.
There is nothing new in this condition. Back in 1979 after only one adult, Dick Siderowf, reached the round of 16, two of the USGA's finest officials--Jim Hand and Sandy Tatum--asked me to concoct a new championship for post college golfers who had not attained seniority.
I came up with what is called the Mid Amateur Championship which bears a minimum age limit of 25. It has been a success in the sense that low handicap golfers enter in droves. The concept has been widely emulated by regional and state golf associations and even the R&A. (By the way, just what is a "mid amateur"?)
The USGA once declared in its code of amateurism that golf scholarships were forbidden. Such an attitude was deemed anti American. The USGA caved in during the 1950s.
Assiduous research led me to conclude that the very first golf scholarships were given at LSU during the 1930s with some other label. Among the recipients was Freddie Haas, who later gained fame by ending Byron Nelson's winning streak of 11 straight victories.
Ah, but who gave out the scholarships? None other than Huey Long, the Kingfish, governor of Louisiana, who wanted LSU to be first in everything except perhaps learning.
Amateurism was a class Victorian notion designed to keep the well bred apart from working men in sport. It evolved, however, into something sane and decent. So long as golf enjoyed its tradition of "open" competitions it was natural to have events limited to those who did not enjoy the advantage of playing golf for a living.
College golf scholarships blew that concept up in that the elite of college golf are better than the best club professionals.
The Rules of Amateur Status are made up of about 2,000 words of rationalizations. Among them is the proclamation that an amateur golfer is one who does not accept remuneration. A college scholarship based on golf skill is obviously a form of remuneration. The entire code, in reality, could be reduced fairly to 13 words: "An amateur golfer is one who does not attempt to win prize money."
Chambers Bay Roundup: Imagination Edition
/"What we've learned is you've got to have moisture down six inches, 12 inches, 24 inches to get a consistent dry where it doesn't go from really good to literally baked out, unplayable in a matter of minutes."
/Tim Booth writes up the outstanding U.S. Amateur final, but doesn't quite capture just what a dynamic and well-played match it appeared to be.
Ryan Lavner captures the joy of the Uihlein family after Peter's 21st birthday win over David Chung.
The golf course looked fantastic on NBC, perhaps a product of a few more production touches saved for the weekend and someone in Orlando not cranking up the green saturation. It also appeared to play better and in an odd twist, Chambers Bay may actually be better off hosting events in June instead of August when there is more moisture in the soil.
From the post round press conference with Mike Davis, Tom O'Toole and Jim Hyler of the USGA:
You know, Chambers Bay came in so incredibly dry that we'd never had any ‑‑ this course is pure sand. If you dig down six inches, if you dig down a foot, if you dig down five feet it's sand. And what's interesting is you could have never gotten another course with any type of other grass like this here you could have kept it like this for months on end and the grass is just dormant.
What we've learned is you've got to have moisture down six inches, 12 inches, 24 inches to get a consistent dry where it doesn't go from really good to literally baked out, unplayable in a matter of minutes.
That's what we learned. So Tuesday night what we ended up going with the superintendent and our agronomist said recharging the greens, we essentially flood the things, absolutely flooded them. So we got water down 12 inches, 16 inches, 24 inches, and that allowed Chambers Bay to, essentially, you know, dry out on a much more even keel basis.
As for the green question, Hyler was asked and answered this way...
Q. It was obvious during the week on the TV the course was a good deal greener than it is in reality. I wondered what your reaction to that was? Were you disappointed by that?
JIM HYLER: We noticed on the broadcast I think the first day or whatever it was with the TV, I looked at it and said that's not what I'm seeing outside. We found out that something was going on with the local feed.
Other parts of the country it was exactly what we were seeing. I'm not sure what the technical issues were, but other places it showed up just like you see it outside. So we had sort of the same thought, but it got straightened out, I think.
Asher Wildman also notes the impressive attendance for the week, which came through on television for Sunday's final match.
Sunday Promises Plenty Of Captivating Storylines And None Involve The FedExCup!
/Saturday's Busy Day Of Golf Open Thread
/The U.S. Amateur, Johnnie Walker Ryder Cup drama and of course the scintillating FedExCup playoffs at Ridgewood. And I'm not watching any of it live. But you might be...not that there's anything wrong with.