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
"The course over the last couple of years has been moving back to what it once was."
/USGA Tweaks Pebble's 14th
/Mike Davis kindly reported back about the troublesome 14th at Pebble Beach and the extreme chipping area that led to AT&T final round dramatics.
After studying the 14th green situation for about 45 minutes today, we decided to bring the rough up on the left side about half-way. I think that will, on balance, provide the fairest outcome. It will allow balls just left of the green to roll down about 5 paces and then be caught by rough. The player would have an uphill shot that could be played with a bump and run or a high-lofted pitch. It will give the player under the tree down on the flat area a play (which he never had before with thick rough) – hit a low pitch out of the rough onto the closely mown area and run it up the hill. I think this scenario will challenge the players from all four sides of the green … try to get their ball up onto what might be the smallest (effective) green for any major competition (that I know of).
Once again, great to see Davis and the committee unafraid of making adjustments this close to the tournament in the name of common sense. Not that the 14th still won't keep Davis and championship committee chair Tom O'Toole up at night, but this modification should cut down on some extreme goofiness. Though the front hole location will still be a beast.
"Firm and fast might mean big stats and low scores, but soft and slow fairways mean challenging and fair golf."
/"Sometimes these people think we're stupid. It's an amazing thing to assume that we had mucked up to that degree. It's just staggering."
/Ah...Back To Reality: A Course Setup Boondoggle To Savor!
/Remember the good old days when we bloggers had to harp on about course setup boondoggles instead of TMZ reports? I feel refreshed after reading about the latest Australian Open debacle that players apparently saw coming, even though the folks in charge did not.
Adam Lucius for Sportal:
"If we are able to accelerate that process of creating heroes then I would predict that the overwhelming new demand for the game will result in some mechanism that creates far more accessibility to the game itself."
/"The decision to defile arguably the most renowned hole in golf reveals how little confidence the R&A has in the efficacy of next year's change from box to v-grooves"
/The PGA Tour Gets It? Volume...
/...uh, I'll have to go back in the archives, but we do have a growing list of examples that the PGA Tour continues to move in the direction of downplaying rough, emphasizing the recovery shot, setting a proper example for the game and preparing us for a return to more flyer lie-golf in 2010 when groove rules are changed.
Thanks to reader Al for this Ed Sherman item about Cog Hill, site of next week's BMW Championship:
Received a call from Frank Jemsek the other day. He said he heard us speculating on our radio show ("Chicagoland Golf," WSCR-AM 670, 6-8 a.m. Saturday) about the rough the pros will encounter next week for the BMW Championship.
It turns out the rough might be as rough. Mr. Jemsek, the owner and operator of Cog Hill, said the PGA Tour has asked him to leave the rough at No. 4 at the same level of the facility's other three courses.
"That would be about 2 1/2 inches," Mr. Jemsek said.
"Thoughtful setup equals more fun"
/Lance Rigler documents a small but nice example of shifting tees around and how some college golfers are finding it both fun and challenging.
The best examples might have been Nos. 16 and 17. Playing from the tips, the par-5 16th hole featured a back right hole location and gave players all they wanted today. It stretched over 680 yards and played to a 5.13 scoring average.
However, players were immediately rewarded with the par-4 17th, where a good drive could find the putting surface. What a swing of emotions that were produced in that two-hole stretch.
“The kids are saying this is a lot of fun,” said Vanderbilt coach Tom Shaw. “The setup today with some of the tees up and some of the tees back, it really makes them think.”
Tigers Braces For Emotional Final Time Around Liberty National
/Rough and the PGA
/You may recall that before the PGA I suggested that we would find out this year whether the clever, low rough setup at Southern Hills was an abberation or whether the less nuanced, high-rough hackout nonsense seen at Oak Hill and Oakland Hills was more typical of the modern PGA Championship.
2009 PGA Championship Clippings: Final Round Whoa Nellie, Y.E. Yang Wins Edition
/They'll be slicing and dicing this one for a while.
From Tiger's post round take to Yang's dynamic personality to the gamesmanship to that silly rough around the greens to the CBS exec who insisted on showing us a Michael Vick clip as the leaders reached the terrifying 16th, the 91st PGA that was looking like a typical Tiger coronation turned into one for the ages.
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