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
HSBC Dude: Tiger Needs To Play HSBC WGC, Not "Meaningless... money-making opportunities".
/Royal County Down Lands 2015 Irish Open
/Gallacher Wins! Rory, Tiger Get All The Attention
/Stephen Gallacher: 10-Under On Last 10 In Dubai
/Interesting Dynamic: Dubai Offers $2.5 Million For Par 4 Ace
/"It sure seems like a long time since Woods stood over an important putt and there was no doubt it was going in."
/Clearing Caddie Renwick In Rory Rules Row
/Abu Dhabi: Larrazabal Beats Rules Maven Rory, Righty Phil
/Oh BTW, Phil Shoots 63, Trails By Two Strokes
/McIlroy Penalized: "There are a lot of stupid rules in golf and this is one of them."
/Paramor Coming After Media For Sergio Cheating Claim!?
/Huggan: Americans Must Apologize To Sergio!
/Video: Sergio Tapping Down Something, Violation?
/Injury Rough Is Back And It's Lamer Than Ever!
/I read through the lines after Sergio Garcia's post-round (76) comments about rough in Abu Dhabi, and wrote about it for GolfDigest.com. I think you'll be surprised to find Sergio was right to call out the course setup tactics.
Because just when you thought the days of injury-inducing rough had ended...
**A SkySports.com report quotes broadcaster Ewan Murray praising the rough, even though it might induce injury.
Murray described the course set-up as "marvellous", and said: "You are talking about setting up the golf course to test some of the finest players in the game today. In my opinion, that examination needs to be a stern one.
"Straight driving is very much part of the game and those who hit most fairways should have the advantage over those who don't. You will not beat these players will length alone, but you will identify the best of them by putting the premium on accuracy.
"The Tour should shorten the course on perhaps two of the four days and combine that with tucking the pins away. Give them different tests rather than the same all four rounds.
"The courses in the States are too easy. There is little or no rough and that plays into the hands of the long hitters. Their setting up of courses creates one dimensional players.
Who'd a thunk we'd come to the point that the U.S. was home to low rough and it was Europe trying to give us the dreadful high-rough, yawnfest golf?
"We copy America too often. The European Tour should take the lead, add variety and ask the players some different questions. When you do that the best will come up with the answers."
Asking players to walk a fine thin center line is not asking a different question. It's asking the same one-dimensional question over and over again.