Philly Inquirer Lifts Paywall Restrictions For U.S. Open Week

Jim Romenesko reports and explains that the venerable paper's strong U.S. Open web page and multimedia effort convinced the beancounters to lift paywall restrictions while millions turn their attention to Philadelphia golf this week.

As always, I love to take in the local coverage for events like this so give them a look and reward the Inquirer for unlocking their host city coverage.

2013 Masters, Iconic Photography Roundup

The light and lens experts weren't given the best conditions Sunday on top of their already limited access yet they still came up with some amazing shots from the 2013 Masters.

Sam Weinman and Alex Myers pick the photos that defined the Masters, including Jewel Samadi's Getty shot of Scott's 18th hole putt.

golf.com posts SI's best stuff from round 4 including Robert Beck's wide shot of the winning playoff putt.


Golfweek features an Adam-only gallery, including an uncredited AP image from behind Scott's 18th hole putt in regulation.

Masters.co features an assortment of beautiful shots, including Scott Brown's amazing shot of Scott's outdoor green jacket ceremony that was also posted on Digg.


The Augusta Chronicle has several galleries, including Emily Rose Bennett's shots from the Green Jacket ceremony, Jon-Michael Sullivan's images of Scott, an Angel Cabrera gallery and a top 12 players gallery.

The Chronicle also sets their shots to a YouTube video set to Come On Aussie. There is also a mute option if you should so choose.

Report: 2013 Mercedes Benz GWAA Dinner Presented By Aberdeen Asset Management, USGA & PGA Of America

The Golf Writers Association Of America held its 44th annual Mercedes Benz Awards dinner and a good time was had by a few. Evening highlights included host Tim Rosaforte’s opening dance number set to award winning ledes from 2013. Later, writer Alan Shipnuck taking time away from his studies abroad to give a heartfelt take on role Twitter-censoring plays at PGA Tour stops. And it was all capped off by PGA of America lifetime achievement award winner John Hopkins revealing the scourge of journalism today: bloggers who refuse confirm with multiple high-ranking sources what the conventional wisdom says before repeating the conventional wisdom in one's reporting.

With award winners accepting their plaques to the soundtrack outtakes from the Beverly Hills Cop 3, a crowd of 200 journalists, dignitaries and select active players recalled past Mercedes Benz Award dinners. Many regaled others with former Aberdeen Asset Management winners, clutched complimentary Scotch courtesy of the financial services sponsor, and even walked a green carpet into the dinner only marred by one fainter who passed out upon learning that Jason Sobel would not be accepting his prize in the Daily Columns division.

The reigning “Players of the year” Rory McIlroy, Stacy Lewis and Roger Chapman all appeared and spoke eloquently. McIlroy brought gal pal Caroline Wozniacki and almost made it to USGA Executive Director David Fay's speech, staying around longer than Tiger Woods ever has, prompting several knowing writers to check with one-another before re-affirming their belief that Woods is still a point-miser while their Rory is the future's great hope. But it was Hopkins’s resounding speech on the horror that is the modern blogosphere which culminated the marathon evening. A former Times writer, Hopkins thanked his "hero" Jim Nugent at Global Golf Post while lamenting the lost art of checking with as many as ten people to best understand what one should be thinking.

Bloggers, who file their views without confirming with others what opinions they should and should not hold most dearly, are threatening the art of journalistic conformity, explained Hopkins as the audience scrolled their Twitter feeds and deleted junk emails. So powerful was Hopkins’s message that I even contemplated making a few notes and checking with others to figure out what to think about his lecture. Then I recalled my role as a blogger, abstaining from taking notes and rattling off my impressions without regard for the opinions of the aristocracy. A most powerful message, indeed.

Holly Sonders Admits: She Has Trouble Saying Rory McIlroy

This news, which most had not noticed but will now, along with revelations can be seen in promo video set to rejected-reality show music for the Morning Drive star's Golf Digest photo shoot.

Sonders appears on the cover of the May fitness-themed issue which I've already seen on the newstand in my neighborhood.

"SI is a dead magazine walking."

Clay Travis analyzes the news of Time Warner spinning off magazines like Sports Illustrated and concludes that it's only a matter of time before print is gone and SI becomes another online Grantland.

I wouldn't agree, and certainly hope he's dead wrong. But then again this is shocking...

SI's descent has been a slow slide, preciptated by difficulty leaving behind print dollars to chase Internet dimes.

As recently as last year do you know what the posted rate was for a full-page ad in Sports Illustrated?

$392,800.

$392,800!

When you were making that kind of money, it was hard to get very excited about the opportunity of the Internet. You want to know who the companies were that got very excited about the opportunity of the Internet? The ones that didn't have the ability to sell full page magazine ads for $392,800.

In the halcyon days of print, the magazine business was amazing. Hell, all of print was. You might read the articles, but the magazine or newspaper existed for one reason -- as a mobile ad device to deliver advertisements to your doorstep. Yep, the first mobile ads were in print media.

Death, Misery Take Hit In 2012 GWAA Awards

Though the bar has been set pretty low, a shocking number of quality entries appear to have been honored in the 2012 GWAA Writing Contest where the judges largely shunned maudlin misery for actual writing about the sport its ownself!

If time allows I'll try to link the winners:

2013 GWAA WRITING CONTEST RESULTS

The following is a full list of the winners, including honorable mentions. There were a record 546 entries in the contest.

DAILY COLUMNS – 1, Dave Seanor, Yahoo! Sports, The false promise of Tiger Woods; 2, Jeff Rude, Golfweek.com, Vivid memories of Hogan and Nelson; 3, John Hopkins, GlobalGolfPost.com, In praise of the Amateur

Honorable mention: Ron Borges, Boston Herald, PoulterHeist; Steve Eubanks, GlobalGolfPost.com, A Selah for Furman; Jim McCabe, Golfweek.com, Remembering Furman Bisher; Josh Sens, Golf.com, Invited to The Country Club, finally.

DAILY NEWS – 1, Ron Green, Jr., Charlotte Observer, McIlroy slays field in PGA Championship; 2, Brian Wacker, PGATOUR.com, Bubba is part artist, part magician; 3, Ian O’Connor, ESPN.com, Olympic’s 16th Hole doomed Furyk.

Honorable mention: Tony Dear, Cybergolf.com, Win by Els is bittersweet; Bill Dwyre, Los Angeles Times, A new name in Masters lore; Jay Flemma, Cybergolf.com, Triple Double at Winged Foot.

DAILY FEATURES – 1, Jason Sobel, GolfChannel.com, More to The Jungle Bird; 2, Lisa Mickey, New York Times, A path to opportunity; 3, Jeff Babineau, Golfweek.com, Good attitude a must at Open.

Honorable mention: Gary D’Amato, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel; Chuasiriporn left game behind; Ron Kroichick, San Francisco Chronicle, Rory’s future is limited only by his drive; Jim McCabe, Golfweek.com, Euro teammates trust Poulter; Alan Tays, GolfChannel.com, Back on course after accident.

NON-DAILY COLUMNS – 1, Beth Ann Baldry, Golfweek, Creamer’s tearful farewell to Pops; 2, Jim McCabe, Golfweek, Jack: Heart of a champion spans generations; 3, Ron Sirak, Golf World, Pepper’s pardon.

Honorable mention – Jeff Babineau, Golfweek, A band of believers; Alan Shipnuck, Sports Illustrated, Dufner is golf’s coolest man; Alan Shipnuck, Sports Illustrated, Rory is not Tiger.

NON-DAILY NEWS – 1, Tim Rosaforte, Golf World, No rest for Rory; 2, Damon Hack, Sports Illustrated, Red Storm Rising; 3, Michael Bamberger, Sports Illustrated, Phil wins, Tiger loses at Pebble.

Honorable mention – Jim Moriarty, Golf World, Beach Party, Rory wins PGA; Jeff Rude, Golfweek, Duval returns to Lytham; Curt Sampson, Golf World, Collectibles, bidding for history; Alan Shipnuck, Sports Illustrated, Rory, globe-trotting star.

NON-DAILY FEATURES – 1, Jaime Diaz, Golf Digest, Billy Casper, Out of the darkness; 2, Gary VanSickle, Sports Illustrated, Education of Tom Watson; 3 (tie) Steve Rushin, Golf Digest, Bad to the Bone and Jeff Silverman, Golf World, Book worms.

Honorable mention – Jim Moriarty, Golf World, Upside-down world of Randy Simmons; Alan Shipnuck, Sports Illustrated, How Jhonny V made good; Stina Sternberg, Golf Digest, Christina Kim: Tears of a clown.

SPECIAL PROJECTS – 1, Alan Shipnuck, Sports Illustrated, Best Sunday ever; 2, Guy Yocom and John Huggan, Golf Digest, Rowdy Ryder Cup at Kiawah; 3, Gregg Dewalt, Times Daily, Revisiting Robert Trent Jones Trail.

Honorable mention: Mercer Baggs, Rex Hoggard, Randall Mell and Jason Sobel, GolfChannel.com, The year 1912 and how it changed the game; Peter Finch and Stina Sternberg, Golf Digest, How golf really treats women; Scott Michaux, Augusta Chronicle, Charl Schwartzel, rise of a natural.

Ugh: Time Inc. Layoffs Hit SI, golf.com

It pains me to see comrades at Sports Illustrated/golf.com losing their jobs as part of Time Inc's 6% global work force reduction. Some very talented people were let go today, and while this Keith Kelly story doesn't name names, it won't get them their jobs back to point out who is suffering today.

This IBTimes.com story cites the layoff numbers, advertising issues and quotes the new CEO, Laura Lang, in a memo to staff:

In a memo obtained by Bloomberg News Wednesday, Laura Lang, the company’s CEO, spoke of a new normal in which magazine companies have to learn how to do more with less. “With the significant and ongoing changes in our industry, we must continue to transform our company into one that is leaner, more nimble and more innately multi-platform,” Lang wrote.

Innately multi-platform. As opposed to multi-platform.

“To make this change, we need to operate as smartly and efficiently as possible to create room for critical investments and new initiatives. These reductions are part of this important transformation process.”

Good & Bad News: Bill Simmons Edits Grantland Golf Columns

Former SNL star Norm Macdonald will be writing some golf stuff for Grantland, the all-things-Bill Simmons home to a fresh take on sports and pop culture. However, golf has not been a strong suit for Grantland and Macdonald essentially revealed it's not an area of expertise for Simmons by having to correct some tragic basics using Twitter.
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