Feherty Advocates Making The Ball Bigger

Bob Carney says that during the Golf Channel's 19th Hole show last week, new Golf Channel everywhere man and internationally renowned cyclist David Feherty advocated an increase in the size of the ball to make the game more attractive to amateurs and more challenging for pros. Peter Kostis has another delusional subversive to tame!
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The "Special Announcement" Dissected

Spare me comments about the importance of the Open, the debt ceiling or the home run derby over this "Special Announcement" nonsense regarding Tiger Woods, Mark Steinberg and Golf Channel. That said, this was another valuable learning experience for those of us social media adopters and this painfully long dissection is necessary, if nothing else than to help most of you work on your quick scrolling abilities.

Still, for those who care, here goes.

It won't go down in the annals of sports gaffes like The Decision (as TMZ hinted), but instead the Tiger-Tilghman-Golf Channel-Steinberg "special announcement" non-news Monday appears to be a simple mistake compounded by social media and the late Sunday night timing.

Here are the events, as best as I can recreate them after making a few calls Monday.

- Golf Channel, whose PR department is very good about sending out press releases to announce special programming, did not send anything to media to promote this "special announcement" regarding Tiger Woods. This should have been the first cue that something was amiss. Instead, Golf Channel Tweeted that there would be a "special announcement concerning Tiger Woods on Golf Channel" at 11 a.m. ET.

- Adding fuel to the fire: the Golf Channel Tweet has since been taken down. Yet, the wording would help people see what was actually sent out, because it did say there would be a "special announcement concerning Tiger Woods on Golf Channel." No, there is nothing special about Mark Steinberg joining an agency, nor in the context of Tiger's career is this "special" news, but the Tweet also is not saying that Tiger himself would be making a special announcement. The Twittersphere and Facebook get the blame for taking the Tweet and twisting it. However...

- More confusion came Sunday evening when Golf Central anchor Scott Walker reported that "Kelly Tilghman will be on location" for this special announcement, but again, there was never a mention of a sitdown interview with Woods. Sadly for Tilghman, her business ties with Tiger's EA game and go-to status as Woods' safe-bet interview has become so ingrained that anyone who hears her name associated with Tiger now assumes another fawning interview is around the corner. But again, still not a legitimate reason to have assumed an interview was happening.

- Mark Steinberg, surely aware that he's going on Golf Channel and CNBC Monday morning to promote his move to a new agency Monday morning, denies there was ever a special announcement to AP, but does not take the opportunity to suggest to AP that this may have been a misunderstanding involving his own personal announcement. Perhaps because he was saving that news for his Keeler, Darren Rovell of CNBC, who does indeed get the scoop on Steinberg's new agency.

- When NPR calls Golf Channel Monday morning, they are told to tune-in to see what's up. Again, not a great move, but this is television and they want eyeballs.

In conclusion (applause breaking out), social media took some scraps of info and assumed the worse, then regular media and bloggers ran with it (myself included). Finally, Golf Channel and Steinberg did not clarify what was up once the media reports started going out.

In other words, a little blame goes around to all parties involved.

We did, however, get to hear Brandel Chamblee, sitting with Rich Lerner to host a very brief live "special announcement" report, try to justify why Golf Channel was cutting in to discuss an agent signing with a new agency.

Thanks to the reader who transcribed...

"To your point, any announcement involving Tiger Woods cause a contegration of speculation. But when you start talking about Tiger Woods, the diamond has lost almost all of its lustre. I think it is an important business decision going forward for Tiger Woods to look for places where he can change the way he is perceived as not only an athlete, but as a personality. He needs to align himself with certainly elite athletes, but squeaky clean athletes. Derek Jeter, these guys across the world of sports have very positive images. Tiger Woods, well you say he's made a fortune in the game of golf. But the fact is he's the single highest paid athlete in the world. So much depends on Tiger Woods...golf, personality, health. The heartbeat of golf beats in tandem with Tiger Woods. Tiger Woods gets a fever, golf gets sick.

Okay here's where it gets a little strange and indecipherable. And the tone for those who saw it live was described as "borderline meltdown" and "seriously over the top."

You start talking about the PGA of America, the PGA TOUR, Yahoo.com, MSN, TMZ. Everyone of these companies and institutions have made a fortune on Tiger Woods' ascent. Some of these media outlets have made a fortune on his descent.

And the Golf Channel too. Maybe more than most?

They will all stand to make another huge fortune if he comes back. You start talking about blockbuster movies and how are they made up? They are made up of an ascent, followed by a descent; impossible hurdles that they can't get over, somehow they get over them, then they come back with an ascent, with perspective and humility. Tiger Woods, should he come back, will make more money than he's ever made before. Not just for himself, but for any business he's aligned with and any ancillary businesses that are with him."

Whoa Nellie!

Then he was asked by Lerner how hard it would be for Steiny to go out on his own.

"Impossible. you're talking about putting all of your eggs in one basket. Tiger Woods' marketability at this point is linked to one thing and one thing only. Winning. If he doesn't come back and win, Tiger Woods in 5, 10 years will hardly be marketable at all because the scandal will look like the thing that brought him down. If he comes back, people will say that this guy has withstood the most adversity that any athlete has endured. Wrongly so, but they will say that.

There goes another Texan thinking Hogan getting-hit-by-a-bus was a bigger deal.

"And that he climbed to a spot higher than he's ever climbed before and that he did so with dignity. Now whether he does so or no, that remains to be seen. But winning, we've seen this so many times. When someone wins, we attach these wonderful attributes to it."

Anyway, time to get on with some golf!

“What you’re seeing is that sports are becoming more relevant to more people.”

SBJ's John Ourand asks how high rights fees can go after another stellar Olympic rights battle and recent deals with college conferences, but does not mention the PGA Tour other than a chart valuing the average annual value of the PGA Tour television contract at $491.7 million.

“The market is very, very robust,” said CBS Sports Chairman Sean McManus. “Each of the parties that’s spending this money must be figuring out a way to justify the rights that they are paying.”

The huge increases may have the feel of a market bubble, having grown so much in such a short amount of time. But veteran sports media executives believe the prices accurately reflect the value of the rights and have room to grow.

“Have sports rights peaked? I don’t think they have,” said NHL Chief Operating Officer John Collins. “What you’re seeing is that sports are becoming more relevant to more people.”

And it's all about cable.

Cable TV channels view sports programming as the easiest way to increase ratings and the license fees that distributors pay. Today, several cable networks actively are trying to add sports to their schedules, which, sports media executives say, is the main reason why media rights fees are rising so quickly.

Comcast wants more sports on Versus. Fox is putting more sports on FX. Turner is trying to build up truTV’s sports assets. And, of course, ESPN needs reams of sports content for its multiple TV channels, broadband platforms and mobile applications.

And great news for the PGA Tour, they...oh wait, what? Oh that's right they're locked into Golf Channel exclusively over 15 years, unless NBC wants to re-write the deal and throw some programming to Versus.

Golf Channel On NBC Secures Olympics Through 2020

With this news, I'm expecting the Golf Channel promos to start soon and the new on screen logo combining  the GC, Peacock and the rings to kick in by the fall, all for one 72 holes of stroke play in five years that will fall off the Olympic radar screen because Tiger will be semi-retired, the format will interest no one and GC/NBC will find a way to tape delay it. Is that cynical enough for you?
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Golf's Most Powerful Man Steps Down: Ebersol Leaving NBC

Richard Sandomir with the news that Dick Ebersol, who locked NBC into deals to televise the PGA Tour and USGA championships and who held more clout than ever after the NBC-Comcast merger added Golf Channel to the mix, is leaving at the end of June to spend more time counting his millions. And to throw the upcoming Olympic and PGA Tour negotiations into flux.
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Battle Of The Blonds: Poulter In New War With Johnny

Two of the world's great fake blonds have issues again. As Ian Poulter rushed to play 17 and 18 today as any sane golfer would do to grab another few hours of sleep, NBC's Johnny Miller and Gary Koch both expressed mild disdain for Poulter's antics.

Alex Myers has the full report here.

When Poulter later found out that Johnny was questioning his move, the Brit took to Twitter to fire back at Johnny!

Zing!

You may recall these two went at it over Poulter's ball striking and Johnny's putting last year.

New Golf Channel Feherty Show Declared "Ground-Breaking" By Golf Channel

For Immediate Release...

GOLF CHANNEL ANNOUNCES GROUND-BREAKING ORIGINAL SERIES STARRING IRREPRESSIBLE SPORTS PERSONALITY DAVID FEHERTY
 
FEHERTY
 
12-Part Series Features Personal Stories, Clever Observations and Captivating Interviews with the Man Known for his Inimitable Style and Witty Golf Commentary
 
Feherty Premieres Week of June 20
 
ORLANDO, Fla. (May 9, 2011) – One of the most recognizable and unique personalities in sports, David Feherty – a 14-year veteran of CBS Sports – is bringing his unmistakable wit to Golf Channel with the all-new, prime-time series Feherty, currently in production and debuting the week of June 20, following the playing of the U.S. Open near the nation’s capitol.
 
Feherty is the first original Golf Channel series created since the golf cable network became a member of the NBC Sports Group following the Comcast-NBCUniversal transaction in January.
 
No topic is off limits in this 12-part series which will share revealing interviews with well-known personalities from all walks of life – from sports to entertainment to politics – along with unique stories and anecdotes from the brilliant yet zany mind of David Feherty.

And skipping through the bio stuff:

“This show is something I’ve always wanted to do, and I'm glad it’s found a home at Golf Channel,” Feherty said.  “I’m really overjoyed, so much so that I may have to cheer down, rather than up.  I think I'm tri-polar.”
 
Surrounding the interview in each 30-minute episode, Feherty will share never-before-heard stories about the sport and the personalities that play it as well as poignant and humorous observations on the peculiarities of life. The series is being shot both in studio and on location with interviews taking place across the country.