John Daly: "I think I may get in trouble for saying this, but..."

From an unbylined wire story:

John Daly was in the group at 69 along with Lee Westwood, Retief Goosen, Y.E. Yang and Robert Karlsson.

"With a small field like we have here, and I think I may get in trouble for saying this, but I'm kind of glad it's not sanctioned by the European or PGA Tour," Daly said. "It shows that China is doing something on their own. They're saying, 'Hey, we may not need the PGA Tour or European Tour, no disrespect."

When did China become IMG? Or IMG become China?

"PGA TOUR Latinoamérica to kick-off inaugural season in 2012"

For Immediate Release...

PGA TOUR Latinoamérica to kick-off inaugural season in 2012

Wow, only one cap on Latinoamérica...

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, FL (October 20, 2011)—The PGA TOUR announced today the creation of PGA TOUR Latinoamérica, a professional tour initially consisting of 11 events played in seven countries across Latin America.

“We are delighted to announce the launch of PGA TOUR Latinoamérica,” said PGA TOUR Commissioner Tim Finchem. “This expansion into Latin America, when combined with what the Nationwide Tour has been able to accomplish in the region in recent year’s, is part of the natural progression for golf which continues to grow globally.  We see this as an opportunity to help in the further development of elite players across the region.  The timing is right, with South America hosting its first ever Olympic Games, which includes golf’s return to the competition for the first time in more than 100 years.  The Latin American market has already produced several PGA TOUR stars, and one of our goals for this tour is to help develop the Latin American stars of the future.”

The 11-event schedule, the result of a collaborative effort among the PGA TOUR, Tour de Las Americas, National Golf Federations, promoters and host clubs in the region, will be contested from September through December 2012.  In 2013, the plan is to have up to 14 events on the schedule.  The events will take players through various parts of the region including Mexico, Colombia, Puerto Rico, Brazil, Argentina, Chile and Peru. A complete schedule will be released in the near future.

And now for the quote pile-on.

Alright, let's get to the takeaway here...

PGA TOUR Latinoamérica events will be 72-hole stroke play tournaments consisting of fields of up to 144 players. The fields will consist primarily of the top professionals in the region with the top money earners receiving access to the PGA TOUR’s Nationwide Tour the following year. The specifics of Nationwide Tour access will be disclosed next year prior to the start of the 2012 PGA TOUR Latinoamérica schedule.

Receiving access? Translation: details to be bickered over at upcoming player and policy board meetings.

From there, the release features a big quote pile-on that won't improve your day.

My knee-jerk takeaway?

The European Challenge Tour should stay away from Latin America, and, as Sean Martin noted when writing about this earlier this year, this should help get more South Americans world ranking points and therefore eligible for the 2016 Olympics.  But as Martin notes in a new story on the announcement, discussions about those points have a ways to go.

"With golf pros in town, host is set to unveil grand plan for Frys.com Open"

Click on image to enlargeMark Purdy of the San Jose Mercury News says the Frys.com Open has two more years at Cordevalle before a long-planned move to The Institute, an ultra-private and, at least on Google Earth, an ultra-horrible looking golf course, owned by Frys founder John Fry. (Check out the hole I screen captured...giggles guranteed!)
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Kapalua Field May Benefit From New Exception?

Robert Collias on changes to the PGA Tour's kickoff event at Kapalua, currently sponsored by Hyundai, says the tour's Championship Management will be taking over the operation (here come the military festivities!) and that scorned Hawaii lover Mark Rolfing is mulling whether he'll pretend to act like he wasn't run out after one year as tournament director.

There is also hope that an expanded exception for non-members might entice more of the previous year's tournament winners (Rory, Darren?) to appear.

Another change that Rolfing had campaigned for is in the works, Pazder said. Nonmembers of the PGA Tour may get to compete in two more tour events, bringing that number to 12. European Tour members, including U.S. Open champion Rory McIlroy, often skip Kapalua because of the limit.

"We will be making a proposal to our policy board here in a couple weeks," Pazder said.