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
Video: Euro Tour's Finest Play From The 22nd Floor
/Another entertaining European Tour promo video, this time for the Atlantis in Dubai and the season ending points race. Nice surprise cameo too.
**You may recall there was some tremendous First World complaining about the European Tour mandating players start two of three "Race To Dubai" events. Ernie Els even WD'd from this week in supposed protest.
Steve Elling explains part of the ire, justified in this instance I'd say:
Bigger cracks emerged at the second event in the series, the lucrative HSBC Champions in Shanghai. The co-sanctioned, 78-man event event is not run by the European Tour, which has little sway over the composition of the field. As a result, 10 of the top 40 on the Race to Dubai points list did not find a place on the tee sheet, including Ryder Cup player Nicolas Colsaerts, Thorbjorn Olesen, Rafael Cabrera-Bello and Shane Lowry.
In theory, a points race represents a season-long meritocracy. But if all three of Dubai’s lead-in events have fields of 78 players or fewer, it crimps the opportunity for top players in the points list to participate. In reality, designating co-sanctioned events as Finals Series stops meant even fewer spots were available to European Tour regulars.
It felt like a closed shop.
At the co-sanctioned BMW Masters, 14 players from the China Golf Association were included in the field. At the HSBC, because of the tournament format, Rory McIlroy and Luke Donald played, while players having better 2013 seasons were benched. In points, both players were outside the crucial top 60, the number required to land a spot in the Dubai finale.
Six of the 78 players at HSBC were from China, including two ranked outside the top 800 in the world. One of them failed to break 80 in three of his four rounds and finished a whopping 59 shots off the lead. Ouch.
That's Embarrassing: Snedeker Injures Himself Getting Off A Segway
/Vijay's Lawyer: Tour Has Made Multiple Drug Policy Exceptions
/Video: Lydia Ko Goes Pro In (Albeit Too Long) Style
/Dennis Walters: "I'm basically in a battle with time."
/Jack's Unretired! Another Great PNC Father/Son Field
/Guan Wants To Thank Paramor For Masters Slow Play Penalty
/Same Day: Spieth Plays Pine Valley & Augusta National
/Fine tuning the game for his TBD 2013-14 PGA Tour debut, Jordan Spieth put up a sweet 67 at Pine Valley, then played a late nine at Augusta National according to tweets by his playing partner and Dallas-based performance coach Cameron McCormick.
Pine Valley is in fall color mode...
75 blows at PV today. @JordanSpieth only beat me by 8. Easy to see why this course is #1 in the world. pic.twitter.com/0rD3QCZv9f
— Cameron McCormick (@CMcCormickGolf) October 15, 2013
And confirmation of the incredible same day PVGC/ANGC combo.
@davepr12 yep both PV and ANGC same day. Both firsts.
— Cameron McCormick (@CMcCormickGolf) October 16, 2013
Haunting Video: Tony Jacklin On Strictly Come Dancing
/Eger's My Shot: "Ridley isn't my biggest fan."
/Nick Price On Native Zimbabwe: "It's been so depressing since the land-grabbing started"
/Greg Norman wonders forlornly if he didn't get a third chance to lose the Presidents Cup because he walked away from a Rolex deal.
Nick Price wonders forlornly about his native Zimbabwe.
I think we've got an upgrade in the Presidents Cup captaincy!
On the eve of the "must win" matches (oy...it's not going away!), Barry Havenga profiles Price and his assistant captains Mark McNulty and Tony Johnstone, who all hail from the deteriorating country.
Accompanying this chaos has been the dismantling of one of the finest golf environments ever seen. In the 1960s and '70s, even amid political upheaval from minority rule that caused the United States to impose trade sanctions on Rhodesia, the country was a golf Camelot. Located along the northeast border of South Africa, it featured brilliant weather, a large number of courses with affordable fees and active junior programs that would, for a few golden years, produce a disproportionate number of the world's finest players.
Three-time major champion Price, now 56, as well as his assistant captains, Mark McNulty, 59, and Tony Johnstone, 57, were products of this time. So were Denis Watson and renowned instructor David Leadbetter. "The weather was so good that you were outdoors 365 days a year, so we played everything," recalls Price. "My brother [Tim] bought a bag of clubs, not a set, a bag, completely mixed clubs. People say there wasn't hickory around in 1965 -- there was in Rhodesia! We didn't have access to new equipment because of sanctions, so we made the most of everything we had."
"As golf enters its own Moneyball Era, every number counts..."
/It's been a longtime coming, but the Moneyball mentality has finally come to golf, reports Tim Rosaforte in this week's Golf World.
Most notably, Brandt Snedeker and Zach Johnson are attributing some of their recent success to more numbers crunching by outside sources, and it's not all ShotLink stats helping the players prepare. Snedeker won't reveal much other than the role Mark Horton has played.
"The lines [between a good and great season] are so thin, so I'm trying to find any edge I can get," Snedeker said. "Mark's done a great job for me of understanding who I am as a golfer. We, as professional golfers, have a tendency of thinking we're strong in particular areas, and that may not be the case at all. He does a great job of identifying what I need to work on, what my strengths are so I play to those, and what my weaknesses are, so I can play away from them."
At East Lake a year ago, Horton worked his computer in the clubhouse, and Snedeker executed a game plan that resulted in a sweep of the final playoff event and the FedEx Cup title for an $11.44 million payday. At the end of the year, Snedeker said Horton was the difference for him in jumping from 38th to ninth on the World Ranking.
Johnson was less secretive about his work with Peter Sanders, whose Shot By Shot website is part of the numbers crunching process.
Sanders, who works out of his house in Connecticut, contends that ShotLink stats are "myopic" and "one-dimensional answers to multi-dimensional questions." The blunt comments point to the theory that identifying tangible areas of improvement that can truly help improve scoring comes from a more focused exploration of the data.
FedExCup: The Money Will Really Mean Something To Stenson
/Punters Beware: Scott In Record 63 At Shinnecock
/It's never too early to file away something for your past performances files, as Doug Ferguson reports on Adam Scott's course-record setting round at 2018 U.S. Open host Shinnecock Hills.
Scott made a 12 footer on the last to set the new record.
"It's pretty cool," Scott said. "The members got pretty excited when I came off the course, and it's one of the best tracks in the world, for sure. No one has ever shot that score in over 100 years off the tees I played. So that's a pretty neat thing."

