The War Of The Members?

A trusted Augusta insider offered this on the abrupt departure of Hootie Johnson and subsequent Billy Payne appointment:

There is a political power struggle, with two distinct factions. Hootie is on your side about equipment and Billy Payne is as well.  There is a younger more corporate group that has a different view of things. The membership knew there was a new Chairman coming but no one was sure who it would be. Hootie stepped aside so that the dwindling majority could put Billy in while they still had the power, and as you and others have picked up on, Billy is just 58 years old. He's going to be there for a while.

Hootie has tried to put pressure on the USGA to do something about the ball, and is frustrated nothing has happened, but feels he can't effect change on this issue. Billy is not in favor of today's equipment and specifically the golf ball. Augusta has been holding back in bringing out their own golf ball or their own ball spec in order to not embarrass the USGA.  But Augusta has given the USGA long enough to correct the golf ball situation to no avail. Billy will not hesitate to move ahead with their own golf ball spec, and maybe very soon. Also, it makes it easier for Billy to bring out the ball rollback without piling more criticism onto Hootie, who has dealt with a mountain of criticism already.

So if true, which side are USGAers Fred Ridley, Walter Driver and Jim Reinhardt on in this power struggle?

If the "Distance Myths" memo is our guide, perhaps they aren't on Hootie's side.

Bomb and Gouge!?!?!

bombers1.jpgPeter Morrice has the first Golf Digest feature/instruction story on flogging, only he employs Chuck Cook's "Bomb and Gouge" label instead of Johnny Millers' "just flog it out there" line. 

I guess flog does have that negative semordnilap thing going against it, after all, it is...golf backwards. And why ever contemplate the negative when you can milk it for an instruction piece AND run photos of pros from the 18-34 demo! 

Today's tour bombers are not only crushing drives, they're establishing a new style of play: Bomb & Gouge. The thinking goes, bomb driver as far as you can and, if need be, gouge the ball out of the rough and onto the green. Golf's long-held ideal--fairways and greens--is giving way to this aggressive new style. Even from the rough, these power hitters say they can take advantage of shorter approach shots and create more birdie opportunities.

"I like hitting driver as much as possible because it gets me closer to the hole," says J.B. Holmes, another super-long rookie and winner of the FBR Open in February in just his fourth start on tour. "Hitting driver gives me the advantage of being 50 yards past other guys. If I hit 3-wood, I'm back where everybody else is."

Here's where it gets fun:

"The biggest factor in distance is that players are just now learning how to launch the ball at optimum conditions," says Tom Stites, chief of product creation at Nike Golf. "It's the technology of the equipment, yes, but it's also the technology of the selection process."

Another major factor is the modern ball. Tour players today hit multilayer, urethane-cover balls that spin less off the tee than wound balls of a decade ago. With the right impact conditions, players launch the ball high but with a lower spin rate, which lengthens but also straightens the flight (reducing spin reduces sidespin as well).

"With the [Titleist] Pro V1, the longest hitters went to bed one day and woke up the next 20 yards longer," says Jim McLean. Ball manufacturers continue to isolate the best flight characteristics, and ball-fitting has become a standard part of the equipment-fitting process. "Matching the ball to the driver being used has been a bigger variable than the equipment itself," says Dave Phillips, co-founder of the Titleist Performance Institute.

Of course, these people are all delusional if you believe the USGA. bomberchart.jpg

Speaking of them, to your right is a Golf Digest chart that the Far Hills group would look at and say, "it's the grooves." (Instead of understanding that greens in regulation will go up when you are hitting more lofted clubs into the holes!):

Then there's this from Morrice and Jack Nicklaus:

As hot as the power game is, it's hardly new. Top players have often had a distance advantage, but they've usually used it cautiously. Jack Nicklaus was the bomber of his generation, but he played a decidedly conservative game. Nicklaus was famous for plodding his way around with 3-woods and 1-irons off the tee until he needed a big drive. Then he'd hammer one 50 yards by his playing partners. "I played a power game," Nicklaus says, "but I always believed the game of golf was a game of power when you need it, but placement and positioning was the more important part of that game. Today, the game to me is power. I don't think the other part is even there."

And this from Hank Haney:

"A few wild shots have always been an acceptable price for Tiger to pay in exchange for dominant length," says Woods' coach, Hank Haney. "The top players play the power game--and prove over and over that distance is king, especially when you have the ability to hit great recovery shots."

This is where things get weird:

Many golf insiders argue that course setups play right into the power player's hands. "Until the tour and other events narrow the fairways to 25 yards and grow the rough to four or five inches, they'll continue to bomb it," says Butch Harmon. "Golf used to be driving and putting, and it still is, only getting the ball in play doesn't matter anymore."

I guess Butch hasn't been watching, but uh, the more they narrow the fairways and grow the rough, the more it encourages flogging!

Don't you just love watching golf turn inward on itself, all to protect the...ah I won't go there.

One idea for putting a premium back on driving accuracy would be to "lower the floors of fairway bunkers so that they're real hazards," says White. "We can't just grow up the rough to six inches. The members at [our tournament sites] would not be able to play their own golf course."

Hey, those will drain well!

Really, how long before we start putting alligators and snakes in the roughs all to protect the...I said I wouldn't go there, and I won't.

Television analyst David Feherty, a former Ryder Cup player, agrees that shotmaking has changed but thinks it's for the better. "I stand up on the tee [at tour events] and look out at a fairway 350 yards out. I put my thumb on one edge of the fairway and my finger on the other--it's like 2 1/2 inches, and these guys are ripping it down the middle," says Feherty. "If that's not shotmaking, I don't know what is."

Now, wasn't he the guy who just last week advocated changing the ball to restore shotmaking?

Drugs In Golf Story By Bloomberg

Here is a lengthy story courtesy of reader Tuco about golf's weak response to possible drug use and testing, courtesy of Bloomberg News writers Curtis Eichelberger and Michael Buteau. A few highlights:

Golf's most powerful organization, the U.S. PGA Tour, says there is no evidence of drug use in the sport and testing is unnecessary. Results from Europe suggest that rationale may be flawed.

While muscle-enhancing steroids aren't surfacing, other banned substances are: Marijuana, cocaine and ecstasy have turned up in French and Italian tests of amateur and pro golfers, according to documents from sports-testing agencies.   Golf's rule-making bodies have little control over the PGA Tour, whose 275 active players include Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson. The tour's resistance makes it unlikely that mandatory, global testing of top pros will emerge in the next few years, current and former golf officials say.

"It's really a matter for the tours to embrace, and I think that's happening slowly, in the United States particularly slowly,'' says Peter Dawson, chief executive of Scotland's Royal & Ancient Golf Club, the sport's rulemaker outside the U.S. and Mexico."I don't think you're going to see a worldwide anti-doping policy in place in golf for some years.''

Because that look the other way approach worked so well for baseball, you know. Though I did find this encouraging from David Fay, who has been reluctant to push publicly for testing:

"It's just a matter of time before the sport of golf needs to deal with this in a comprehensive manner,'' says Fay, 55. The USGA, which oversees rules in the U.S. and Mexico, runs the U.S. Open. It has no control over the 47 other PGA Tour events, where $250 million in prize money is disbursed.

 And...

There are signs that young American golfers are using illegal drugs as well. The latest tests of U.S. college amateurs, in 2004, showed no positive results, yet an anonymous survey indicated drug use. The 2005 National Collegiate Athletic Association survey of a sampling of golfers indicated steroid use by 1.3 percent, amphetamine use by 3.5 percent, cocaine or crack use by 2.7 percent and marijuana use by 25 percent, according to the NCAA.

And...

The view of South African Ernie Els, a PGA Tour member who has earned $26.7 million over his career, is common among touring pros. "We're all-natural,'' he says. Els, 36, labels calls for drug testing in golf "ridiculous.''

We're all natural. Wow. Let's test Ernie first, because he's smoking something if he believes that.

If Congress requires random testing, the PGA Tour will comply, Combs added. He declined to respond to questions about other banned drugs or to comment about results in Europe. He also declined to say whether any PGA Tour golfer has been asked to take a drug test under the current policy, introduced in 1992.

At a press conference in March that focused on steroids, Finchem said there was no evidence of drug use among golfers, and he stressed that players adhere to a code of honor. Without proof, there is no need for testing, he said.

This is fun...

"These excuses are so lame, it's like reading something out of a Monty Python script,'' says Charles Yesalis, 59, an anabolic steroids specialist and professor of health policy at Pennsylvania State University in State College. "We don't have a problem because there is no proof, and we aren't going to test to get the proof.' This whole notion that there is something about carrying a bag of clubs that places you in a high ethical and moral plane is naive.''
And...
The Ladies Professional Golf Association, based in Daytona Beach, Florida, says it has no evidence of drug use among its members.

That's right, back acne and excessive facial hair have always been part of LPGA Tour life.

Drug testing will be conducted at the World Amateur Championships in October in Stellenbosch, South Africa, a first for the event."It's educational,'' says Fay, whose USGA is involved in organizing the tests. "We won't announce the results.''

 Golfing executives agree that any testing policy for pros or amateurs needs to be uniform across the globe. The European tour holds 46 events in 23 different countries.

And...

Stewart Cink, a 12-year veteran of the tour, says testing is probably a good idea if only to erase any doubt about drug use. Nothing players might take will make them better golfers, says Cink, 32.

"Everything you could take would diminish your performance,'' he says.

German government anti-doping officials are operating on the opposite assumption. They are working with German golf association executives to come up with a testing program partly because the anti-doping officials say golfers can enhance their performance.

"In every type of sport, it's possible to gain an advantage with certain substances,'' says Matthias Blatt, director of Germany's National Anti-Doping Agency. "Theoretically, golfers could even dope to increase concentration.''

 Beta-blockers, used to treat hypertension, create a more regular heart rate, possibly reducing anxiety and giving a player a steadier hand. They are prohibited in the Olympic sports of archery, curling and shooting and are often outlawed at chess and bridge tournaments, doctors say.

And finally...

In the U.S., Fay says it will probably take a crisis to get drug testing on the fast track.

"The court of public opinion doesn't seem interested in how it relates to golf because they sense it is a clean sport,'' he says. If there is a documented case or strong suspicion, that is when the interest level will spike.''

Funk, Ames In Skins; Organizers Eye Craig Perks and Jodie Mudd to Round Our Reunion Of Former Players Champions

Yes, that's right, Stephen Ames is "eligible" to play in Skins, which should generate huge interest now that Tiger's ABC deal has expired.

The Skins Game no longer has Tiger Woods under contract, but at least it has new life.

LG Electronics has signed a three-year agreement to become the title sponsor of the Skins Game, the original event in the Silly Season that will be held Thanksgiving weekend at Trilogy Golf Club in La Quinta and televised by ABC Sports.

"This relationship ensures that the LG Skins Game will remain part of our Thanksgiving viewing menu during the holiday weekend, much as it has been over the last two-plus decades," said Pete Derzis, general manger of ESPN Regional Television.

Fred Funk is the defending champion, wearing a pink skirt last year after Annika Sorenstam drove past him on one hole. Also eligible to play is Stephen Ames after winning The Players Championship. The rest of the field will be determined later.

Woods played four of the last five years at the Skins Game under an endorsement deal that expired last year.

 

Shapiro On Commitment to Diversity (Or Lack Of)

leadership2.jpgLeonard Shapiro really hopes Augusta National takes a Woman-American member, and so do I, if nothing else so that we can move on to more important topics, like the emasculation (sorry) of the golf course.

And he writes:

Then again, nothing involving golf and women really surprises me much any more.

I mean really, the last two presidents of the U.S. Golf Association, the organization charged among other tasks with making the game accessible to the masses regardless of gender, race or religion, are both members of all-boy Augusta National. Current president Walter Driver, also belongs to Peachtree in Atlanta, a golf club that has no female or African American members, either.

And you ought to see the statement on the commitment to racial and gender diversity the Atlanta law firm, King and Spalding, he headed until last year trumpets to the public on its web site. Sadly, Driver and many other CEOs who belong to Augusta National don't practice in their private lives what their public companies preach in terms of doing all the right things.

The photo above of Walter Driver and friends was presumably not taken at Peachtree. Love that natural, at-ease body language!

No More 2-Year Exemptions For Cup Team Players

One of the silliest PGA Tour exemptions is about to run its course, according to Doug Ferguson.

Trevor Immelman came within a 10-foot putt of winning the Wachovia Championship, a tournament he might not have been able to play except for a Presidents Cup perk that no longer exists.

The PGA Tour began offering a two-year exemption in 2004 to anyone on the previous Presidents Cup or Ryder Cup teams, provided they had some degree of tour membership.

More times than not, anyone good enough to make either team had no trouble keeping his card, although there were exceptions. Paul Azinger was picked in 2001 to play in a Ryder Cup that was rescheduled to 2002, and he was able to play in 2004 on that exemption after finishing 169th on the money list.

But what really infuriated players was the case of Immelman.

He tied for 17th in the PGA Championship to earn just enough money for special temporary membership. Later that day, Gary Player made him as a captain's pick for the International team, even though Immelman was 22nd in the standings.

It smacked of preferential treatment, not only because Player and Immelman are South Africans, but because Immelman's father is commissioner of the Sunshine Tour in South Africa. And just like that, he was exempt for two years on the PGA Tour.

"I think it's more important to win a golf tournament for a two-year exemption than it is to make one of those teams to get the exemption, or even theoretically be a captain's pick," Jim Furyk said after his playoff victory at Quail Hollow.

Furyk wasn't alone in his complaints.

The criticism was so strong that the tour's policy board rescinded the exemption in May last year. Because it was in the middle of Presidents Cup qualifying, the perk wasn't taken off the books until this year. That means the exemption is effective this year for Ryder Cup players, and through 2007 for Presidents Cup players.

More Carolyn

Jim Ducibella of the Virginian-Pilot sat down with LPGA brand lady Carolyn Bivens for a little lesson in white papers and brand planning.
Q: Eight months into it, how much of your strategic plan is in place?

A: No one outside of the LPGA has seen any aspect of my strategic plan. (Former commissioner) Ty Votaw and the staff worked very hard to set up 2006, and most of it was set up in 2004 and 2005. Television contracts were signed. Tournaments were signed. Contracts dictating the look and feel of the LPGA brand were in place. The strategic plan and analysis we've been doing behind the scenes won't show up in large measure until 2007.
Oh goodie, something to look forward to. I wonder if this "look and feel" of the brand includes playing tournaments on decent golf courses?
Q: In December, you hosted the first-ever "Phenoms to Pros" forum to address the issue of more and more young athletes turning pro. Commissioners from the NBA, NHL, MLS and the CEO of the Women's Tennis Association convened at your invitation. Did anything come out of that?

A: A white paper was generated out of it that summarized the key issues. We've convened a panel that is studying the white paper and our intention is to recommend a change to the LPGA constitution before the end of the year.
Can't wait for that document to find its way into the hands of some crafty writer.
Q: You didn't come up through the LPGA. Is there a benefit to not knowing how your predecessor handled things because it allows you to set your agenda without the influences of the past?

A: There are pluses and minuses. I've tried to make sure that (to overcome) what was perceived as a weakness - that I'd not come up in the world of sports marketing and golf - I've surrounded myself with people who are. I've made sure that the players, the tournament sponsors and others are all represented when we're making a major directional decision. I also think there are advantages to coming from the outside. I'm not so tied to the tradition of, 'This is the way things have to be.'
A directional decision? Nice. Take that Commissioner Finchem!

Bobby Knight Golf Outtakes

knight.jpgThanks to reader Rob for the link to this Bobby Knight golf show outtake package over at YouTube.com.

Now, this is a family values website, so naturally I'm only posting this for the entertainment of certain members of the browsing audience. If you are going to watch this at an office or with young children or with spouses nearby, I highly recommend headphones! And be warned, as soon as you hit the link, it starts rolling!

Teleconference With Billy Payne

This Billy Payne thing is basically a column writer's worst nightmare. Okay, I won't complain anymore...this paragraph.

His opening remarks:

If I may, I'd like to talk first about our golf course.   There will be some changes to the course for the 2007 Masters that Mr. Johnson has already initiated, but certainly, I think you'll agree, not as significant as in the past.   They will include adding five to seven yards in front of the tees on hole Nos. 11 and 15.   The length of the tees on our other par 4s and 5s average about 20 yards.   On those two holes, it's only about 13 yards.   So these changes will make these tees consistent with the other tees on our course, and will provide us with more flexibility if the holes are playing into a substantial head wind or if the fairway conditions are soft.

Wow, flexibility. I wonder if someone had to explain it to Fazio?

Also, we will be adjusting the mow line at hole No. 11 about three to five yards on the golfer's right.   This, we believe, will provide the medium-length player a wider fairway, especially at the 280- to 300-yard mark.

Also, on the 11th hole, and on the right, we will be removing the grass from under the pine trees and replacing it with pine straw.   This, too, is consistent with other parts of our course.

Once again, ladies and gentlemen, I'm very excited about today and look forward to your questions.

Here's what Billy's really thinking after sitting through plenty of press conferences: let the predictable questions begin.

Q.   Sounds like your first order of business is to make the course shorter somehow.

BILLY PAYNE:   Well, I think it gives us the flexibility, Doug, that we want, depending on the course conditions and weather conditions.

Q.   I wanted to ask you, one issue that has arisen during Hootie's tenure was the lack of female members.   Can you see that changing?

BILLY PAYNE:   Doug, I think I would answer that by saying as we've said and as you've heard many times in the past, on membership matters, all of them will be decided by our members, and we have no specific timetable to address that issue.

Well, that took all of 20 seconds.

Q.   I'm wondering if this teleconference is any indication that under your tenure as Chairman, there will be other media availabilities other than Wednesday the week of the Tournament.

BILLY PAYNE:   Well, I think I answer that specifically by saying that I certainly intend to come down there more than just Wednesday as I'm quite accustomed to the media center, made a lot of friends and feel a significant responsibility that the media continues to have all of the needs and services in order to do their job properly.

So I think you're going to see a lot more of me, and certainly have an opportunity to continue those relationships.

Q.   But does that include possible situations such as a teleconference other than the week of the Tournament?

BILLY PAYNE:   You know, I don't know.   I haven't yet taken over officially, so I haven't really thought about that.

Well, now that we got that vital topic of non-tournament week teleconferences out of the way...

Q.   Mr. Johnson mentioned the possibility in the future of adding PGA TOUR winners back to the exemption ranks.   Are there any other changes that you're going to be looking at right away?

BILLY PAYNE:   You're accurate.   We're looking at the issue of adding back PGA TOUR winners.   We're studying the issue.   We don't expect to do that by 2007.   In fact, it would actually be unfair to do so because there are golfers out there playing right now under the existing qualification standards.

So while you won't see it next year, I think it's a probability that you will see it sometime soon in the future.

Ah, the first Hootie mess he'll be mopping up.

Q.   Just wondered, you've only had a few days to think about it, but what do you regard as your greatest immediate challenge?

BILLY PAYNE:   I think I have -- I think it's safe to say that I will need to watch, to observe, I will need to learn a lot, get familiar with significantly greater detail about the operation of the Club and the Tournament than I now possess, and I've always felt that the best learning experience initially is certainly to listen and not talk.   So that's what I plan to do in the coming months.

Okay, this nonsense is just not going to fly.  How am I, as a column writer, supposed to work with humility?

Q.   A few of my questions have already been taken,

Oh you mean, like all of the predictable ones? Sorry, continue...

but can you tell me a little bit more, carrying on plans with some of the property acquisition around the golf course and plans for the practice facility and those types of things?

BILLY PAYNE:   Yes, sir, I can tell you a little bit, which will be the full extent of my knowledge at this point in time.   I am, of course, as are all of you aware, that in order to accommodate the growing support and parking needs of the Tournament, including a state-of-the-art practice facility, we have had this effort underway now for a couple of years.   It is ongoing.   We hope to have some renderings to be able to share with y'all sometime next year, so you can see for yourself what precisely the plan is.   And we continue to look for a completion date and utilization date in the 2010-2011 time frame.

We hope to have some renderings to share with y'all? No, no Billy, you need to be combative, petulant, arrogant, smug. I can't work with this!

You realize that if he keeps this stuff up, the focus will be on the Masters and the players, and not the Chairman?

That's just so wrong on so many levels, and so disrespectful to Chairman Johnson.

Q.   The idea of a Tournament ball has been floated the last couple years, Billy, what's your position on that?

BILLY PAYNE:   Well, I guess first I'll start off, Doug, by saying that I'm very encouraged that there's an ongoing dialogue among the governing bodies, USGA, the R&A, with input and participation by the PGA TOUR to look at limitation on advances in both the equipment and the ball technology.   And I remain very hopeful and encouraged that while a difficult issue, some equitable resolution will be made, which will have the effect of slowing down the distances or the gains and distances as we have observed over the last several years.

So many of our great golf courses are at risk of becoming obsolete.   And while I and we would hope that resolution would come as quickly as possible through that normal process of the governing bodies, we would not take that option off the table in the context of what lengths to which we would go to protect our own course in the future.

I don't know about you, but there just seems to be a different feel to his comments on this subject compared to his predecessor. Maybe it's wishful thinking, or maybe Payne has grown tired of listening to Walter and Fred's lame excuses?

Q.   Everything has pretty much been asked, but a couple of things, are we pretty much maxed out on the golf course as far as the major changes?   Are we pretty much going to see what we're going to get for a while here?

BILLY PAYNE:   Yes, sir, I think we have it just about right now.   Remaining hopeful as I do that some limitations will be placed on equipment which will diminish the game in distance.   I think we've got the golf course pretty much like we like it right now.

Okay, so we need to chip in and buy him a chainsaw and maybe he'll get the hint. But isn't it interesting how he keeps hoping for limits to be placed?
Q.   Sorry if this has been asked, but have you thought about what it's going to be like to be part of that Champion's Dinner next year?

BILLY PAYNE:   I've thought about it a lot and I've been told that I'm an invited guest and I'll have a great time.   My job is just to listen and have fun, and boy, I'm really looking forward to it.

Good lord, you actually get the feeling he respects the players and feels privileged to be in their prescense.

This has to stop!

MacDuff's Post-Wachovia Fed Ex Cup Points List

Reader MacDuff reports that David Duval moved into the 149th spot, two places ahead of John Daly.

He also reported this to me prior to Wachovia: "We've had 18 events so far and there are 17 more up to and including the PGA -- which I take it is the cutoff point for the Fed Ex seedings. Looking at the MacDuff table so far, the top 30 players have an average of 8.6 events each to put toward a grand total; the bottom 30 players (down to no.140) have an average of only 5.7 scoring events to put toward that grand total. So the top boys should have about 17 results to choose from by end of PGA, and the bottom ones only about 11 positive scores to submit."

Here is how a FedEx Cup points race would stand after the Wachovia, and yes, that's right, Lucas Glover is second and Tiger 18th:

1    Mickelson    17509.37        11
2    Glover    15854.16        11
3    Furyk    15212.5        10
4    Singh    14746.87        11
5    Gf. Ogilvy    13762.5        9
6    C.Campbell    12837.5        11
7    Appleby    12662.5        10
8    Toms    12409.37        8
9    Sabbatini    12179.16        9
10    Pettersson    12058.33        12
11    Weir    12009.37        9
12    Goosen    11775        8
13    Verplank    11612.5        9
14    Van Pelt    10977.5        12
15    T.Clark    10897.5        10
16    Olazabal    10875        7
17    Parnevik    10767.5        12
18    T.Woods    10659.37        6
19    Pernice    10625        8
20    Mayfair    10479.16        9
21    Donald    10289.37        7
22    Cink    9708.83        9
23    Warren    9700        9
24    Oberholser    9687.5        9
25    Funk    9262.5        9
26    Lehman    9225        8
27    Ames    9162.5        7
28    Love III    9112.5        9
29    Vn Taylor    8912.5        7
30    Bohn    8733.33        9
31    Watney    8725        9
32    D.Wilson    8712.5        9
33    Els    8650        8
34    Jerry Kelly    8625        7
35    Gay    8500        9
36    Z.Johnson    8475        8
37    Chopra    8267        10
38    Senden    8225        7
39    Villegas    8225        8
40    Pampling    8217.5        8
41    Purdy    8200        8
42    Franco    8087.5        8
43    Choi    8050        7
44    G. Owen    7975        8
45    Harrington    7962.5        7
46    Garcia    7900        7
47    Hoffman    7870        8
48    A.Scott    7750        6
49    Rollins    7675        7
50    JB Holmes    7420.83        7
51    Howell III    7337.5        11
52    Branshaw    7325        8
53    Palmer    7291.66        7
54    J.Smith    7200        7
55    Immelman    7050        6
56    B. Quigley    7000        6
57    J.Ogilvie    6920        7
58    Jobe    6892.5        7
59    Baddeley    6850        7
60    JJ Henry    6837.5        6
61    Couples    6825        7
62    Beem    6768.75        8
63    Imada    6717.5        8
64    Barlow    6712.5        8
65    Rose    6654.16        8
66    RS Johnson    6580        6
67    Bertsch    6575        8
68    Baird    6517.5        7
69    Estes    6500        6
70    Fischer    6425        9
71    M.Wilson    6390        6
72    Langer    6354.16        7
73    Calc    6342.5        10
74    Olin Browne    6312.5        10
75    D. Howell    6262.5        5
76    Pat Perez    6262.5        7
77    Leonard    6220.83        7
78    Bjornstad    6217.5        7
79    Allenby    6187.5        6
80    Poulter    6175        7
81    Lowery    6175        8
82    Herron    6132.5        6
83    F.Jacobson    6075        6
84    Bryant    6050        6
85    B. Haas    6025        7
86    Bub Watson    5962.5        6
87    JL Lewis    5962.5        8
88    Crane    5907.5        6
89    Micheel    5887.5        7
90    Waldorf    5787.5        7
91    Flesch    5755        9
92    Gove    5737.5        6
93    Sluman    5725        10
94    Slocum    5687.5        8
95    N.Green    5662.5        7
96    Atwal    5625        5
97    Gore    5525        6
98    J.Byrd    5500        4
99    Durant    5400        9
100    DiMarco    5384.37        5
101    Curtis    5375        7
102    Wetterich    5350        5
103    Gronberg    5312.5        5
104    Barron    5306.25        6
105    Leaney    5225        5
106    Stricker    5212.5        4
107    Westwood    5187.5        5
108    Sindelar    5187.5        7
109    Hart    5137.5        6
110    Cabrera    5100        5
111    Sutherland    5100        7
112    Matteson    5037.5        7
113    Maggert    4937.5        7
114    D.Clarke    4900        4
115    Triplett    4800        5
116    Azinger    4762.5        7
117    Mahan    4462.5        7
118    Br.Davis    4437.5        7
119    Faxon    4362.5        7
120    Armour III    4275        5
121    Lickliter II    4250        5
122    Frazar    4187.5        6
123    Austin    4162.5        9
124    Geiberger    4100        6
125    S. Maruyama    4075        6
126    Veazey    4025        5
127    Cook    4000        4
128    Dickerson    3975        7
129    S.Jones    3967.5        6
130    Kenny Perry    3962.5        4
131    Lonard    3937.5        6
132    Andrade    3895        6
133    Pavin    3787.5        4
134    Goggin    3737.75        4
135    Ridings    3700        5
136    Kent Jones    3612.5        5
137    Kaye    3575        5
138    WMacKenzie    3562.5        4
139    Petrovic    3512.5        5
140    Garrigus    3492.5        6