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
The Next Phase Of The Groove Debate...
/...means hearing about the massive financial hardship this has caused for the manufacturers to retool their assembly lines. Joe Ogilvie on Twitter today:

Of course, if they didn't lobby the USGA for the right to give free equipment who can break 75, they'd be able to recoup the cost of the new grooves by selling the top amateurs the new, conforming wedges.
Now Ogilvie's first point is a great question. Don't most players want to be known for their skill instead of their ability to obtain a PING wedge?
PING CEO: No Local Rule
/The meat of the statement:
Ryo's Press Conference Before The Press Conference
/Just in case he has new revelations today that he can't share tomorrow, here's Ryo Ishikawa's impromptu sit down with scribblers and photographers this afternoon. He's scheduled to come in the media center Tuesday as well.

"Since last summer Phil has been feuding with the blue coats over a groove developed by Callaway that was called the multiangle wall (MAW) design."
/Alan Shipnuck offers this background on Phil's decision to play the PING wedges and what motivated the stunt:
Since last summer Phil has been feuding with the blue coats over a groove developed by Callaway that was called the multiangle wall (MAW) design. The MAW adhered to all of the USGA specs governing the new grooves but still imparted spin comparable to the old square grooves. In profile the MAW looks a bit like a martini glass, with sharp edges where the groove wall meets the plane of the clubface. "The language in the USGA rule allowed edges to become sharper as the groove sidewall becomes less steep," Roger Cleveland, Callaway's design guru, told SI in an e-mail. "Despite the fact our MAW groove design fit within the USGA's original specifications, we clearly invented something that they didn't anticipate. It performed so well that they decided to reject it, claiming the MAW groove violated the spirit of the rule."
Contrary to reports, the face of the MAW wedge did not look like this.
Meanwhile Lawrence Donegan agreed with me that this little PR firestorm is a good thing for the game, taking issue with Tim Rosaforte's assertion that this was the last thing Tim Finchem needed to be dealing with.
Excuse me but how can 464,000 Google hits on a golf-related story be a bad thing? And what is so awful about a golf story being featured on Sportscenter (which is the nightly sports news show broadcast on ESPN)?
As for PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem having to deal with a great, big, fat controversy not long after his most famous PGA Tour member was revealed to have been leading a double life - isn't that why he gets paid the ridiculous sum of $5 million (or so)? To handle, or rather capitalise on, these things?
And because golf is a gentlemen's game where the players police themselves and therefore don't need drug testing, E. Michael Johnson reports that players are bugging their tour reps for a dealer who can supply them with some old PING wedges. They can also just go on ebay, as Ryan Ballengee explains.
But Padraig Harrington reportedly has some in his bag though he hasn't decided whether to engage in cheating (which is different than being a cheater!).
Scenes From The New And Improved "NTO"
/The Revamped 8th At Riviera, 2010 Edition
/"It's a rather convoluted rule and fairly contentious right now about exactly whether or not it should or shouldn't have been promulgated."
/Callaway CEO George Fellows talks about the groove rule to Bloomberg TV and is now suggesting there is some question as to whether the groove rule change should have happened. Why didn't he speak up sooner? And why is everyone so in love with the word promulgated all of a sudden?
"Instead of golf, there's another wave of negative news that's putting the tour on SportsCenter, and we're not talking about the Tiger Woods scandal or John Daly's latest quitting act."
/"Obviously, two shots have cost me two tournaments. But at least they're costing me tournaments."
/"I don't think it's breaking the rules, it's bending them."
/"They haven't made any comment about it at all"
/Thanks to reader Tom for Tim Dahlberg's downright bubbly take on the state of the Tiger Woods Foundation and in particular, the Anaheim learning center where life goes on and the kids seem unfazed.
The head of the Anaheim City School District says he's grateful for the center, saying the 20,000 or so kids it has touched in its short existence far outweighs anything Woods may have done in his personal life.
"Having a resource like the Tiger Woods Learning Center is just incredible," superintendent Jose Banda said. "It comes down to money, especially with budgets the way they are. The stuff they have is state of the art and expensive stuff."
On a recent morning, the driving range out the back door was empty. During breaks, the fifth-graders are likelier to be kicking a soccer ball than hitting golf balls.
This class is mostly Hispanic, and nearly all are from low-income families. Ask if they know who Tiger Woods is, and they're quick with a response.
"He's a professional golfer," one says.


