Drumbeat Continues For Tiger To Hire Hank Haney**

Well, not yet, I was kidding, but isn't it a matter of time before it starts after this round at Firestone?

"Sports Illustrated called Snead's 59 'the greatest competitive round in the history of the game.'"

Nice note from Bob Harig this week on a forgotten 59 by Sam Snead at, you guessed it, the Greenbrier in 1959.

It doesn't count in the PGA Tour record book because the event was not a tour-sanctioned tournament. But it got plenty of attention nonetheless.

According to West Virginia's Register-Herald, Snead shot 59 on May 16, 1959 at the Greenbrier Open, a pro-am event staged at the annual Spring Festival at the Greenbrier.

Snead played alongside three amateurs and Robert Harris, the director of golf and recreation at the Greenbrier. Harris noted that at the time that Snead "did what no one thought was possible. He shot a 59 in a competitive event on a championship golf course during the Greenbrier's annual Spring Festival pro-am.

"Although the PGA Tour does not recognize the feat in their record books, the world recognizes that Sam was the first golfer, either professional or amateur, to achieve that goal."

Sports Illustrated called Snead's 59 "the greatest competitive round in the history of the game."

Snead did shoot 60 in an official PGA Tour event, one of 24 recorded overall. He became the seventh player to do so, accomplishing the feat at the 1957 Dallas Open at Glen Lakes Country Club.

"We know, liberals, that you find golf hilariously bougie and pointless."

The cranks at Wonkette take on liberals for feasting on sun baked Congressman John Boehner playing 119 rounds of fundraising golf last year (actually, not true) and the overall golf bashing. Of course, that doesn't stop Wonkette from also bashing golf, suggesting that politicians like Boehner and Obama only took up the game for the schmooze and old boys club benefits.
Read More

“I'm planning on playing my way into the team.”

Steve Elling on his exchange with Tiger Woods today over the possibility of going as a captain's pick.

Later, ESPN.com’s Bob Harig asked Woods whether a meeting with Pavin was unnecessary, a roundabout attempt to get Woods to verbally commit to playing regardless of how he made the 12-man U.S. team.

No luck with the knuckleball offering, either.

“I think if I do well this week, I should sew up my spot,” he said.

Woods drew laughs with his stubbornness, but with a simple answer, he could have cleared up the discussion and ended the questions. Let the speculation continue. This time, he rekindled the speculative bonfire himself.

Perhaps pride forbids him from even contemplating the need to be a captain's pick, or maybe he's just that confident he'll make it on points. Or both.

"PGA TOUR is not the place for learning. That's essentially it. You've got to have your game when you're out here."

Interesting stuff from Padraig Harrington today about the success of non-Americans in the U.S. this year. At least that's where he started, but then he moved into some things I've never heard a player suggest about the advantages of starting on the European Tour.
Read More

"So the next time I hear players or media tongue-waggers squawking about how Turning Stone CEO Ray Halbritter was going to cost some pro a spot in the field and a chance at continuing his career, I am hereby hitting mute."

Steve Elling and Scott Michaux debate the question of CEO Ray Halbritter entering and withdrawing from his own Turning Stone event this week. Elling comes down on the side of letting the guy play, and I have to say his reasoning is an eye opener:
Read More