Players Praising Royal St. George's, R&A

I've noticed a recurring theme in a few stories about the course: the R&A addressed complaints by widening fairways and keeping the rough tame. Uh, let's give credit where credit is due: the Golf Gods have kept Sandwich dry and therefore, at least based on the player comments I could find, the course is going to present itself well thanks to the lack of tall grass lining the fairways that has become an R&A staple to slow down swelling driving distances.
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Dawson's Theory Validated!*****

The higher the ball flight, the worse the landing on a fairway hillock, goes Peter Dawson's theory revealed yesterday in a story by John Huggan.

Now Mike Stachura has tracked down a professor who confirms. Fasten your seat belts!

But here's the bit that justifies Dawson's explanation of projectile motion. Basically, a projectile like a golf ball has two velocity components, a horizontal one and a vertical one, as Martin Brouillette, professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Sherbrooke and a member of the Golf Digest Technical Panel explains: "Assuming two cases with the same landing velocity but with different landing angles, the case with the steeper landing angle has a smaller horizontal velocity component, therefore a greater vertical velocity component. This greater vertical velocity component, upon interacting with a tilted landing surface, is more likely to produce a greater sideways velocity component."

Therefore, play the stinger...less sideways velocity component. Oh wait.

***** Stachura writes:

Of course, a ball that's rolling over those awkward angles is going to be dramatically affected; one that's flying by those humps and bumps won't be bothered by them at all.

Maybe we could read more about this theory in the USGA/R&A ball study? After all, we're 8 years in, I assume this theory is covered?

Rory's World Files: American Scribblers Descend On Holywood Edition

Before we get to the poor folks of Holywood having to fend off some of America's top golf writers making the pilgrimage to Rory McIlroy's hometown, a few stories about the reigning U.S. Open champion.

According to Paul Brennan, Rory tuned up with nine holes (carrying his bag!) at Royal County Down on Monday. He also tweeted photos here and here.

In a lengthy front page of the New York Times Sports Monday section, Niall Stanage takes on Rory's ambivalent stance on religion and politics and unlike some of the other stories along these lines, is detecting that this is a compliment to the Rory generation's wisdom and tolerance.

McDowell was raised as a Protestant, a religious identity that he wears with just as little ostentation as McIlroy’s Catholicism. But McIlroy is on his way to becoming a global superstar, which makes his case all the more intriguing.

“Isn’t it funny?” McGuigan said, reflecting upon the focus on religion. “People our age always want to find that out. It’s the same way that there used to be all that stuff about ‘How do you spell your surname?’ or ‘What newspaper do you read?’ That is going to take time to eradicate.”

He’s right — for our generation. For those who are younger, the change is already under way. John Stevenson was McIlroy’s principal at his high school, Sullivan Upper, just outside Belfast. There, as well as witnessing the teenage golf prodigy demolishing much older, bigger boys in inter-school games, he also saw what he terms “the first post-Troubles generation” come to maturity.

Lawrence Donegan profiles Chubby Chandler, who talks about the huge offers Rory is getting, with this beautiful quote:

"For instance, I called Rory the other day about a deal he had been offered. It is a very good deal, I told him, but I have no idea if it's for the right amount of money because I spoke to someone else and they offered more. So you are just feeling your way out there. The thing is if we do deals that are sympathetic to Rory then I know we won't go far wrong. He is 22, the lad, and we have got to make sure he isn't a basket case by the time he is 25."

At 5/9, 161, ESPN's Sports Science declares Rory gets all his power from his 72 degrees per second hip rotation. I think it's the driver head the size of a cantaloupe and weighing just a wee bit more than a mouse turd. But that's me.

As for the folks in Holywood, Mark Cannizzaro tries to better understand where Rory's humility comes from.

McIlroy, who now owns a spectacular house about 20 minutes away from Holywood with four par-3s, a driving range, putting greens, a soccer pitch and two full-time greenskeepers to tend to it all, has drawn from everyone around him.

“Money doesn’t matter to Rory,” Gerry McIlroy said. “He doesn’t change, and I’ll tell you why. When he was growing up, we used to say to him, ‘The only way to go through life is to be nice. It doesn’t cost you any money to be nice.’ ”

Gene Wojciechowski also checked out the town and writes about the impact Rory has had on Holywood.

"Oh, he's put Holywood on the map," says Lorna Alexander, a McIlroy family friend whose haircutting shop features an autographed photo of Rory. "It's become a very special wee town."

McIlroy could live anywhere. He has the money: $5.2 million earned on the PGA Tour, another 8 million-plus pounds earned on the European Tour, endorsement money out the wazoo. In fact, Oakley just unveiled its very own Rory golf clothing collection, complete with a pre-announced Open Championship ensemble for his Thursday-Sunday play -- just like his boyhood golf hero Tiger Woods used to do with Nike.

But when he was done with the post-U.S. Open news conferences, the photo shoots, the video shoots, the endorsement obligations in London and the Royal Box appearance at Wimbledon to watch buddy Rafael Nadal, McIlroy returned to the place he knows best and trusts most: Holywood.

Dawson: Today's Higher Trajectory Means More Extreme Bounces!?

The beautiful undulations on the 17th fairway at Royal St. George's. (click to enlarge)John Huggan defends Royal St. George's but shares this peculiar theory of R&A in-house course designer Executive Secretary Peter Dawson, talking about the many harsh bounces found at Sandwich in 2003 and how the R&A has widened out the course since then to address player complaints.
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Steiny Hoping To Build Stable Of Clients

Mark Steinberg sits for an exclusive Q&A to his Executive Assistant Darren Rovell and besides the usual stuff about Tiger's endorsement partnerships being in great shape and offers out there for dollar figures in line with pre-11/27/09 numbers (group pause for eye roll here), he dictates to secretary Rovell plans to build a stable of players, though with restrictions in the IMG department.
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Look Out Champions: LPGA Going To Five Majors By '13

A Golfweek Staff report says the LPGA Tour is now looking to catch the Champions Tour's eleven majors by making the Evian an LPGA major.

This would be a non-story except that the LPGA has one of the most admired Hall of Fame entry standards and this will muddle that a bit.

Beginning in 2013, Evian will be designated as a major championship, the LPGA’s fifth, sources told Golfweek.

The LPGA’s number of major championships has been a moving target over the years. The tour’s current majors – Kraft Nabisco Championship, Wegmans LPGA Championship, U.S. Women’s Open and Ricoh Women’s British Open – have been a foursome only since 2001. Before the British Open achieved major status, the du Maurier Classic was the tour’s fourth major, from 1979 to 2000.

Bubba Makes Amends, Issues Apology And Desire To Learn French Pronunciations

Lawrence Donegan with the always frank Bubba Watson speaking at length about his disastrous visit to Paris, suggesting he was not showing disrespect but simply could not pronounce certain landmarks. He also said he has a fear of large crowds, explaining his issues with the security and expressed a desire to return.
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