"Dramatic N'wide Tour changes needed"

As the PGA Tour's Oxford shirt set prepares to present players with their plan to save the Nationwide Tour by killing the Q-School avenue to the PGA Tour, Sean Martin suggests ways to liven up the soon-to-be-renamed minor league tour. And I couldn't help but wonder why you wouldn't take these suggestions to make it more sponsor-attractive without killing the Q-School approach?
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"The most refreshing thing was that for a change he could actually see his ball land in the fairway."

Tom Dunne's excellent case for a shorter ball and downsized game was inspired in large part by a visit to Kingarrock, an experience he says "felt straight out of an episode of Downton Abbey." He makes a couple of key points for those who react in horror at the thought of hitting shorter drives on shorter courses...

After playing a few holes, I looked at a 300-yard par-four in exactly the same way I would a 400-yarder using all modern stuff. And on the one occasion that I outdrove my playing partner, I felt exactly the same way I would have otherwise.

And this point interested me because I was absolutely smitten with the noticeably shorter time between teeing off and reaching your drive, an element that dramatically improves the flow of a round.

Since my visit to Scotland, I've kept in touch with David Anderson, Kingarrock's proprietor. He told me a great story a couple of months ago. A South African touring pro (not one of the household names) visited and played hickory over the summer. After his round Anderson asked him if he'd enjoyed himself. The pro said yes, adding that the most refreshing thing was that for a change he could actually see his ball land in the fairway. That's the game they play. And we could play it, too, under Solheim's three-ball solution.

Here's my video diary from a day at Kingarrock:

Add Brandel To The Pro-Bifurcation List

Golf Channel's Brandel Chamblee, subject earlier this week of a New York Times story with some strong endorsements from his boss suggesting he could be in line to move up the NBC/Golf Channel ladder, penned a "Commissioner-for-a-day" piece for GolfChannel.com.  And he pegged bifurcation as the number one issue he'd address.
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Podcast: Course Rankings, Hope and Clinton

I'm a podcast junkie and you'll notice podcasting will be more prevalent here in 2012, so I hope you'll consider subscribing to Golf Digest's free podcasts via iTunes.  In time you'll see a nice variety of interviews, college golf coverage from Ryan Herrington and bonus stuff from the Digest and Golf World teams, with able hosting by GolfDigest.com editor Sam Weinman.
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