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
Tiger: "I follow my old stuff and hit it awful."
/Moore: “Today I got a penalty stroke for absolutely no reason."
/REWARD! Tiger's Stolen/Lost/Disappearing Ball!
/Doug Ferguson with the strange saga of Tiger's lost/stolen/disappearing/still-in-the-tree ball at Quail Hollow. Can't wait for the follow-up stories and of course, the video.
Well, the follow-up stories anyway.
“These are the kinds of stories you hear from the past.”
/He trails the first round Wells Fargo Championship leaders by one but as Sean Martin explained before an opening 66, Patrick Reed is just the kind of refreshing, retro, free-market success story that the tour needs more of. But with fewer Monday qualifiers and Q-School's demise, don't count on them coming along too often.
Reed was a first-team All-American last year at two-time national champion Augusta State but is without status on any major tour. After finishing 35th at the Texas Open, he made the nine-hour drive with his fiancee, Justine Karain, to New Orleans. They arrived at 2:45 a.m., sleeping four hours before the Zurich Classic’s Monday qualifier. An 8-iron to 2 feet on the second playoff hole earned him a second consecutive start. He birdied five of his final eight holes at TPC Louisiana to tie for 24th.
The pair took a circuitous route to this week’s Tour stop in Charlotte. Their first flight went from New Orleans to Chicago’s Midway International Airport. The next one landed in Greenville, S.C., some 90 minutes from Charlotte. They arrived at the hotel around 1:15 a.m. Monday, with another Monday qualifying round awaiting. He shot 65 to advance to the Wells Fargo Championship.
Reed is accompanied by his fiancee, Justine Karain, who works as Reed's caddie.
“It’s been a very hectic couple of months, but a very happy couple of months,” Reed said. “I’m in a great state of mind and very happy. She’s keeping me calm. She’s the most positive one on the golf course. When I get down, she picks me up.”
Reed proposed to Karain, whom he met while attending high school in Baton Rouge, La., in January, shortly after returning from a victory in a professional event in Trinidad & Tobago. They also moved to Houston that month.
She does more than carry the bag. Karain, a former high-school golfer, helps read the putts.
USGA's Davis On Trump: "For all that comes with Donald as a business icon and media personality, he couldn't have been a more gracious host."
/Translation, even though he seems like a blowhard, he actually can host a championship well enough that we'll put up with a "partner" that would have made Joe Dey jump off the Brooklyn Bridge.
At least, that's how I took USGA Executive Director Mike Davis's remarks, though a transcript from the day can't be found at the usual spot USGA transcripts appear.
This was an interesting element in the decision to take the 2017 Women's Open to Trump National.
"We really get to showcase our museum and we get to showcase where we test balls and clubs," Davis said. "Far Hills is not the easiest place to find, so to get the golf world for a week here, it's very exciting and we will expose the campus."
Brad Klein got to spend some time driving around the course with The Donald and came away swooning about the man, even dropping the "h word. (Humble...really).
Enthusiasm and attention are why he got to Trump National 90 minutes before the news conference. That gave him time to inspect work in progress on the club’s new 10,000-square-foot locker room. And it’s why he insisted on accompanying me on a drive through the back nine of the Old Course. His discourse during such a trip is filled with superlatives, about this being the largest single green in the world and the whole course being the best in all of New Jersey and worthy of a top-10 national ranking. He’s an incessant follower of course ratings and thinks that Golfweek, in rating Trump National-Old at No. 72 Modern, we’ve not shown the course (or him) enough respect.
USGA.org featured a slideshow from the media day. This one had a caption, but somehow I know you can do better:
Tucson Golf: "We've cut about as much as we can cut."
/Thanks to reader Jim for Greg Hansen's morbidly depressing story about the state of golf and our economy in Tucson, where the golf courses are literally ghost towns. Tucson Parks and Recreation Director Fred Gray says the numbers don't lie.
Gray tells the commission that 299,583 rounds of golf were played on the city's five courses in 2001. A decade later, 2011, that total was 193,166. It is a staggering decline that reflects national golf numbers and, of course, the nation's struggling economy.
Gray and Hayes have chopped the equivalent of 81 full-time jobs from the golf payroll over the last year, from 145 to 64. That's 176,280 reduced man-hours off the books.
"We've cut about as much as we can cut," Gray says. He acknowledges that the courses will not be mowed as precisely or as often. If you desire golf instruction, you must now work through an outside contractor, not a Tucson City Golf pro. If you buy a beer from the cart lady, her paycheck is coming from an outside firm contracted to sell you that beer.
This is golf in Tucson, golf in America, 2012. If the industry worked like TV ratings, the whole sport would've been canceled.
These are the numbers that stop the audit commission and raise a collective eyebrow: In 2011, Tucson City Golf had operating revenues of $7,015,000 and operating expenses of $8,275,000.
Lanny's Back!
/Romans: "It's like a guy from Augusta putting on the green jacket."
/Randy Beard on trainer Dale Romans, who I know you all revere as the Preakness-winning trainer of the great, legendary and unforgettable Shackleford, really wants to win Saturday's Kentucky Derby.
And how can you not root for a Louisville native who wheels out a golf analogy?
"It's like a guy from Augusta putting on the green jacket," said Romans, referring to The Masters golf tournament. "The (Kentucky) Derby is the dream."
Based at Churchill Downs, Romans trains Dullahan, an 8-1 deep closer in a speed-heavy race who drew the five post and who so far has largely shown himself to be a synthetic specialist. Kind of like a golfer who really only plays well on Nicklaus courses.
Your Chance For Masters Tickets...Or Rejection
/The Augusta Chronicle says the now-annual Masters.com application process is alive and well. Chances are slim but hey, the demographics in golf are changing and it's free to try to get a chance at buying into the best-run event in sports.
Lawrie To Skip U.S. Open For Ryder Cup Points Grab
/Bubba Skipping Players For "Bonding" With Infant Son; Taking "At Least" A Month Off
/What's going to happen when little Caleb is actually aware he has a father?
Will Bubba ever play again?
From Twitter today:
**The tour is treading carefully on this one, even though it's hard to imagine they are pleased.
"We respect Bubba’s decision in light of the unique and life-changing circumstances of the past month,” said Ty Votaw, Executive Vice President of Communications and International Affairs for the PGA TOUR. “His focus on his family is admirable, as was his decision to honor his commitment to the Zurich Classic of New Orleans as defending champion. We look forward to having him back on the TOUR soon."
Trevino: "We were hoping somebody would invite us into the clubhouse and buy us dinner."
/Okay, so Lee Trevino sounds like a geezer talking to Paul Fogleman of the Hickory Daily Record** before a speaking gig in front of the Hickory Sportsman’s Club. Still, it's always fun to hear what's on his mind. Two highlights:
When did you come to that determination to retire? How did you figure out that you had had enough?
I’ll tell you what brings you to that decision. It’s real easy. It’s when you can’t wait to get to a tournament, and then when you drive in you say ‘What am I doing here?’ And then you can’t wait to get out of there. In other words, I don’t care about competing any more. I came to grasp with everything when I realized I couldn’t compete any more, If you’ve won as many tournaments as I’ve won and competed the many years that I competed, you understand that you’re not gonna go play just to be playing. When you drive into that golf course, you want to have a chance of winning, and if there’s any doubt inside of you that you can’t win, it’s time to hang it up.
And...
When you go back to your heyday, there were players like yourself, Arnold Palmer and others who were characters of the game. One of the biggest criticisms of the PGA Tour today is it doesn’t have the personalities like it did in your prime.
If you’ll look back at the old days, most golfers when we came to the course we had a sport coat on, and we hung it up in the locker. Today, these kids come to the course in shorts and a pair of tennis shoes on, and a T-shirt, and then they dress while they’re there. And then they leave the same way. It’s almost like the rock band Kiss. Once they take the makeup off, nobody recognizes them. It was different back then and we were more personable I think back then, and the reason for it is simply because we didn’t play for a lot of money. We were hoping somebody would invite us into the clubhouse and buy us dinner. That’s why we had the coat there.
**Link working now.
Tour Finally Puts Quail Hollow Fazio Tee To Rest
/Players have long hated a back tee added by the course renovator-to-the-stars and like so many of his modifications to tournament courses over the last decade, the back tee on Quail Hollow's par-3 17th will be retired to the delight of players.
"I think it's a great decision just because of the way the green is designed," said Phil Mickelson, who was one of those who pushed for the modification.
"It's designed to receive the shot from over there," he added. "When the green gets firm like it will be this week it's a much better hole from over there. There is more decision-making and more risk-reward as opposed to 100 percent defense. I think it's a great hole from over there."
**Ron Green Jr. has the full story behind the tee change including a priceless quote from Tiger and some insight into the thinking of architect Fazio and Johnny Harris, Mr. Quail Hollow.
First, Tiger on seeing the left tees in use.
Pleased with what he saw, Woods told a hole marshal, “We used to play this as a short par-4.”
And...
“Clearly Tom Fazio and I didn’t get the message like everyone else did,” Quail Hollow president Johnny Harris said.
“We finally decided to listen to the pros. We can make the course unplayable if we wanted to but that’s not our intention. We have nine years of data from the right side. Now we can get it from the left side.”