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 Bunker Shot Photo: Wrong Place, Right Time
/Classic shot from Glyn Kirk of Getty Images who theoretically was in the worst possible spot to capture Tiger's 18th hole bunker hole-out, yet got the best image of Woods and the crowd.
Here's a Zapruder version of the shot and reaction.
The ESPN interview and highlight package:
Utterly Fascinating, Bizarre But Maybe Brilliant: Tiger's Conservative Strategic Approach
/Adam Scott, The Long Putter And 36-Holes To Go
/The dreaded, seemingly non-conforming long putter and the act of bracing it against the torso is 36-holes away from capturing the third leg of its dreamed of Grand Governing Body Headache...errr Slam.
But for John Huggan, that's reason enough to root for someone other than Adam Scott.
Still, it is all but impossible to blame Scott for going down the long-putter alley, no matter how dark it might be. Before making the switch from short to long, the 31-year old Australian was approaching basket-case status on the greens. Now, he is a man transformed, someone who scoffs at even the slickest downhill left-to-right four-footer.
"My putting has improved out of sight," he admitted after his opening round of 64 here at Royal Lytham. "Two years ago I was 180th on the tour and now I'm pretty good. Better than average, I would say. So that's a big difference. A shot or two on average makes a big difference to my scorecard."
The ESPN highlights from round 2 and Scott's post round interview:
"They're deep with steep walls, much like a miniature swimming pool."
/Doug Ferguson on the water bunkers at Lytham, where the saturated earth is sending ground water into many of the 205 pits, leading to some strange dilemmas.
No one said it was unfair. No one said the bunkers should have been declared out of play, as was the case for one bunker in the U.S Women's Open at Newport Country Club in 2006. After all, bunkers are supposed to be hazards.
These certainly were.
''A lot of bunkers out there are pretty much out of play,'' Branden Grace of South Africa said. ''That was the main goal for myself today, to stay out of them.''
**The Telegraph's Matt Scott, quoting Graeme McDowell about the bunkers following a second round 69 that left him T5:
"I saw one in particular left of the 16th green, if you hit it in there, there’s nowhere to drop and there’s a foot of water. That’s not golf.
“It’s not fair. A few of these bunkers that are question marks need to be taken out of play. Hopefully they can get them dried out overnight.
“The golf course has remained unbelievably dry considering how much rain we’ve had. The bunkers are a little dodgy in some places, unfortunately.”
More On Surprising Karlsson's WD
/Derek Lawrenson reveals just a bit more about Robert Karlsson's Wd earlier in the week and it seems it was more than just an issue with pre-shot routine.
How touching it was, then, to see Sergio Garcia consoling Robert Karlsson on the second fairway in practice, moments after an attack of the yips forced the Swede to withdraw. Garcia has conquered mental swing issues of his own in the past and spent 10 minutes with his arm round Karlsson's shoulder.
Video: Snedeker In The Zone
/Stricker: "I bet if we really go back and look at each pin, there was half of them are up on a little knob."
/Steve Stricker spoke candidly about Friday's setup at Royal Lytham and was not particularly enthused about what he saw as an extreme ratcheting up of the hole locations. Speaking after the round of the many holes cut on knobs:
No, I mean, but there was a lot of them like that. There were. I mean No. 15, you know, it's almost 500 yards and it's sitting basically up on a little deal like this. If you go past it, it rolls away, and short of it you're putting up the hill. But a lot of them are like that today, right on a little knob.
Asked by Alex Miceli if the R&A could claim the course setup was pre-planned early in the week and was merely his imagination, Stricker was emphatic.
No, because, you know what, it was so different from yesterday. I mean yesterday was pretty fair, benign, you know, you could be aggressive to some of the pins. It looked like even if you short‑sided some of your shots yesterday, you could get it up‑and‑down. Today it was not the case at all. I mean, I'm telling you, every pin was on a little knob. Maybe they thought they were going to have casual water. But ‑‑ no, I'm kidding. I'm really kidding. There's casual in the bunkers, but I don't think they'll have casual on the greens. But there was that much of a difference. It wasn't like one or two or three through the course of a round. I bet if we really go back and look at each pin, there was half of them are up on a little knob.
**My Golf World Daily item on Stricker and other players lamenting the R&A's hole locations Friday.
2012 Open Championship Round 2 Comment Thread
/Soggy Lytham amazingly appears to still be maintaining some firmness in the fairways, but look for the putting surfaces to hold and if forecasts are to believed, winds never exceeding 5 m.p.h.
Hopefully this does not mean a repeat of round one, as Gene Wojciechowski put it:
The Open Championship is supposed to be a four-day weather wedgie, the rainsuit capital of golf. You're supposed to leave here with windburn and with mud caked to your cleats. You're supposed to see whitecaps on the nearby Irish Sea.
Instead, we got Palm Springs. The only thing missing was an umbrella drink.
The R&A did release an update on changes to the par-3 yardages, but no other course updates are available at this time. I'll post the Friday course setup details when they hit my inbox.
1st hole - 192 yards
5th hole - 227 yards
9th hole - 153 yards
12th hole 196 yards
**ROUND TWO COURSE SET UP NOTES
Weather (provided on-site by the Met Office) -Around 11mm of rain fell at the course overnight. This band of rain has now moved to the east of the course and there is every chance that the rest of the day may well stay dry.
Cloudy skies at first will gradually lift to give some bright or sunny spells. There will always be the risk of a heavy shower, but there is every chance that these will stay to the east of the course. Winds will be light and variable in direction for much of the day.
Cutting Regime and Green Speeds - The greens have increased in speed today.
This morning, the greens were double cut at 3.25mm and they were rolled.
The average pace is 11.2 feet on the stimpmeter, compared to 10 ½ feet yesterday.
Total Course Yardage for Round Four (tee marker settings to flagstick)- 7003 yards (as compared to the full yardage of 7086)
Hole-by-Hole Information
Hole 1 – Full yardage = 205y – Today = 192
Hole 2 – Full yardage = 481y – Today = 472
Hole 3 – Full yardage = 478y – Today = 489
Hole 4 – Full yardage = 392y – Today = 390
Additional Info – Hole location moved from original plan so that away from bunkers on the left of green with casual water.
Hole 5 – Full yardage = 219y – Today = 227
Hole 6 – Full yardage = 492y – Today = 471
Hole 7 – Full yardage = 592y – Today = 583
Hole 8 – Full yardage = 416y – Today = 422
Additional Info – Very back centre hole location
Hole 9 – Full yardage = 165y – Today = 153
Additional Info – Very front hole location – 7 yards on (5 left).
Hole 10 – Full yardage = 387y – Today = 392
Additional Info – Very back right hole location
Hole 11 – Full yardage = 598y – Today = 593
Additional Info – Hole location in the middle of small mound on left of green
Hole 12 – Full yardage = 198y – Today = 196
Hole 13 – Full yardage = 355y – Today = 346
Hole 14 – Full yardage = 444y – Today = 432
Hole 15 – Full yardage = 462y – Today = 467
Hole 16 – Full yardage = 336y – Today = 336
Additional Info – Hole location moved from original plan so that away from bunker on the left of green with casual water.
Hole 17 – Full yardage = 453y – Today = 443
Hole 18 – Full yardage = 413y – Today = 399
Loopers Lashing Out: "The R&A are sipping their gin and tonics in the clubhouse and we’re having to pay full price to get our wives in."
/Charles Sale talks to caddies who are in a rage over having to use Strokesaver yardage guides and the R&A's ticket policy.
Mick Donaghy, caddie for Jamie Donaldson who was two under par after the first round, said: ‘The way we’re treated here is nothing short of a disgrace. The R&A are sipping their gin and tonics in the clubhouse and we’re having to pay full price to get our wives in. The other golf organisations give us proper respect, but that’s never been the case at The Open.’
Dave Clark, who carries Vijay Singh’s clubs, said: ‘There’s still a stigma around caddies. We’re regarded as the lowest of the low. Surely we shouldn’t have to rely on the players to help us out with passes all the time.’
R&A chief executive Peter Dawson countered: ‘Our pass policy is generous and caddies have a fantastic time here.’
Always smoothing things over, Peter is!
Photo: Royal Lytham Can't Handle Much More Water
/An cncredited PA photo from the Daily Mail (witih others on their live blog) after Thursday night rains forced the closure of the clubhouse entry gate and left Royal Lytham further drenched.
Day One Open Championship Images
/Book Signing: "It's not the full Monty"
/Rory On Freak OB Shot: "He could have headed it the other way."
/First Round Leaders, Lytham And Other Stats
/Lytham has not been kind to early speed horses, according to Golf World's Brett Avery.
2. Only five first-round Open leaders have won since 1975: Tom Watson (1980 at Muirfield), Seve Ballesteros (1988 at Lytham), Greg Norman (1993 at Royal St. George's), John Daly (1995 at St. Andrews) and Tiger Woods (2005 at St. Andrews). In the first 11 Opens at Lytham, only three first-round leaders have proven victorious: Peter Thomson in '58, Gary Player in '74 and Ballesteros in '88. Perhaps even more dispiriting for Scott, only two first-round leaders have won on the PGA Tour this season (George McNeill at the Puerto Rico Open, Zach Johnson at the Crown Plaza Invitational at Colonial).