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
'13 World Cup Headed To Royal Melbourne
/We first learned of the possibility last month from Mark Hayes and now it's official: Royal Melbourne will be hosting the 2013 WGC World Cup a week after hosting the Australian Masters.
Bruce Young is understandably excited:
The likely scenario of the Australian PGA Championship at Royal Pines on the Gold Coast, the Australian Masters and the World Cup of Golf back to back at Royal Melbourne and the Australian Open at Royal Sydney all being held in the month of November could mean Australian golf has a summer along the lines we saw here two years ago when the Australian Open and PGA Championship benefited from the Presidents Cup ’being in town.’
**The press release which details the retro format that should be the Olympic golf format:
World Cup of Golf returns to Melbourne, Australia, in 2013
The Royal Melbourne Golf Club to host event week after Australian Masters
PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla., USA, and MELBOURNE, Victoria, Australia (May 11/12, 2013) – The International Federation of PGA Tours, an organization of the top professional golf tours in the world that sanctions the World Golf Championships and the World Cup of Golf, is proud to join the State of Victoria and the International Golf Association in announcing that the 2013 World Cup of Golf will return to The Royal Melbourne Golf Club in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, and will be played November 21-24.
The Royal Melbourne Golf Club, which hosted The Presidents Cup 2011, will host back-to-back events in November. The World Cup will be preceded on the calendar by the Australian Masters, which boasts Adam Scott as the defending champion.
The World Cup has been played three previous times in Australia, each at The Royal Melbourne Golf Club. The event was last played in Australia in 1988 as part of the nation’s bicentennial celebrations when the U.S. team of Ben Crenshaw and Mark McCumber defeated the Japanese team of Masashi (Jumbo) and Tateo Ozaki to win the tournament.
“It is an honour to host the World Cup and welcome another international golf event to Melbourne, home of great sporting events and, of course, the incredible Sandbelt region,” said Victorian Premier Dr. Denis Napthine. “Melbourne is the pride of Australia when it comes to major events, and we would argue rivals any city in the world in that regard. Today’s announcement is another exciting chapter for Melbourne, and we eagerly anticipate the World Cup in November, when we can once again showcase all that Victoria has to offer to the event’s players and fans.”
As part of the move, the event boasts an $8 million total purse and returns to an individual, stroke-play competition for $7 million, with a team component (adding the total scores of two-man teams) for $1 million. The qualification system for the event is similar to that which will be used in the Olympic Games, when golf returns to the program in 2016. The field will include 60 players (no cut), with eligibility taken from the Official World Golf Ranking. Up to four players can qualify, per country, if they are in the top 15 of the OWGR. Beyond No. 15, up to a maximum of two players per country can qualify.
If two or more players from a country qualify, then the country is eligible for team competition, with the top-two players comprising the qualified team.
The major difference between the World Cup qualification model and that of the Olympic golf competition is that England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland will each be considered a separate country (for the purpose of the Olympics, those four countries compete as Great Britain). Further, the Olympic Games golf competition will not feature a team component.
Yes we know.
Players Round 3: The Sergio And Tiger Backstory
/With Sergio Garcia a stroke ahead of Tiger Woods heading into a Saturday's 2:40 p.m. tee time at The Players, Ron Sirak tells us a bit about the past for these two lovebirds.
It dates to the Battle At Bighorn and Sergio's exuberance.
After a flight from Ohio to California, Woods arrived at Bighorn the next day with a touch of the flu and was lethargic in his round, clearly both sick and tired.
Garcia, meanwhile, got more animated as the round went on and when he closed out Woods on the last hole acted as if he had just won a major championship.
If there is such a thing as X-rated body language, that's what Tiger was speaking as Sergio cavorted. Lost on Garcia in the celebration, apparently, was the fact Woods had just won four of the five previous majors.
The second round highlights from the PGA Tour:
**Ron Green Jr. considers what might have been for Tiger and Sergio. Along with the column is a great shot of the two in happier times wearing much baggier clothes.
Even Slugger White Anchors His Putter...
/And Ken Willis found out after a recent round of golf with one of the PGA Tour's two Vice Presidents of Rules and Competitions that Slugger White would give up the game if a universal anchoring ban is enacted.
Slugger says he’d have to quit golf if a universal ban on anchoring comes down. He claims that if forced to use a conventional putter, his hands spasm and, in certain terms, begin to shake like a dog trying to pass a razor blade.
'14 Ryder Cup Ticket Buyers Must Submit A Photograph
/A reader alerted me to this last week and I couldn't quite believe it until I read it in the Scottish Herald: 2014 Ryder Cup advance ticket buyers must submit a photo of themselves before registration opens.
The story says it's to prevent "fraud or ticket transfers, according to Ryder Cup Europe."
Aren't there less peculiar ways to discourage scalpers?
Cell Phone Task Force Is Out! And Working
/Criminal: Marshal Prevents Turtle Dive Redux!
/You'd think my posting of the turtle dive classic would have inspired this marshal to leave one of the 16th hole turtles alone to show off their improve diving technique, but noooo....
From Friday's Players Championship telecast courtesy of PGA Tour Entertainment.
A shame one of those snaps didn't get a wee nip of the man in teal.
Instant Poll: This Week's Best Celebrity Twosome Photo
/Why Is Vijay Not Suing WADA?
/Couples On The Queen Mary Open & His HOF Speech Video
/John Daly To Vijay: "Don't do this"..."Not worth it"
/John Daly took to Twitter to offer Vijay Singh some advice: don't take on the PGA Tour.
VJ don't do this horrible advice you got off take it from me not worth it #friendlyadvice
— John Daly (@PGA_JohnDaly) May 8, 2013
Video Flashback: The Turtle Dive!
/I saw a turtle sauntering across the 16th fairway yesterday and couldn't help but think of one of my favorite Players moments.
For my new friends from Minnesota and Dallas dining at the always outstanding Palm Valley Fish Camp, here for their first Players, here's my original turtle dive post with NBC's stellar Dan Hicks-anchored play by play, circa 2011, or the YouTube video of Sky's coverage with Jean Van de Velde.
Either way, it never gets old...
"When A Low Score Is A Good Thing"
/Adam On Moving The Putter A Millimeter Away, Putting On The Green Jacket Every Day
/Jim Tucker focuses on Adam Scott's new morning routine at home of waking up and putting on the green jacket.Bob Harig on Scott's first press conference since the Masters, where the Masters champ budged a bit on anchoring in the future. A few millimeters to be exact.
In the interest of context, Scott's anchoring remarks in their entirety:
Q. Are you going to be relieved in any way when the USGA and R&A make their final decision on anchoring maybe just to get the debate out of the way? And if they do ban it and the TOUR goes along with it, do you have a backup plan for three years down the road to working a conventional putting method into your practice?
ADAM SCOTT: I think, yeah, I think I'll be relieved when it's all over and we can all get beyond it. I may or may not like the outcome of that, but I think we've all spent enough energy on it now, doing what they're doing.
No, I don't really have a backup plan. I'm just going to keep doing what I'm doing and deal with it then. I don't think there will be anything much for me to change. If I have to separate the putter a millimeter from my chest, then I'll do that.
Q. Will three years be enough time to prepare?
ADAM SCOTT: Yeah, tomorrow is enough time for me. I don't see myself putting any different looks‑wise. My hand will be slightly off my chest, probably.