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
Q-School Fees The Same, Purse Goes Down
/World Match Play Returning To England?
/Once a staple of the European Tour schedule, the Volvo World Match Play may be coming back as a fall event, reports Derek Lawrenson in the Daily Mail.
As for venue and location, IMG's Guy Kinnings suggests an English venue would be preferred.
‘We’re excited to be returning to the October date and our hope is that this will mean a return to the UK,’ said Guy Kinnings, global head of IMG Golf, who promote the event.
Kinnings is a passionate advocate for another tour event in England, so fingers crossed.
The Donald In Court This Week Over Scotland Wind Turbines
/Jetspeed: Ramifications Of Expedited Product Cycles
/Toothache Explained: Rory Spending Too Much Time In Lawyer Offices
/Take That, The Donald: Turkey Considering '22 Ryder Cup Bid
/Sergio Believes The Days Of Fried Chicken Jokes Are Behind Him
/Shane O'Donoghue got Sergio for a one-on-one to talk about the state of all things Garcia and to find out what exactly he learned from uttering a racially insensitive joke at Wentworth last May, which subsequently led to embarrassing remarks from European Tour Commish George O'Grady.
"I didn't mean it in a bad way. When I was driving back to the hotel, I started thinking about it," Garcia told Shane O'Donoghue.
Nice to know the dead silence in the room took that long to sink in! Oh, and it's still Steve Sands' fault.
"Obviously, I didn't expect that question at all and you try to be funny and it comes out the wrong way I guess," he added.
And Mr. Contrite:
"It was horrible, but what's done is done. Everybody knows how I feel about it, so I think they should be fine with it and if not, it's kind of their problem," he said.
"The most important thing is learning from all those things.
"I'm making sure that all those experiences make you stronger, a better person and things like that. I think that I've learned from those things and I just need to keep getting better at it, and hopefully keep making people happy."
If you have sixty seconds or so of your life to never to enjoy again:
Aus Masters: Jarrod Lyle's Return From Cancer
/Beman: "Why is it now so important to eliminate bifurcation?"
/I finally got a few minutes to take in the entire Deane Beman address (text version) from last week's USGA Pace of Play event, and besides enjoying the image of folks squirming as he talked bifurcation of the rules where the rulemakers reside (and steadfastly oppose bifurcation), you have to admire the dry wit.
Beman, most certainly never considered for a sidekick role on The Tonight Show, turned the tide on the bifurcation discussion by accepting that we already have it, and why are we the big, bad governing bodies trying to get rid of bifurcated rules?
The former PGA Tour Commish lays out the ways we are bifurcated now (grooves, one-ball rule) and writes:
Why is it now so important to eliminate bifurcation? There is no evidence that bifurcation has hurt the popularity of our game -- just the opposite can be creditably advanced. Golf’s popularity was surging in the 1950’s and 60’s when two different size golf balls were played around the world. Don’t let the stance on bifurcation stand in the way of addressing some of golf’s problems.
He ties it into the slow play discussion and makes this point about longer, narrower courses in championship play making their way into the everyday game:
The problem of slow play, as well as the decline in the growth and financial viability of golf in the U.S., has some of its seeds from the well-intended notion that in order to identify “a worthy champion” in major championships, it was necessary to alter the playing field to accomplish that objective.
The Red Sox won the World Series and they are the undisputed world champions of baseball. Baseball did not feel the need to add another 10 feet to get to first base, grow longer grass in the infield or move the home run fence farther out. They also have bifurcated rules that allow a designated hitter in one league versus the other and were able to make a mutual accommodation for the World Series for the good and harmony of the game. None of these actions would lessen the crown that Boston wears or harm baseball as a popular sport.
Video: Euro Tour's Finest Play From The 22nd Floor
/Another entertaining European Tour promo video, this time for the Atlantis in Dubai and the season ending points race. Nice surprise cameo too.
**You may recall there was some tremendous First World complaining about the European Tour mandating players start two of three "Race To Dubai" events. Ernie Els even WD'd from this week in supposed protest.
Steve Elling explains part of the ire, justified in this instance I'd say:
Bigger cracks emerged at the second event in the series, the lucrative HSBC Champions in Shanghai. The co-sanctioned, 78-man event event is not run by the European Tour, which has little sway over the composition of the field. As a result, 10 of the top 40 on the Race to Dubai points list did not find a place on the tee sheet, including Ryder Cup player Nicolas Colsaerts, Thorbjorn Olesen, Rafael Cabrera-Bello and Shane Lowry.
In theory, a points race represents a season-long meritocracy. But if all three of Dubai’s lead-in events have fields of 78 players or fewer, it crimps the opportunity for top players in the points list to participate. In reality, designating co-sanctioned events as Finals Series stops meant even fewer spots were available to European Tour regulars.
It felt like a closed shop.
At the co-sanctioned BMW Masters, 14 players from the China Golf Association were included in the field. At the HSBC, because of the tournament format, Rory McIlroy and Luke Donald played, while players having better 2013 seasons were benched. In points, both players were outside the crucial top 60, the number required to land a spot in the Dubai finale.
Six of the 78 players at HSBC were from China, including two ranked outside the top 800 in the world. One of them failed to break 80 in three of his four rounds and finished a whopping 59 shots off the lead. Ouch.

