GMac Is Back! Credits Greg Norman With Key Tip

After a two-year career struggle and self-doubt, Graeme McDowell got back into the winner's circle by claiming the OHL Classic at Mayakoba. McDowell beat Russell Knox and Jason Bohn in a sudden death playoff, then discussed his confidence bout with Golf Channel's Phil Blackmar after the win.

Even better was his revelation that Chinese National Golf Team advisory coach Greg Norman influenced GMac's weekend play after a text message from the Shark, who has gone an amazing two weeks without Instagramming a shirtless photo of himself.

Brian Wacker
reports:

“Funny anecdote for you,” McDowell said. “I got a text message lesson from Greg Norman on Saturday night and he said he watched some of the coverage and he thought I looked a little short and a little quick. He said complete my backswing and be a bit more relaxed at address.”

The two went back-and-forth with text messages, McDowell gave his backswing extra attention Sunday and Monday, and voila.

Here's the voila:

Stunner: Happy Gilmore Shot Earns John Peterson No Fine!

Happy ending to the Happy Gilmore!

Rex Hoggard reports the swell news (not so good for the charity of John Peterson's choice): the former LSU star was not fined for his running tee shot in Malaysia, as lovingly recorded from a grassy knoll by Jason Dufner.

From Hoggard's enjoyable report:

“I spoke with [Andy Pazder, the Tour’s executive vice president and chief of operations] twice and explained I was just trying to get 20 more yards [out of the tee shot],” Peterson said.

He missed his calling as a defense attorney!

Even better, the Dufner shot clip still lives on Peterson's Twitter account, even though Dufner's posted version sleeps with the fishes.

2015 European Tour Q-School Notables: Struggling

They still meaningful Q-Schools in Europe and a EuropeanTour.com report explains who halfway leaders Lukas Nemecz and teenager Marcus Kinhult are.

The full list of scores can be found here. (At the end of the six rounds the top 25 players and ties will earn places on The European Tour for next season).

Of note are several names of recent Walker Cuppers and veterans who have work to do if they want a 2015-16 card: former Ryder Cuppers Soren Hansen (T48) and Eduardo Molinari (T77), recent Open Championship star Paul Dunne (T55), Walker Cup hero Ashley Chesters, veterans Nick Dougherty (T148) and Peter Lawrie (DQ).

Forward Press: Two Races-To-Cash Wrapping Up, Aussie Majors Starting And Loopers In The Booth!

It's a bizarre week in golf as the LPGA Tour and European Tour end their respective "races."

One (LPGA) has a lot on the line with a possible entertaining showdown. The other is teetering on the edge of silliness as players defect and the points leader got to the finals on a free pass from the home office.

For American west coasters, the joyous annual ritual that is going to bed watching Australia's golfing triple crown is upon us. And finally, Friday and Saturday's tour event from St. Simons Island, Georgia will feature two caddies named Bones and Woody working as on course reporters, prompting me to wonder in the column if the next "Rossy" is upon us.

Here is this week's Forward Press column at GolfDigest.com, with links and some fun embeds.

Speaking of Rossy, for those of you too young to remember the beloved ABC/ESPN on-course reporter, I went hunting for a "he's got no chance" clip on YouTube. Sadly, that signature phrase from the late Bob Rosburg was nowhere to be found.

But do check out this short British Pathé highlight reel from Wentworth, circal 1960. The Ballantine's event was played to test the larger American ball. It includes Rosburg, stylish crowds, a stylish version of that now-mangled golf course (no doubt this clip will be studied by restorer Ernie Els) and best of all, those wacky flagsticks!

Stevie: Vijay "Should Have Been Banned From Golf Completely"

Golf World's Jaime Diaz tries to understand why Vijay Singh is still all-in on his suit against the PGA Tour over his use of deer antler spray and thinks he may have found what's fueling the fight.

Diaz asserts that Singh is still haunted by accusations of cheating that led to a two-year suspension from the Asian Tour. One prominent view arises in a new book that is the premise for Diaz's argument.

Clearly he resented inquiries about being suspended from the Asian Tour for two years after allegedly changing his scorecard at the 1985 Indonesian Open. Singh has disputed the charge, but never in any depth, and it hovers over him unresolved.

In his recent book, veteran caddie Steve Williams, who worked for Terry Gale in the Indonesia event in question, wrote: “I think you have to man up and admit your mistakes. Vijay has vehemently denied he did anything wrong, and I’m still angry to this day he hasn’t admitted his error.” Williams added that he believes Singh “should have been banned from golf completely.”

Water Week And Goat Hill: Morning Drive's Coverage

I understand that on the list of sexy television topics, water issues in golf sounds about as thrilling as the early rounds of the National Paint Drying Championship. And while I'm biased because I'm on the show and much of the coverage focused on issues facing California courses, we all know that water use is a big deal in golf going forward for three reasons.

One, the playability of a course is just better and more fun when it's not overwatered.

Two, the game will not survive if most of the world thinks that a golf course is a place where water goes to disappear.

And finally, a generation of people whose annoying name starts with an "m" have already shown they are not afraid to make decisions about purchases or associations based on how something fits into the world. If golf is a water waster, the m's and the Gen Z's are probably not going to want to get near it.

So in case you missed it, and the chances are you have a job and did, here are three of the better moments from Morning Drive's Water Week coverage.

A look at the experimental work at Poppy Hills by Toro to develop new technologies gives a wonderful visual and behind the scenes look at what smart people are doing to make a golf course not waste water. There was also the backlash Pasatiempo received after photos appeared in Golf Digest showing it parched, with insight into the effort to reduce water and change community perceptions in Santa Cruz.

And the third piece involves Matt Ginella going to Goat Hill in Oceanside, California to learn about both saving the course, the effort to re-imagine the affordable muni going forward in the face of water shortages and all of the other great things they are doing to make it a true 21st century "community" course.

Inbee Park Moves Within A Point Of Hall Of Famer Status

She's been battling injury but Inbee Park won the Lorena Ochoa Invitational Sunday with an 8-under-par 64 to also make some of the year-end awards and such interesting. She also got to wear the least-flattering winner's prize in all of golf. Does anyone look good in a sombrero?

Park earned another point toward her LPGA Hall of Fame qualification and now has 26 of the 27 points needed to be eligible. This in just ninth year as an LPGA member (must be an active member for 10 years to be eligible for induction).

At next week's CME Globe, Inbee has three opportunities to earn the point that lands her in the hall: a win, winning Player of the Year or winning the Vare Trophy.

This is all interesting because, in all honesty, the LPGA has the best and toughest system for "HOF" status and it's pretty amazing that someone so young is on the cusp in just year nine of her career as an LPGA member.

The dreaded sombrero photo, no captions please.

Following her win on Sunday, Inbee Park sits just 1 point shy of qualifying for the #LPGA Hall of Fame.

A photo posted by Golf Channel (@golfchannel) on

Poll: Why Does Spieth's 2015 Get No Respect?

Posted on what could be the poster-child webpage for pop-up blockers, SI’s Sportsman of the Year voting page shows the Kansas City Royals (34%) still leading American Pharaoh (28%) and Lionel Messi (14%) in third.

Down in the category that would have them relegated to the pre-Republican presidential debates, Steph Curry (3%), Jordan Spieth (3%) and Serena Williams (1%) aren’t getting much love from voters.

The SI Editors ultimately will decide the annual award, and while this is hardly a scientific poll, I find it fascinating that the readers are recognizing the magnitude of American Pharoah’s year despite the decline of horse racing as a popular American sport.  Meanwhile, the Royals just won in impressive fashion and clearly have a strong social media following. But I sense Spieth's place in the polling is the best confirmation yet that the sports viewing public has very little grasp of Spieth’s Masters-U.S. Open win accomplishment, which was made only more remarkable by his near-wins in The Open and the PGA.

My sense is that this could be attributed to a few possible issues.

—Jordan Spieth is not seen as a transformative figure and to casual fans, his chatty on course style is either not appealing or still coming off as whiny to those who don’t watch him a lot.

—Tiger spoiled us. He was a frontrunner most of the time and dominated in his best years in majors, plus he had two seasons and a Tiger slam that all but set the history-grabbing bar too high

—Noise. There are a lot of golf tournaments on a sports calendar that is relentless in scheduling and compelling almost all year. Even though Spieth dominated in the majors, in the ADD world the majors seem like ages ago and only golf fans know that he ended the year with a Tour Championship/FedExCup win. Lost in the noise of oversaturation?

—Golf history is not valued. In an era of parity, a player going 1-1-4-2 in the majors should be seen as an incredible accomplishment but isn’t perhaps because people just don’t respect the sport? Even SI's Spieth-write-up mentioned his regaining of the world No. 1 ranking over his year in the majors, speaking to a level of remarkable ignorance.

—It was great year for Spieth, but it’s just hard to top the first Triple Crown in 37 years + a Breeders Cup Classic, the first horse to accomplish the fete and his name will now be mentioned alongside Secretariat when people talk about the greats.

—Golf fans wanted to vote, but SI’s pop-up ads and confusing page prevented them from voting.

Please vote and share your views based on feedback from talking to sports fans. We will discuss Monday on Morning Drive.

Why does Spieth's epic 2015 get so little respect?
 
pollcode.com free polls

We Thought Only Media Shuttles Took Forever: LPGA Player Edition

It wouldn't be a golf tournament if the media shuttles didn't take some circuitous routes to the course, though even those entertaining debacles rarely happen now that tournaments have turned to quality outfits like Country Club Services.

So it's a bit surprising to see LPGA players not only taking a tournament shuttle to the course, but experiencing a total nightmare. That's what happened Saturday in the Lorena Ochoa Invitational, where the tour relied on the Decisions of the rules to push back tee times for four players whose 15-20 minute journey took over two hours due to road issues and Mexico City's infamous traffic.
Randall Mell reports on the remedy for this bizarro situation:

With four players who were in contention stuck in a shuttle bus that took more than two hours to make the usual 15- to 20-minute commute from the tournament hotel to the golf course, the LPGA pushed back the day’s final three times. By doing so, Suzann Pettersen, Angela Stanford, Minjee Lee and Carlota Ciganda were assured that they would be spared disqualifications for missing tee times.

The LPGA cited Decision 6-3a/1.5 in pushing back tee times, determining there were “exceptional circumstances beyond the players’ control.”

Playoffs In Golf Aren't Playoffs Files: Sergio Passing On Dubai

Ewan Murray's files a story on Sergio Garcia, currently 30th in the Race To Dubai and bound to move up thanks to a strong BMW Masters showing, deciding to pass on the European Tour's grand Dubai finale.

As Murray notes, Garcia has been positive about this latest format tweak, but instead has played in Asia the last two weeks and is passing up the chance to take an easy check just for showing up in Dubai.

García cited scheduling and tiredness issues when he was among a trio of players in 2013 who refused to meet the playing criteria required for the flagship Dubai tournament, in what was the inaugural year of the European Tour’s Final Series. The format for that has since been tweaked and will be again during an announcement by Keith Pelley, the European Tour’s chief executive, in Dubai on Tuesday. Pelley will also unveil new criteria for Tour membership, the template for which was revealed by the Observer last week.

At the time of the previous alteration to the Final Series, García said: “I’m very happy with the changes and I’m looking forward to the Final Series. At the end of the day, we are all working together. I’m very happy to see that we’ve reached a middle ground which should help make us all happy.”

This latest in a neverending list of player defections, WD's and overall mail-in jobs during playoff season got me thinking: have any of these golf "playoffs" on the major tours ever generated an onslaught of positive press?  Or just mostly negative stories about player apathy, fatigue, boredom or nonchalance?

State Of The Game 62: Ru Macdonald And Scottish Golf

Ru Macdonald joined us to discuss the state of Scottish golf and in particular, the travel industry there. We also kick around the exciting new Royal Dornoch-adjacent project under development by Mike Keiser, news of which was broken by Ru on his website.

If you are not a subscriber to his podcast you might want to add him to your queue, as the episodes are never too long but always filled with insights into Scottish golf. Of late he's been joined by recent University of St. Andrews graduate Graylin Loomis.

You can listen to the MP3 here, or listen and download the show here.

For iTunes, the episode is here.

We also asked Ru to pick a random sampling of shows for new listeners. Here are the links to the shows:

Episode 79 – Alan Shipnuck’s 10 Rounds In 6 Days
Episode 73 – Father/Son Trip to Northeast Scotland
Episode 67 - The Undiscovered Links of the Highlands with Jason Scott Deegan
Episode 63 – Ran Morrissett (Golf Club Atlas)
Episode 55 – Finding your Linksoul with John Ashworth
Episode 42 – A Scottish Golf Trip with Geoff Shackelford
Episode 22 – Playing Scotland’s Hidden Gems with Robert Thompson and Ian Andrew

Here's the embed:

 

Different Reactions To Boo's "It Sucks" Commentary

Boo Weekley isn't a fan of the wraparound schedule and said so last week at the Sanderson Farms Championship, a.k.a Mississippi's major.

Weekley's contention, at least after I ran it through a few Google translators, is that Commissioner Tim Finchem adds tournaments because he's incentivized to do so. And Weekley misses the old system of the fall events being about the hungry up-and-comers and veterans holding onto their cards.

"It ain't doing nothing, but it is what it is. It's supposed to be the players tour. It's Tim Finchem and them's tour is what it is."

Weekley has certainly benefitted from fall golf, as Jim McCabe points out in trying to put down Weekley for criticisms that almost assuredly earned the veterain tour player a fine.

During lean years, 2011 and 2012, Weekley was struggling and very much needed good play late in the year. The PGA Tour was there for him, offering fall events; Weekley played four of them in ’11 and four more in ’12.

Of course that was when tournaments were part of the same year's schedule and the events wrapped up the season on a very quiet, lowly rated note, not around it. But the difference is important: one is promising to be the start of a new year, the old system was merely wrapping up the season's business by dealing with the fates of the second tier player and offering sponsorship opportunities at a lower price for companies unwilling to pay the huge tab a standard tour event demands.

McCabe rebuts Weekley this way:

In 1980 the PGA Tour season consisted of 44 tournaments. In 2014-15 there were 47 tournaments. It’s still a lot of golf, only it’s packaged differently with the wraparound season, a concept that marquee names clearly don’t like. They’ve come to the realization that they might need to play two or three times in the fall, to avoid giving young and hungry players a massive head start, unless they want to roll the dice that they play extraordinary well in 15-19 tournaments starting in January or February.

At least this year. That's because 2016's schedule is a mess. Whether it's a trend or a one-off to compensate for next year's madness remains to be seen.

Rex Hoggard at GolfChannel.com considers the Weekley comments and says that world ranking points available for fall events are up this year, confirming McCabe's point. But Hoggard also notes this in reaction to Boo's comments about the reduced time for fishing due to the need to play some fall golf even after having secured his card:

With apologies to the man from Milton (Fla.), cutting into Weekley’s extracurricular outdoor activities is the least of the Tour's problems. Instead, rest and recovery are in short supply at the highest level and more than one Tour swing coach has lamented that the slim offseason window has made it virtually impossible to institute any meaningful changes to a player’s game.

It’s the Tour’s mandate to create playing opportunities for every member, but as is the case in most businesses, quantity doesn’t always equate to quality.

While I enjoy the different philosophic approach, the numbers are not lying. While the ratings about to be about the same as they were last year and maybe up just a tiny bit since the PGA Tour's fall events became leadoff events, the buzz simply isn't there. Fans are speaking with their remotes.

SportsTVRatings lists Saturday's live WGC-HSBC from Shanghai, with McIlroy, Spieth and other impressive names in the TV window, drawing a 94,000 viewer average over five hours. Granted, those are late hours for half of America, but the Presidents Cup was recently on in the middle of the night and drew big numbers because the "product" is different and compelling.

While it was noble (and maybe a contractual obligation), Monday afternoon's rain delay finish of the Sanderson Farms drew an average of 69,000 viewers. I could go on and on listing examples of fall events which are not showing the uptick suggesting these start-of-the-season events have been legitimized in the eyes of the most hardcore fans.

The fans do matter to the PGA Tour, right?

Van Sickle's Letter From Web.com Tour Second Stage Q-School

SI/golf.com's Gary Van Sickle checks in from Web.com Tour second stage Q-School where his son Mike was paired with former U.S. Amateur Champ Bubba Dickerson and 2014 NCAA individual champion Cameron Wilson.

While we enjoy the glitz and glamour of big time PGA Tour golf, it's nice/sobering/interesting to hear from the trenches and Van Sickle collects a mix of anecdotes about Dickerson and his son. There is also this, in case you have any ideas...

Mike, 28, and a Pittsburgh resident, is a big hitter and said his drivers typically last less than a year before the face caves in.

"Who makes Thor’s hammer, I don’t remember that ever cracking," Mike joked. "I check my driver pretty closely during the year because of that and I try not to hit too many range balls with it. Because of that, I had a backup driver ready to come in from the bullpen, or the back of my car. The one that broke today made it well past the ‘best by’ date so I’ve been checking it pretty carefully."

He’ll be trolling online to see if there are any more 9° Classic 290 drivers on the market. Other than that, he had a quiet day. The pins at Southern Hills Plantation were in the toughest spots in three days and a stiffening breeze made the closing holes a little more challenging.

Finally! Twilight Rates Coming To A Major

Finally!

Whether due to golfers being morning people, or the days at major championships just going on too long, it’s become a strange late-day sight to see sparse crowds.

The Masters and U.S. Open, where tickets are usually in high demand, have always seemed the best option for a twilight ticket, but it’s The Open striking first. This new £25 option for those arriving to watch golf from 4 pm to dark certainly helps make the high price of the standard ticket look more palatable and probably will appeal to a younger crowd a Open venues closer to large cities.

Phil Casey reports on this and the reduction in price for a normal ticket purchased in advance (Americans are often shocked to learn you can buy a ticket at the door for The Open, even at St. Andrews).

Odd: Rich Harvest Farms Drops Out Of 2016 LPGA Event

Brainchild of Commissioner Mike Whan, the International Crown is one of the LPGA's bigger events thanks to a different format. Announcing the exclusive Rich Harvest Farms as 2016 host was considered a nice get for Whan, though architecture aficionados pan the course which was a Golf Digest panel favorite before it wasn't.

Now comes news the course is pulling out of the 2016 IC obligation less than nine months out, with no reason given but a funny comment from the LPGA Tour that they are open to future events there despite this uncomfortable situation. Right!

From the Len Ziehm, who notes developer Jerry Rich's interest in hosting events adding to the oddity of the last minute drama.

Teddy Greenstein says the event will stay in the Chicagoland area, possibly at Merit Club or Cog Hill.

The LPGA's statement:

LPGA & Rich Harvest Farms

The LPGA and Rich Harvest Farms have mutually agreed to relocate the 2016 UL International Crown.

Despite this decision, both parties remain open to future LPGA opportunities at Rich Harvest Farms based on the successful partnership in staging the 2009 Solheim Cup.

The UL International Crown will continue as scheduled July 21-24, and the LPGA stands committed to keeping the 2016 edition of the biennial match-play event in the Chicagoland area. The 2018 event will still be showcased in the Republic of Korea.

The LPGA is finalizing a new host venue and will comment further at the appropriate time.