Steph Curry's Indoor Golf Gone Bad
/Steph Curry was apparently practicing his swing in the hotel and now moves into the hotel room accidental trashing HOF!
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
Steph Curry was apparently practicing his swing in the hotel and now moves into the hotel room accidental trashing HOF!
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Maybe your course, city or club is considering a par-3 course? Well, then say thanks the social media and golf professional team at Pinehurst for documenting early numbers on their new short course.
Sounds like a lot of fun is taking place. If only golf had about 1000 more of these sprinkled across the land.
In the smart phone era, entrepreneurs have tried to develop apps and other ways to inject fun and prizes into golf viewing. The PGA Tour seemed to shy away from interactivity in the early days of social media and mobile phones, but they obviously have given their blessing to FanBeat's attempt launching this week and co-sponsored by my partners at Golf Channel and Callaway.
Mixing general trivia questions with elements related to the WGC Mexico City Championship playing out before our sleepy eyes, the game marks the first legitimate attempt backed by legit prizes. In this scenario, I'm more attracted to the predictive questions, something many have wanted to develop with the tour for genuine fan interactivity. I don't believe Commissioner Moonbeam ever warmed to such ideas since interactivity leads to a form of handicapping and that could lead to watching for reasons other than his favorite moment of the PGA Tour day, hats off for handshakes.
You can sign up here, and you don't need an app (though it is said by FanBeat's Brandon Farley on the Callaway Ship Show to have a few more features). The general concept:
- Prior to the tournament coverage, two pre-round questions were available to answer anytime.
- Additional questions are posted during breaks in the action of each round of the following four upcoming tournaments: WGC-Mexico Championship, Valspar Invitational, Arnold Palmer Invitational, and WGC-Match Play Championship.
- Questions will be things like βWhere did Phil Mickelson play his college golf?β or more predictive questions like βHow many birdies will Sergio Garcia make on the back nine?β
- You earn points for each correct answer to move up the prize leaderboard during each round, and can earn chances to win additional βinstant winβ and tournament prizes
- Fans who ace all questions during any of the up to 19 tournament rounds in the FanBeat Challenge will have a chance to win $1 million.
- Additional prizes offered by Callaway include a full set of clubs with custom fittings at the Ely Callaway Performance Center in Carlsbad, Ca, a new Callaway Rogue Driver, Odyssey Toulon Design Putters, and much more.
Just amazing amounts of snowfall at Muirfield too. Click on the images to enlarge:
The Honourable Company of Edinburgh Golfers pic.twitter.com/h4E0jdYfbS
— Cutmaker (@cutmaker) March 1, 2018
USA Today's Steve DiMeglio talks to players and caddies about distance adjustments they're making for this week's WGC Mexico City and they've settled on a solid 15% or more bump in distance.
The story is of particular note given that we are not far from hearing pros howl about the awful adjustment period should the governing bodies ever roll out a distance rollback. But here they are all on the record about Trackman and the relatively easy process of adjusting thanks to launch monitors.
βI think this is going to be the best week for (Trackmanβs) branding, for sure, versus any other week,β said Justin Thomas, who won his seventh title in his last 30 PGA Tour starts last week in the Honda Classic. βIt's very, very dependent on the shot you're hitting and the club you're hitting, but when you hit those drivers up in the air, they go pretty far.β
And there was this...
Chez Reavie was in full mathematician mode Tuesday on the range in his first trip to the tournament. For 2 hours, 30 minutes, he and his caddie, Justin York, went to work with numbers spinning around in their heads.
βWe jumped on the Trackman to get numbers,β Reavie said. βI hit 10 balls with every club to find a median number each ball was carrying. And we found about a 15-18% difference. We have all the clubs plotted now and from there weβll rely on feel. But at least we have a ballpark figure now.β
That's all you need! Of course, players will tell us that a Masters ball would be impossible because of the long adjustment period.
The WGC Mexico City arrives Thursday and once again interrupts the Florida swing. With 45 of the world's top 50 and a guaranteed $50k payment (plus charter flights), no one should feel sorry for this event.
So should anyone be excited with a no-cut points and cash grab on a tight, tired-looking venue by modern standards but with robust support from its creators? Probably not, even as it's a WGC venturing outside of the U.S.
But a week after a lively Honda Classic that followed a strong West Coast swing, the event sits in a tough spot.
Rex Hoggard at GolfChannel.com makes a strong case that we should root for this event and with a likely spot between LA and Florida next year, theoretically it'll be a better fit. Theoretically...
The dramatic makeover of the Tour schedule beginning with the 2018-19 season will feature the WGC-Mexico Championship moving to the back end of the West Coast swing, but with fields in California and Arizona enjoying a renaissance in recent years, a post-Los Angeles date likely won't be a dramatic improvement over the eventβs current date.
As the Tour schedule compacts to prepare for a pre-football season finale in 2019 and beyond, finding prime real-estate will be a challenge, but Mexico should be first in line for an upgrade, particularly with officials like Salinas talking in terms of a 20- or 30-year commitment.
The championship deserves better. Salinas deserves better. And the opportunity to truly grow the game on an international stage certainly deserves better.
The Beast From The East they are calling it, reports Brentley Romine. But look at the contours in snow! Arrow on the image right will take you through all of the shots posted by the Links Trust.
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There were 423 entries in the 2018 Golf Writers Association of America contest. I've done my best to include links where I could find them. Jaime Diaz tied Dan Jenkins atop the all-time win list with his 10th winner.
Happy reading!
2018 GWAA WRITING CONTEST RESULTS
The following is a full list of the winners, including honorable mentions.
DAILY COLUMNS β 1, Max Adler, βThe best part of Masters week could be the one thing thatβs missingβ, golfdigest.com 2, Michael Bamberger, Rules changes disappoint, golf.com; 3, Jason Sobel, I want the U.S. Open back, ESPN.com.
Honorable mention - Ron Borges, Life handcuffs Woods, Boston Herald; Bob Oliver, Stop the insanity of rules call-ins, The Golf Insiders; Geoff Shackelford, Inside story of Spieth's bogey, golfweek.com
DAILY FEATURES β 1, Michael Bamberger, βThe Other Arnold: Palmer's daughter reflects on the chasm between the brand and the manβ, si.com; 2, Randall Mell, Secret war, forbidden love, golfchannel.com; 3, Helen Ross, How Michael Jordan became a golfer, PGATour.com.
Honorable mention -- Rex Hoggard, Woodland's toughest year, golfchannel.com; Ian O'Connor, The improbable rise of DJ, ESPN.com; Garry Smits, Day rises to No. 1, Florida Times-Union; Jason Sobel, Tiger and his famous Scotty, ESPN.com
DAILY NEWS β 1, Beth Ann Nichols, βStacy Lewis Earns Emotional Win for Houstonββ, golfweek.com, https://tinyurl.com/dailynews18; 2, Jaime Diaz, Payne, a man with a plan, golfdigest.com; 3, Dave Kindred, Sergio had to do it the hard way, golfdigest.com.
Honorable mention -- Alan Bastable, US on cusp of President's Cup win, Golf.com; Rex Hoggard, Spieth silences doubters, golfchannel.com; Alan Shipnuck, They look like America, Golf.com; Jason Sobel, Leishman's harrowing journey, ESPN.com.
NON-DAILY COLUMNS β 1,Jerry Tarde, βSandy Tatum: He never surrenderedβ, Golf Digest; 2, Michael Bamberger, Ernie and Sam, Golf Magazine; 3, Ken Van Vechten, So, are we better golfers?, FORE Magazine.
Honorable mention β 1, Tom Callahan, Confessions of an enabler, Golf Digest; Tom Coyne, The push and the pull, The Golfer's Journal; Jerry Tarde, Forgive us our press passes, Golf Digest.
NON-DAILY FEATURES β 1, Sean Zak, βWe were watching greatness: An oral history of the 1997 Mastersβ, Sports Illustrated; 2, Gary Van Sickle, William McGirt isn't supposed to be here, Memorial Tournament Magazine; 3, Josh Sens, Collision course, Sports Illustrated.
Honorable mention -- Michael Bamberger, The last man who grew up at The National, Sports Illustrated; Jaime Diaz, The new Sergio, Golf Digest; Alan Shipnuck, Donald Trump, Golfer-in-Chief, Sports Illustrated; Guy Yocom, Hello Mickey Wright, Golf Digest.
NON-DAILY NEWS β 1, Jaime Diaz, βFred Ridley takes the lead at Augustaβ; 2, Alan Shipnuck, Viva Sergio!, Sports Illustrated; 3. Alan Shipnuck, Koepka outmuscles Erin Hills, Sports Illustrated.
Honorable mention -- Michael Bamberger, Trump, the new First Golfer, Sports Illustrated,; Jaime Diaz, Players date may change, Golf Digest; Beth Ann Nichols, Lewis win, donation highlight 2017, Golfweek.
SPECIAL PROJECTS β 1, Gary D'Amato, βThe Making of Erin Hillsβ, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel; 2, Guy Cipriano, When the creek rises, Golf Course Industry; 3, Al Tays and Matt Adams, Best equipment innovations, golfchannel.com.
Honorable mention -- Jaime Diaz, Ron Whitten, Guy Yocom, Ron Sirak, Jerry Tarde, Donald Trump, Golfer-in-Chief, Golf Digest; Mike McAllister, The man who inspired an army, PGATour.com; Ryan Lavner, Rex Hoggard, Mercer Baggs, Will Gray, The class of 2011, golfchannel.com.
I do take this issue seriously, as today's Alternate Shot discussion suggests. There will be moments when losers are wagering and decide to interfere with a golf tournament outcome and if not addressed with ejections, golf tournaments will only get more unruly and even unsafe.
However, in the spirit of trying to help losers who need attention, I'm offering a simple guide to determining if you have the kind of loser tendencies that could lead you to act in unfortunate fashion while watching a golf tournament.
Iβve worked with players, caddies, officials and other observers to develop this list. Certainly Iβve missed other signs, but I think in the spirit of Justin Thomas walking back his frustration with hecklers in the face of new losers threatening to make his life miserable, this guide could be useful.
You may have serious loser tendencies ifβ¦
The Honda Classic overnights have been finalized and the ratings were even higher, as The Forecaddie notes, with Golf Channel also scoring huge audience sizes for lead-in audiences compared to non-Tiger tour events. There were also some big wins for the golf against stiff competition.
The early season boost delivered by Woods has prompted AP's Doug Ferguson to suggest, for now anyway, Tiger is actually bigger than ever.
Golf is in a different place than when Woods picked up his 79th victory on the PGA Tour in August 2013, his most recent victory. Thomas had just turned pro. Jordan Spieth had just earned a full PGA Tour card. Jon Rahm was going into his sophomore year at Arizona State. Since then, five players have taken turns at No. 1 in the world.
During his longest stretch out of golf with his bad back, the refrain was that golf needed Tiger Woods. When he was on the verge of returning at the end of 2016, the talk was that golf was in a good spot and Woods could only make it that much better.
For the first few tournaments of his return, it has become Woods and everyone else.
We've already had a lot of exciting playoff golf in 2018 and the sudden death format clearly works well for the PGA Tour. In considering the new U.S. Open policy of 2-hole aggregate playoffs, there was prevailing desire to avoid sudden death playoffs at major championships stemmed in large part from years of being reminded by the USGA that an 18-holer was the only proper way to determine a national champion. When Far Hills reduced the U.S. Women's Open to three hole aggregate no one minded because of the success seen in other playoff formats of three or more holes.
Landing on two holes, when the other majors and The Players play three, could damage the U.S. Open's already bruised stature. Following the Chambers Bay and Erin Hills experiments, any differentiation in stature could further undercut the U.S. Open's identity.
On that front, he Players went to the 17th hole in sudden death and no one felt good about determining a winner that way. It was one more reason The Players was not up to the level of a major. The PGA Tour changed the format to three holes and it produced one of the most thrilling playoffs in modern golf history when Rickie Fowler won in 2015. The tournament, as a result, has more stature because of its playoff format.
This brings me to a second point: the next two U.S. Open venues feature a par-3 17th hole. And there is something unsettling about starting a playoff with a one-shotter in the same way architects avoid opening a course with a par-3. Shinnecock and Pebble's 17th holes are great holes but tough places to start, especially if you've been sitting around a while.
Satisfyingly, we'll be finishing U.S. Open Sunday's more often than not. But will it be satisfying with just two holes?
The counter argument to all of this says The Masters has done fine with sudden-death. I believe "fortunate" would be the more apt description. I won't be surprised if this news hastens a move to a two-hole format that is forced by their routing and lack of daylight. If this happens, then we'll know the USGA likely settled on the "two" route in coordination with The Masters. What they get back for their supportive and credibility-denting compromise? Only time will tell.
We kicked around the topic on Alternate Shot today:
As the distance discussion ramps up, many professionals are beginning to suggest they don't like seeing mediocre ball striking corrected by equipment. The de-skilling of the pro game is not a new topic to most of us, but I do think it's fascinating to see players slowly coming to that conclusion.
The Forecaddie quotes William McGirt on the constructive criticism he offered to the USGA and that he sees all of this as a health-of-the-game matter.
βI told them, βLook, if you honestly believe that the ball doesnβt go any farther than it did 20 years ago, youβre in denial,ββ McGirt told TMOF. βIf thatβs the case, why am I hitting my 7-iron 10 yards farther in the air today than when I was 23 years old? They finally admitted the ball goes farther. The big thing is, I just wish theyβd make it curve again. Let foul balls be foul balls.β
McGirt is in the minority on many fronts, from being articulate on the matter to wanting to see skill preserved. Average golfers will no doubt hear this and assume that their game improvements clubs will be taken away from them--they won't. So calm down!
However, his point is worth considering and an articulate contrast with comments earlier this week.
I saw the headline on Alistair Tait's Golfweek item about the R&A running out of viable candidates to captain future Walker Cup teams because, amazingly, after all these years, those men who turn pro and earn money playing the game are in some sort of permanent purgatory. Heaven forbid they taint the young amateurs who...are about to turn pro themselves!
Here's the worst part: a number of former Walker Cuppers would bring a great perspective and much-needed spice to a Walker Cup that deserves more eyeballs.
Tait writes:
Former R&A chief executive Peter Dawson has considered using tour pros who had played in the match, names like Colin Montgomerie, Paul McGinley and Padraig Harrington.
βWe have a problem going forward since so few Walker Cup players remain amateur,β Dawson told Golfweek.
Irelandβs Jody Fanagan and Scotlandβs Stuart Wilson are two possible candidates. Fanagan was a member of the 1995 GB&I team that defeated a Tiger Woods-led U.S. team at Royal Porthcawl. Wilson, the 2004 British Amateur champion, appeared in the victorious 2003 GB&I team at Ganton.
While Montgomerie, McGinley or Harrington would raise the matchβs profile, expect the R&A to go with either Wilson or Fanagan, with the latter the more likely candidate since Garth McGimpsey in 2005 was the last Irish captain.
It's rather apparent the former Chief Inspector is floating this idea publicly because he knows the 21st century would welcome former Walker Cuppers with the stature of a McGinley, Montgomerie or Harrington to captain the biennial matches. But he must be facing some seriously old-school stiffs within the R&A who, amazingly, carry on the centuries-old tradition that professional golf is barely a level above porn star in the jobs department.
Beth Ann Nichols at Golfweek with all of the details on new/old look Pine Needles getting a record fourth U.S. Women's Open, this time sadly without patron saint Peggy Kirk Bell around but featuring revitalized architecture.
As he did at the must-play Mid-Pines, 36-year-old architect Kyle Franz is bringing some fun back to Donald Rossβ 1928 Pine Needles design. Not that there was anything wrong with the course restored about fifteen years ago by John Fought, but as The Forecaddie notes, with everything going on in the neighborhood, Pine Needles was starting to lack a certain visual sizzle that you can only find in the sandhills of North Carolina.
Some photos of the recent work, starting with this before/after (arrow on right of image will take you to the after):
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Since Jack Nicklaus spoke up about distance impacting pace of play, many have seized on his 20% reference as a nice way of distracting from the Golden Bear's core arguments. GolfAdvisor's Brad Klein joins that frey and while his piece makes a phenomenal case for distance restrictions due to a number of reasons, he tries to make the case that slow play could not possibly be caused by the ball flying longer distances.
Then writes:
Nicklaus seems to think the problem with distance is that itβs causing slow play. The evidence for that claim is scant and fleeting. The closest I have ever seen is a view voiced by course owner Frank Jemsek concerning Cog Hill Golf Course No. 1, part of a multi-course facility the family owns in Chicagoland. Jemsek is adamant that theyβve lost one starting time an hour because of slow play on the opening hole, a par-5 that lots of middle-handicappers think they can hit in two β and so they wait before playing up.
But none of that is relevant to PGA Tour pacing, where a major culprit for slow play is the players who play slowly.
Anyone who has seen pro golf at the same course over the last twenty years can attest that par-5s once barely reachable, can now be reached in two by at least half the field. And par-4s barely drivable are now long par-3s. The examples are extreme compared to the fine example shared by Mr. Jemsek above, but to say PGA Tour slow play is mostly caused by slow players ignores mountains of evidence suggesting otherwise, including from the recreational level where a longtime operator has seen and felt a change.
Geoff Shackelford is a Senior Writer for Golfweek magazine, a weekly contributor to Golf Channel's Morning
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