Instagram: Tiger’s Muscle Backs, Rory’s Swing, 13-Under At The Four-Ball And Jack Honors Billy Payne

Tiger has new irons he's helped design in the bag for the Wells Fargo. Woods took the irons out Tuesday for a practice round with Davis Love and looked sharp, reports Golfweek's Dan Kilbridge.

Rory's feeling bullish about his swing, and why shouldn't he be when you swing like he does? 

Looking forward to getting going this week @wellsfargogolf

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Reigning U.S. Girls’ Junior champion Erica Shepherd and Megan Furtney were 13-under-par while winning a pair of U.S. Women's Amateur Four-Ball matches on a gusty Southern California Tuesday to advance to Wednesday's semifinals.

The 🦅 has landed! #USWFourBall 📸USGA/JD Cuban

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Jack Nicklaus attended at University of Georgia event honoring Masters Chairman Emeritus Billy Payne and attended by many luminaries.

Two Short Course Openings: Sand Valley's Sandbox, Prince's Himalayas

Social media watchers have known these two were coming for some time, still it's fun to see a pair of great "accessory" courses opening to play on the same day: Sand Valley's new "Sandbox" course by Coore, Crenshaw and The Boys, and the rejuvenated Himalayas nine at Prince's Golf Club by Mackenzie and Ebert.

A few images, starting with Sand Valley where I'm sure we'll see more as the opening day play proceeds:

Prince's 3200 yard nine makes a 27-hole day there appear to be essential. Here is a Golf World UK story pre-project on the planned work.

Ko's 3-Wood Reminds Us What Shotmaking Can Be Like When The Professional Game Has Symmetry

If you haven't seen the shot, do check out Lydia Ko's 3-wood from Lake Merced and the 2018 MEDIHEAL Championship.

In her Golfweek account, Beth Ann Nichols called it "one of the most clutch 3-woods in LPGA history, negotiating a tree down the left side of the closing par 5 and nestling it in close for eagle. For a moment, an albatross was in the picture."

I want to highlight the shot for a host of reasons beyond the simple pleasure of watching someone with supernatural talents deliver so decisively under pressure. 

Some are wondering why the LPGA held more appeal in recent weeks and shots like Ko's bear greater study in the context of the distance and skill debate.

Consider...

--The 18th hole for this particular event will never be confused with Augusta National's 13th, yet there was enough strategic interest to create intrigue: drive down the right side and get a better view of the green, drive left and perhaps shorten the approach, but also lose the better angle.

--In the playoff, Minjee Lee outdrove Ko by 30 yards, but as Golf Channel's Karen Stupples noted almost immediately, Ko would have the better angle due to an overhanging cypress tree and the shape of the alleyway approach. Check out this screen grab of Ko's angle, with Lee's ball down the left, just above Ko's waistline:

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--Since LPGA driving distances are of sane proportions for a majority of the golf courses on earth, even very simple architectural elements provided options, risks and nuanced reward in positioning. The execution by Ko was ultimately masterful, but she was given a canvas thanks to the firm ground conditions, immaculate turf and LMCC design to execute something special.

--Watching the way Ko's ball hit the ground and release toward the hole only added to the drama and beauty of the shot. If this were a 6-iron, as we see all too often hit into a par-5 by today's male players, the shot loses appeal. It's not something we talk about nor is it a shot that leaves us in awe of the players. Or, in modern parlance, we don't feel like we're living under par.

--The game is far more interesting to watch and play when angles have meaning and the ground can be used. Even a novice golf watcher can get a thrill from a shot like Ko's and appreciate that they saw something few humans could accomplish. 

--When the game is compelling because of the aforementioned elements, more people will tune in on those merits over, say, watching forty-year-olds playing air guitar to music that hasn't been relevant in decades, if ever.

ASGCA Recap: Collegiality, Practicality And A Ross Tartan Yarmulke

I couldn't help but chuckle at some of the observations from the annual American Society of Golf Course Architects annual gathering as seen through the eyes of a compassionate Bradley Klein, filing for GolfAdvisor.com.

Incoming ASGCA President Jeff Blume spoke powerfully about the collegiality that lies at the core of the group. 

So nice all of the men in plaid are getting along these days.

There was this, which sounds like the practicality highlight of the session:

Among the most ambitious of these efforts that served as a case study at the meeting is The Preserve at Oak Meadows in the Chicago suburb of Addison, Ill. Golf architect Greg Martin described the scope of a 285-acre project costing $18 million that involved 19 regulatory government agencies, conversion and a small army of consultants. Martin called it “a forest preserve with a golf course,” with the priority placed on reclaiming the native Illinois prairie and wetlands landscape while providing a revenue producing recreational amenity that was both "resistant and resilient" in the face of perennial flooding. It’s the kind of project where the golf course has to fit within a larger strategy of land management. Not the sort of thing that you can just improvise in the field.

And there was this lovely gesture to Klein from the society, who had already given him the Donald Ross Award:

The honorary membership status that came with the award qualified me for a share of the red tartan cloth, which they thoughtfully presented in the form of a Ross-plaid yarmulke.

DCP'ers At The U.S. Women's Amateur Four-Ball Offers Perspective, Raises Questions

The Forecaddie is astonished as many of us were upon learning how many Drive, Chip and Putt finalists are competing in this week's U.S. Women's Amateur Four-Ball (nearly a 10% clip for DCP finalists). After Monday's round of 32, all but two were eliminated, reports David Shefter.

We discussed on Morning Drive what a statement this is for the DCP:

The average of participant--18.1 for the match play--does raise questions about what this event has become. 

The USGA seemed to schedule the men's and women's four-balls at at time to discourage college players and make it easier for mid-amateurs to compete. At least on the women's side, the timing has been conducive to junior golfers and not so friendly to both college players (conference finals/regionals) and mid-amateurs (too early in the golf season). While I love seeing the young talent excel, it also calls into question who this U.S. Amateur Pub Links replacement is serving and if the April date is working for anyone. 

(Booth) Bifurcation At The U.S. Open!

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The Forecaddie says Fox is taking a different approach to the U.S. Open this year at Shinnecock Hills, with two lead teams(ish) featuring Joe Buck and Paul Azinger, along with another team of Shane Bacon and Brad Faxon.

Loomis explained what viewers can expect to see at Shinnecock Hills in June: “On Thursday and Friday at the U.S. Open there will be hours when it’s just Shane and Brad, and hours where it’s just Joe and Paul. On the weekend, there will be times where Joe and Paul will get two holes, Nos. 1 and 2, and Brad and Shane will get two holes, Nos. 3 and 4. It adds up to 10 holes for Joe and Paul, eight for Brad and Shane. Because people don’t see us all year, it allowed us to be a little simpler in figuring out who’s talking for the viewer.”

Congrats to Shane on the big vote of confidence! It must be the Shotmakers bounce!

Nobilo: "The professional game has never been more divorced from the amateur game. I think that is extremely dangerous."

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Frank Nobilo talks to Golf Australia's John Huggan about a range of topics, but his comments about fearing for the health of golf due to cost, length and a growing divide between professional and amateur games. He wants to slow down the ball.

That sense of connection is always mentioned by anti-bifurcation types looking to protect the golf ball, yet all playing the same ball the divide is growing. Nobilo sees and doesn't like the lost connection, which he even sees between the most recent generation of greats and today's major winners.

We have equipment that is really designed for the recreational player, but which produces unhealthy distance for the elite players. I remember playing in pro-ams and occasionally being out-driven by an amateur. Now that never happens. Now the pros hit their 5-irons past the amateur’s drives.

The professional game has never been more divorced from the amateur game. I think that is extremely dangerous. I’m not one for bifurcation though. One of the beauties of the game should be that everyone can play. But if we went to different equipment we would lose that. The game wouldn’t be what it is supposed to be.

As with most people, it all goes back to the Old Course...

When they started messing with the Old Course at St. Andrews and adding yardage, the R&A lost me. Can you imagine if the All England Club did that to Wimbledon and made the centre court smaller so that the game would be more difficult? In tennis they slowed the ball down. I think we need to do the same in golf.

I know many people do not place value on this, though it's never for a reason beyond personal financial gain:

I am amazed when I go to Wentworth now for the BMW PGA Championship. It isn’t the course I remember playing. So any comparison between now and then has been lost. Martin Kaymer, for example, should be able to compare himself with Bernhard Langer. But he can’t. He isn’t playing the same game or the same courses.

Instagram: Ko Hoists A (Strange) Trophy, Lake Merced In MacKenzie's Day, Web.com Winner's Slick Pick-Up

For those weird golf trophy collectors out there, the Mediheal makes its bid. Lydia Ko doesn't care of course, she's a winner again for the third time at Lake Merced and 15th time on the LPGA Tour.

3rd win at Lake Merced 15th LPGA Tour victory 21 years old @lydsko #MEDIHEALCHAMP

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As good as Lake Merced looked on television, Dr. Alister MacKenzie would argue that he created something better:

Jose De Jesus Rodriguez, a four-time winner on the PGA Tour Latinoamerica, won the United Leasing and Finance Championship Sunday at Victoria National. Here is Alex Wood's PGATour.com game story, but the real prize came with this smooth pick up off the glasses:

“He swung right out of his sunglasses.” 🕶

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Walk-up Music: It's Not Just A Way To Play...It's A Way To Be...Lame

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My phone was ringing off the hook with non-golfers totally engaged by this weekend's walk up music, so I saw little of the Zurich Classic.

Actually that's not true. The only people who saw wealthy golfers take practice swings to music were in person or watching on Golf Channel. And they all really like golf already. 

Nonetheless, the poorly executed "walk up" music that played between first tee announcement and tee shot was "awkward" at best, as Ryan Lavner noted, or a symptom of something far more peculiar. I'll take the latter and call it good old-fashioned desperation coupled with poor execution. 

But the Commissioner Jay Monahan, on hand to witness this historic moment at least tells us who thought of something he claims brought in new fans: Daniel Berger.

From Ryan Lavner's report at the Zurich:

“I think we need walk-up music on the PGA Tour,” he said. “Every other sport does it, and it creates a really good energy. I’d like to see that happen one day.”

Less than three years later, the Zurich Classic became the first Tour event to use walk-up music on the first tee – even if Berger wasn’t around to experience it, after missing the 36-hole cut here with Gary Woodland.

“That was the authorship right then and there,” Tour commissioner Jay Monahan said Sunday at TPC Louisiana. “It made sense when he said it, and it’s proven to be right.”

Mercifully, the tour social accounts posted only one walk-up moment from Sunday's play. Now that's living under par.

Video: Lydia Ko With The Best Of Shot Of 2018 (So Far)?

It's early, but given the circumstances, Lydia Ko's 3-wood on 18 at Lake Merced in sudden death is the clubhouse leader for 2018's best to date.

In a playoff with Minjee Lee--winner of the U.S. Junior Girls at the same course--Ko went for the 18th in two. But it was the combination of pressure, picking three-wood off the tight LMCC fairways and hitting over an overhanging cypress branch that makes this really special. 

"Tournaments come, and tournaments go. That’s how it is on the PGA Tour."

MorningRead.com's Gary Van Sickle provides some fun memories while reminding us of bad news we already know: nothing lasts forever on PGA Tour.

As two towns integral to men's pro golf prepare to lose events or become less significant in the 2019 schedule--Akron and Houston namely--Van Sickle says this is the history of the PGA Tour, where even the once-vaunted Western Open teetered and is now barely recognizable. 

He also reminds us that someone in Tour headquarters signed off on Cialis as a title sponsor.

History is nice, but our memories often are nearly as short as our modern gnat-sized attention spans. Remember the Western Open? It was a cornerstone of the PGA Tour lineup for decades. Butler National Golf Club, the tournament’s long-time Chicago-area home, was considered a beast by Tour players. The event was seen as being just a notch below a major championship during the 1980s.

Today, the Western Open is long gone, having hit a low point – in my eyes, anyway – when Cialis, an erectile-dysfunction drug, became the title sponsor for a few embarrassing years. Imagine being a female tournament volunteer and having to wear a big Cialis logo on your shirt.

Zurich 2018: How Will An Alternate Shot Final Round Play Out?

Given that alternate shot is better suited for match play, two rounds at the Zurich Classic is a tall order. Installing the pressure-packed format will test the bond between players Sunday. That's why the bond between last year's runner-ups Kevin Kisner and Scott Brown may play a bigger role than normal with Sunday's revamped format.

As Dan Kilbridge notes though, it may not matter to sponsor Zurich, which has seen solid momentum and bigger Saturday crowds in 2018 following the two-man format's debut in 2017, despite most of the big names faltering.

The walk-up music experiment Saturday was a bit strange given that music was not played when players were walking up to the tee.

This is very awkward and needs work:

There was at least Charley Hoffman, walking up and hitting his ball as the walk-up music played:

@charleyhoffman knows how to party (swinging on beat too!) #LiveUnderPar

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Instagram Roundup: Ko's Bunker Hole-Out, New Yorker Golf Cartoon, DCP Represented At Women's Four-Ball, Flipping Burgers Trick Shot

Lydia Ko could end a victory drought of 22 months, writes Beth Ann Nichols of Golfweek in previewing Sunday's final round at Lake Merced. 

Ko holed this shot Saturday:

For the lead! 🔥💪 @lydsko #MEDIHEALChamp

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You don't see a lot of New Yorker golf cartoons. This one from 2014 was posted today on Instagram.

A cartoon by Alex Gregory, from 2014. #TNYcartoons

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To make you feel old, there are 13 former participants from the (five-year-old) Drive, Chip and Putt playing in the U.S Women's Amateur Four-Ball at El Caballero CC.

@thatgolfgrind Giving new meaning to flipping burgers...

Post round BBQ 🍔🌭 Comment and tag friends! ⬇️ #sctop10

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"Short and Sweet: 9-Hole, Par 3, and Short Courses Are The Future"

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There is much to feel good about in Adam Schupak's Links Magazine cover story on Par-3 courses gaining popularity, respect and a passionate audience wanting more of them

For starters, there is the totality of the short course message being validated by big names like Woods, Spieth, Bandon and Pinehurst.

There is the sheer variety of projects, the styles of design, numbers of holes and different philosophies for building or adding a Par-3 Course. 

The lack of dissent, except from Links editor George Peper and Golf Digest Architecture Editor Ron Whitten, speaks to the way these little courses resonate with most.

And selfishly, there is this very nice mention of the Prairie Club Horse Course's impact on Mike Keiser.

Bandon Preserve was conceived as a breather for the golfer walking 36 holes day after day at the resort’s four standout 18-hole layouts, while giving another option to the golfer who didn’t want to sit in his room all afternoon, either. Keiser says his inspiration for the Preserve was The Horse Course, a course with no tees, just expanded fairways and 10 greens, at the Prairie Club in Nebraska. Designed by Gil Hanse with Jim Wagner and Geoff Shackelford, the trio took the concept of basketball’s game of “horse,” which allows the winner of each hole to choose the stance, lie, shot, and green for the next hole.

Here's a fun drone shot of the Horse Course by Patrick Koenig:

Chamblee Laments Alister MacKenzie's Design Influence On Golf, Death Of "Ribbon Fairways"

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Irony isn't his thing, otherwise Golf Channel's Brandel Chamblee might even find it funny that he's dusting off his sticks for a competitive comeback with the hope of playing the Old Course during this year's Senior Open Championship (John Strege reports). 

Yet the same analyst who so eloquently lamented the disappearance of Alister MacKenzie design features at Augusta National just seven years ago, who advocated bifurcation regularly not long ago in hopes of allowing for classic designs to matter, now blames Alister MacKenzie's design philosophy for a range of things, including potentially "damaging" the modern professional game.

In quite the contradictory column, Chamblee says elite players would return to smaller driver heads and spinning balls to shape the balls into...ribbon like fairways lined with thick rough. Except MacKenzie--supported by rogues like Bobby Jones and Ben Crenshaw--had the audacity to channel the Old Course and spread that who whole fun/width/strategy message.

Players, professional and amateur, loved the forgiving nature of his designs, and budding architects wanting to imitate MacKenzie’s work, adopted philosophies along similar lines. To this day when having a debate with a group of Tour players or golf course architect nerds, the consensus will be to have little or graduated rough off of the tee, “to allow for the recovery” many will say, followed by “to give the greatest pleasure to the greatest number.”

I've never actually heard a tour player recite the greatest pleasure line and can confidently say that there are three active players on the PGA Tour who've actually read those words in print. (That would be the law firm of Ogilvy, Herman and Blair).

Because golf course setups have become far more forgiving – owing to the MacKenzie philosophy, complaints and suggestions of the players and to the social media chorus that we want more birdies ­– players seek to launch shots as high as they can, with as little spin as they can, with as long of a driver as they can handle.

Wait, so the players try to make birdies to please social media, not because it helps lower their scores? Kinky!

Distance has become a means to an end so much, that many are crying for a roll back of the ball when all that needs to happen is to roll back to an era when one man had the guts and the acuity to not listen to the players, or the pervading philosophy of fairness.

Imagine if the U.S. Open and other events returned to this demanding philosophy. Players out of necessity would choose balls that spin more, heads that were smaller so they could shape shots, shots that would start lower for more control and golf swings would evolve to find the balance of distance and accuracy. In time an athlete would come along who could solve the puzzle of how to hit the ball far and straight. 

Yes, they never practice how to hit it straighter these days, these kids. 

It is amazing how quickly some forget the bomb and gouge era of the early 21st century when rough and narrowness was employed to offset a distance explosion. That was back when Brandel was pro-MacKenzie and pro-bifurcation.