Video: Tom Watson On Callaway Live!
/Great chat with the five-time Open Champion who will hopefully be teeing up at St. Andrews in the Senior Open in a few weeks.
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
Great chat with the five-time Open Champion who will hopefully be teeing up at St. Andrews in the Senior Open in a few weeks.
Joanne Carner
While Joanne Carner won't find it too funny, the USGA wisely had an equipment specialist at this week's U.S. Senior Women's Open registration just in case some of the legends showed up with clubs which, shall we say, haven't been seen in these parts for some time. They've tested 20 clubs, with seven being deemed non-conforming, most likely due to worn grooves.
As Beth Ann Nichols writes for Golfweek, Joanne Carner has had to scramble to find a new wedge for her Chicago Golf Club scrambling. Carner turned up at the Open with a Wilson R90 sand wedge from her heyday that probably lacked conforming grooves on the face.
“Oh, it was awful,” said Carner of parting with a club that’s been critical to her game around the greens and from 75 yards out for so many years. It felt like parting with an old friend.
When head pro John Guyton got wind of Carner’s predicament, he pulled out the wedges that had been cleared away from the pro shop to make room for championship merchandise and presented them to Carner. The 79-year-old legend whittled it down to two wedges, and Guyton adjusted both to match the loft and lie of old faithful. Guyton had the clubs out to Carner before she’d even reached the first green of her practice round. She wound up choosing a Titleist Vokey 54-degree wedge that was bent to 55.
Andy Johnson has done a superb job capturing the history of Chicago Golf Club, one of America's most important golf courses last seen hosting a Walker Cup. However, this time around Fox Sports 1 will be giving it the full coverage blowout, so check those local listings (I couldn't find broadcast times online).
Beth Ann Nichols with a nice primer on what it took to get this tournament going and who the key players will be.
Dan Moore takes an architectural angle as well in examining this grand old design.
The USGA has full coverage here.
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They've been whapping golf balls around Gullane Hill since the 1600's and turned the hill over to golf in the late 1880s, yet somehow this is only the second big pro golf event there this century.
The European Tour makes a big return this week after a bold move in 2015 to bring the Scottish Open to charming Gullane. Coverage this week is split in the US between Golf Channel and NBC, so check those local listings.
All signs on social suggest it's faster and firmer than last time around, and that was a pretty lively year.
Adam Schupak at MorningRead.com on the big return and why Gullane is such a special (and bold) choice for the Scottish Open.
Gary Williams and I discussed the wonders of this special property and its historic place in the game.
Punters will enjoy this Scottish Open preview by Betfair.
The club's posted flyover on YouTube...
Not much footage, but into the second Open film from Carnoustie, I'm sensing a trend already: rain!
Make sure to check out Walter Hagen's swing and suave. And that Claret Jug ceremony coat. Byron Nelson finished fifth to Cotton, who won by two strokes over Reg Whitcombe.
Full title reads: "CARNOUSTIE". OPEN GOLF CHAMPIONSHIP AT CARNOUSTIE Carnoustie, Scotland. Crowds watching the boards at British Open Golf Championship at Carnoustie, Scotland. It is raining - people with umbrellas. Various shots of the contestants playing golf and the crowds watching. Men clearing rain from parts of the course.
There were plenty of fascinating surprises and a few bold moves made the PGA Tour in revamping it schedule.
In this quick-take for Golfweek, I cover some of the questions, positives and negatives of the new 2018-19 PGA Tour schedule, the first with a May PGA Championship. Mostly, I'm struck by the idea of vacating Labor Day weekend.
To expand on what I wrote for Golfweek, I'll certainly defer to the TV Execs, Tour VP's and numbers crunchers who probably can make the case that football fans have already fled by Labor Day. And as I noted for Golfweek, Atlanta is a circus that weekend. But as a sports fan, Monday of Labor Day has been fairly uneventful, and the PGA Tour's FedExCup concluding on that day seemed like a fantastic way of saying, "that's all folks!"
Which is why in today's Alternate Shot with Matt Adams (who has a nice list of issues with the schedule), I suggest that my hope is a change in time that has golf reclaiming that weekend and finishing on that Monday.
Rex Hoggard talks to Jay Monahan about what drove the changes but sees traffic congestion issues in the new schedule before playoff time.
If that all sounds clean and easy, consider that the run up to the post-season will now feature a major (The Open), a World Golf Championship (Memphis) and the Wyndham Championship. Including the three playoff stops, that’s five must-play events in a six-week window.
He notes a similar congestion problem in the Masters lead up, with the Honda Classic and Arnold Palmer Invitational very much in danger of losing top players with two WGC's events. Is this a bad time to mention (again) how I think WGC events are really doing no one any good?
Joel Beall has seven takeaways, but he sees Valspar taking the biggest hit in Florida and he may be right. But don't underestimate the player enjoyment of Innisbrook and the growing disdain for PGA National and Bay Hill hurting those two. He also makes a strong case for continued struggles mid-summer for new stops trying to lure players as they either break between the U.S. Open and The Open, or play European events.
Andy Pazdur joined Morning Drive to discuss the PGA Tour's approach:
However, you know the M's love their subscriptions!
Say, how the auto manufacturers are taking car leases, losing the down payment into the monthly cost, and calling them...subscriptions. Ding! Millennial joy!
With nearly 70% of you saying no to paying for the proposed Tiger v. Phil match revealed by Alan Shipnuck and without any other known details (such as follow-up competitions as part of the package or a format that promotes presses), the organizers will face an uphill battle getting golf fans to pony up. Then again, 22% said you'd pay between $1 and $50.
So perhaps as part of a subscription, or incentive to subscribe to an app this match could make sense?
There are certainly plenty of entities out there right now who would love to include Tiger v. Phil as their entry into sports. And perhaps throw in future undercards of Shell's type matches.
We discussed the poll (thanks again for voting) on Morning Drive:
The singer was spotted at Chicago Golf Club for day one of U.S. Senior Women's Open practice.
Rickie Fowler teed up at North Berwick, finished just barely in bounds at 18 and is using a push cart as he prepares to defend his 2015 Scottish Open at nearby Gullane.
After contending at the Greenbrier Classic, Harold Varner kept his word and cut mom and dad's lawn.
Sunday: -12 at @AMilitaryTribute. Monday: Mowing Mom and Dad’s grass. #LiveUnderPar
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The inspiration that is Tommy Morrissey continues to attack the game with vigor and nearly made an ace at Pinehurst's Cradle.
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They didn't call him the Silver Scot for nothing, as Tommy Armour looks as eloquent as we've always been told in winning Carnoustie's first Open Championship.
Or, gulp, as the gentleman presenting the Claret Jug dares to call it, the British Open. In Scotland!
The final leaderboard, where Armour outlasted Argentina's Jose Jurado, and a write up can be viewed here.
The highlights with audio, including Armour's use of the word "domiciled":
Tommy Armour pierces the field at Carnoustie. Keep in touch with us! Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/The-Open-Championship/ Twitter - https://twitter.com/TheOpen Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/theopen/
The Pathe version without sound includes some different footage, including a monster flagstick screen captured above.
Full title reads: "Carnoustie. Open Golf Championship. Tommy Armour - Edinburgh born - takes championship to America for eight consecutive time." Carnoustie, Scotland. Prince Edward, Prince of Wales (Later King Edward VIII, Duke of Windsor) arrives on the tee to start the British Open Golf Championship.
This week we break down Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson potentially facing off for $10 million (02:42) and preview the Scottish Open (22:27) before Atlanta Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan joins us to talk about his experience growing up with golf (41:32).
As always we're brought to you by Callaway and this week our friends at Helix with a fantastic coupon code, so listen close!
Great line from Eamon Lynch in his Golfweek column zeroing in on PGA Tour cheating, of which there is very little. Nonetheless, with an incident like last week's Sung Kang drop location refuted by his playing partner Joel Dahmen, not addressing such situations publicly gives the impression of rules enforcement complacency.
PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan took a positive step in making public drug test violations. He ought to put in place a similarly transparent process to address credible accusations of cheating. The number of deceitful players is small, but there is no deterrent if a player knows his (or her) Tour lacks either the process or stomach to expose them.
It’s inevitable the Tour’s standing will be impacted if a player is found to have cheated. What is avoidable, however, is tarnishing the hard-earned reputation of the 99 percent with a perception that rogues are shielded from the reckoning they deserve.
Look no further than slow player as example A when nothing is done.
Just weeks after his U.S. Open breach of etiquette and subsequent claim to have used the rules to his advantage, Phil Mickelson breached the same rules he purported to know so well during Sunday's the Greenbrier Classic.
The violation, which I'm pretty sure 99.9% of PGA Tour pros know is a no-no:
After consulting a rules official, Phil Mickelson assessed himself a 2-stroke penalty for improving his line of play (violation of Rule 13-2). pic.twitter.com/61GiY5ggaj
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) July 8, 2018
The conversation with official Robby Ware:
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It's fascinating to see the PGA Tour on all of its social media accounts billing this as a player calling a penalty on himself. It's an unusually desperate and ignorant position to take from the land of #LiveUnderPar (well except in this case).
To review: Mickelson asked a question sensing he might have violated the rules and likely anticipated someone spotting the violation on the PGA Tour Live telecast. He got the explanation from Robby Ware and was subsequently penalized after Ware double checked, out of kindness.
So please, whether this "called a penalty on himself" nonsense is born out of ignorance or just a marketing effort to show that living under par means calling penalties on oneself, do not lump this incident with the many folks who have called penalties that no one else could see or possibly have known about. Especially since many of those incidents, which we rightly hold up for being incredible displays of integrity, happened because the player could not live with themselves thinking they had violated the rules.
Phil's case was a simple act of ignorance. He would have been assessed a penalty after a those monitoring the telecast would have passed the word along of his silly-stupid move.
Unless, of course, no one was watching PGA Tour Live. A very real possibility.
Kevin Na won the Military Salute At The Greenbrier Classic and with it, the classiest, biggest plasticware or hookah I've ever seen.
Sei Young Kim shatters the LPGA's scoring record by four with a nine shot win at the Thornberry Classic. Instead of showing you the trophy selfie, check out this great shot with her scorer and standard bearer:
Russell Knox took the Dubai Duty Free Irish Open in a sudden death playoff and is magically Scottish again in a Ryder Cup year.
Nelson Ledesma won the LECOM Health Challenge and with it the most attractive bulletin board in golf.
The USA men and women won the Palmer Cup at Evian, France where, for a change, it was not raining.
2018 Arnold Palmer Cup Champions #TeamUSA #APCup #Rolex
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I'm not sure why my pros don't do this when a putter has misbehaved for the final time. Nice work Danny Lee...
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Matt Kuchar, Tommy Fleetwood and Sergio Garcia at the Royal Box, Wimbledon 2018.
“Gentlemen, please find your seats.” - Umpire, probably. 😂 #LiveUnderPar 🎾
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Joshua Kelley with the ultimate don't-try-this-at-home trick shot.
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Alan Shipnuck reveals for Golf.com that Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson have been plotting a $10 million, winner-takes-all (right!) match with major sponsors and television. It sounds like the concept is a burgeoning franchise in the vein of All-Star Golf and Challenge Golf matches from the past (Google it precious generation).
An initial match in Las Vegas — Shadow Creek is the likely venue — is just the beginning of their shared vision. Mickelson says he and Woods hope to play a couple exhibitions a year, around the world. Sometimes they could partner up — depending on how the Ryder Cup goes, it's easy to envision Tiger and Phil taking on two top Europeans (a match with Rory McIlroy and Ian Poulter as the opposition could be particularly juicy). Woods and Mickelson are both shrewd businessmen, and they are trying to set up this new venture so they essentially own the matches and thus will get a chunk of the TV revenue, merchandising, and sponsorship dough.
That sounds like a pay-per-view model to me.
The value has decreased a bit with the whole kumbaya, bonding-over-hating-Tom-Watson, cart-driving mania. But, maybe the lovebirds can create some dramatic tension with the winner-takes-all approach even if we don't really believe it.
Tiger could bring his tailer to the first tell to help Phil get a better-fitting Mizzen & Main shirt.
Phil could replace brother Tim with Stevie Williams.
Anyway, we have time to work on theatrics.
So...assuming this is a pay-per-view model, what would you pay?
Geoff Shackelford is a Senior Writer for Golfweek magazine, a weekly contributor to Golf Channel's Morning
Copyright © 2022, Geoff Shackelford. All rights reserved.