6.5 To 3.5: U.S. Rallies Late To Prevent International Blowout, Woods To Sit Saturday Morning

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It was a sensational day at firmer and faster Royal Melbourne, with the International team looking like they could win all five matches at one point before a foursomes session tie. This sets up a big Saturday with of four-ball and foursomes.

Woods plans to sit in the morning session, but is sending out the 0-2 team of Patrick Reed and Webb Simpson. The early morning matchups:

While the day was dominated by the Internationals, the standout moments belonged to the Americans turning two tied matches into 18th hole wins.

Patrick Cantlay sank this birdie putt to hold off Joaquin Niemann and Adam Hadwin. At the time, Team USA trailed 6-1.

Tiger’s approach to 18 set up this Justin Thomas clutch birdie putt:

Patrick Reed's "Fun" With The Crowd Highlighted And It Doesn't Go Over Well

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For the second day Patrick Reed and Webb Simpson lost a Presidents Cup match.

Reed, fresh off cheating at the Hero World Challenge, has been hearing it from fans so even though he made a putt just to halve a hole and keep his match at 2 down, the hubris and rage kicked in. The PGA Tour social account, perhaps encouraged by Team USA’s kid-gloves treatment of Reed, gave it a light spin and the commenters were not amused. Golfers, I’m pleased to say, are not embracing the nebulous behavior of Reed despite efforts to sugarcoat his actions.

The post:

And just some of the comments:

Presidents Cup: Are There Aussie Fanatics Paid To Act As Americans?

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Cover your children’s eyes. This could be jarring.

GolfDigest.com’s Shane Ryan wrote about the Presidents Cup first tee scene Thursday and subsequently reported that the group of red-white-and-blue “American” fans seated there are…Australians.

Worse, Ryan says they are part of The Fanatics group, and likely paid by event organizers to act as crazed, noisy, red-blooded Americans. Other outlets are noticing his Tweets, in order starting from the bottom up.

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Can't Make It Up Files: Ladies European Tour Confirms They Are Headed To That Bastion Of Gender Equity, Saudi Arabia

Hey, the women will get to enter restaurants through the front door as of this week!

No better time to go to Saudi Arabia then for a golf tournament!

Originally announced in late October, the details were made official today. From Reuters:

“I’m incredibly excited by this announcement and it is an honor for the Tour to be part of history in bringing the first-ever professional women’s golf event to Saudi Arabia,” LET CEO Alexandra Armas said in a statement.

“Confirmation of adding Saudi Arabia to our schedule for 2020 is an exciting prospect... and having seen the quality of the event staging for the Saudi International, I am sure this will be a fantastic experience for our players.”

A number of golfers have been roped in as ambassadors to promote the sport in the country, including Britain’s Carly Booth, Amy Boulden and Rachel Drummond, and Sweden’s Camilla Lennarth and Isabella Deilert.

It wasn’t long ago Booth was roasted for signing an endorsement deal with Saudi Arabia (Ewan Murray’s Guardian story from April.)

At least the LET learned from the European Tour’s mistake and did not mention the Crown Prince’s grand vision for golf.

Clayton On Royal Melbourne: "Perfection isn't always perfect"

It was a sensational first day at crispy and speedy Royal Melbourne (at least from the approaches in). While much focus has rightfully been on the players, the course really is the star.

The Composite Course’s routing and sequencing is a bit unusual for the Presidents Cup, so Golf Australia’s Mike Clayton looks at that and other minor flaws in what he sees as an otherwise flawless piece of architecture.

He addresses the bland 17th, which is actually a brilliant, Old Course-inspired opener most of the time:

With its hugely wide fairway the opening hole on the West steels from the principle of the shot off the first tee on The Old Course at St Andrews. At both it’s awfully hard to mess the drive up, allowing players the comfort of knowing they are unlikely to ruin their day almost before it has begun. 

The problem is a hole designed to open the course is the 17th this week, making it a bit like reading a book with the chapters out of order. It’s not a bad 17th hole but the 17th on the West Course (9th this week) might be the best par four in the country and the original 17th on the Composite (the 15th) is one of the finest par fives.

The very next hole, the par 5, 2nd West (the 18th) is played off the women’s tee this week as a par four. Whilst the carry bunkers wouldn’t pose a problem off the very back (par 5) tee they are too close to the tournament tee to even look ‘right’ because the scale doesn’t quite work.

A great long two-shotter is thus reduced down to a drive and a short iron and something MacKenzie wouldn’t even recognise if the measure is the clubs he wanted players to be hitting into one of the most beautiful green sites on the course.

Video: Presidents Cup Tribute To Peter Thomson

Nice to see a tribute to three-time (and only International winning) Presidents Cup captain and Australian golf great Peter Thomson as part of day one’s festivities. Besides the late Australian great’s family at the first tee, this feature aired on the broadcasts and social media.


Whoa: Sharp Internationals Open Up Stunning 4-1 Presidents Cup Lead Over USA

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Royal Melbourne looked stunning.

Quality golf from Tiger and most of the Internationals offset some rust, sloppiness and course management mistakes from the USA. And in what has been mostly lopsided, the International team opened up a stunning 4-1 lead as Team USA looked a bit overmatched at times (jet lag, speedy Royal Melbourne the likely culprits).

Friday’s foursomes, where USA teams have dominated (unlike the Ryder Cup), just got more interesting. This is the International team’s first lead after any session since 2005.

Tactically, the Patrick Reed placement with Webb Simpson will be questioned given Simpson’s recent strong play in matches with Matt Kuchar. Reed, predictably, was heckled loudly on the first tee and received lukewarm reactions throughout the day.

As for highlights, Sungjae Im’s first hole eagle was the only better shot than Tiger’s brilliant wedge and gimme:

Woods chip in at 5 as he carried Justin Thomas to the lone USA win:

Dustin Johnson driving the 11th may have been the most incredible shot of the day. He missed the eagle putt and his team halved the hole.

Friday’s foursomes deprived us of a Reed-Cam Smith showdown, and it sounds like that’s a shame given the tension as reported on by Mark Hayes:

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Nicklaus Rolex Sells For (Only!?) $1 Million

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I know, a piece of golf man jewelry that was on the wrist of Jack Nicklaus for for fifty years should go for $1 million.

Some thought it would match Paul Newman’s nearly $17.7 million watch price, but as Forbes noted, the opening bid was for $500,000 and two minutes later the auction closed at a $1 million bid.

Proceeds from the sale will benefit children's health care via the Nicklaus Children's Health Care Foundation.

Reed: If I Had Cheated, "It would have been a really good lie, and I would have hit it really close''

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Patrick Reed’s Presidents Cup press conference was carried live on Golf Channel and his attempt to answer questions about his Hero World Challenge run-in with the rules included an odd rationalization. From Bob Harig’s ESPN.com story on Reed’s remarks and the notion of cheating:

"It's not the right word to use,'' Reed said after a practice round at Royal Melbourne, where the Presidents Cup begins on Thursday. "At the end of the day, if you do something unintentionally that breaks the rules, it's not considered cheating, but I wasn't intentionally trying to improve a lie or anything like that. If I was, it would have been a really good lie, and I would have hit it really close.''

What an odd way to think.

Maybe Patrick’s new irons feature a sand shock absorption feature? Because I’m fairly confident no one who has played golf for any length of time would claim they are unable to see or feel the type of contact with the ground he displayed.

Video of the session, which includes Reed saying the matches are “personal” now that International team members have called him out:

Meanwhile there was little sugarcoating of the Reed situation on last night’s Live From the Presidents Cup (video embedded below):

Brandel Chamblee – “In general, the team will have the appearance of a well-oiled machine, but deep down, the marrow of this team, they will be affected by this controversy. Their DNA as a team has been altered. There are no two ways about it.”

Chamblee – “I have never seen a more obvious breach of the rule than this. One that is not in any way – nobody who watches it in any way will be able to acquit him of what transpired [at Hero World Challenge]. His comments aside, this was a gross breach of the rule. The court of public opinion is a lot harsher than the rule book. The rule book is going to give him two shots. The court of public opinion is going to make him pay for this for a long time.”

Nobilo – “Public opinion says this is far more egregious, but the rule book disagrees with that. That is why were are almost in a double jeopardy situation. If there is anything positive that does come out of this situation, is that this rule is addressed going forward.”

Chamblee – “To have somebody on your team who so flagrantly abuses the rules of the game of golf, and there is no more sacred rule in the game of golf than play it as it lies. They [the U.S. Team] have a couple of hurdles against them. They are on foreign territory and now they have ceded the higher moral ground to the other team.”

Chamblee – “The whole team made a deal with the devil when he was chosen for the U.S. Team. All of the baggage that they thought was going to come with him has multiplied exponentially with what happened last week. I cannot imagine that Tiger Woods’ choices for teammates for Reed can be anybody other than just himself.”

Jaime Diaz – “Everything was smooth and safe but for one thing. He didn’t think he moved any sand. Players are too good and have too much feel to not have a sensation like that. It is just hard to believe. I think this is going to hang him up forever.”

Jim Gallagher, Jr. – “This week might be difficult for Patrick Reed and it could be difficult for his partners. That is the hard part. The captains are trying to deflect it and go forward, but I don’t know if it will keep deflecting because this is growing into a life of its own.”

USGA, R&A Considering Letting Juniors Become Logo-Clads, For Expense Money

While junior golfers are now regularly clad in corporate logos, have their own tour reps and even endorse brands on their social media bios, the governing bodies are contemplating letting them take those endorsements to another level.

In Ryan Herrington’s Golf World look at where loosened and reimagined amateur status rules may go, he notes this late in the piece.

Where USGA officials see the most opportunity for potential changes to the amateur rules to have a meaningful impact is if restrictions on accepting money for expenses were to go away. Particularly in the case for junior golfers whose families don’t necessarily have the financial resources to compete beyond a very local basis.

“We just feel like would be a game-changer,” Winter says. “Yeah there would be logos in junior golf, but it would give so many more kids access. And it would in some ways democratize what is a pretty expensive sport by giving young players the ability to not only compete in golf but just experience golf in a more robust way, to really level the playing field.”

While I have little doubt there are cases where this will be true and might do wonders for de-emphasizing privileged upbringings, I would hope some in the sport might question the need to corporatize our youth at increasingly younger ages.

McIlroy On Saudi Decision: "There's a morality to it"

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Less noticed from Rory McIlroy’s lengthy Morning Drive appearance was his answer on passing up the European Tour’s Saudi Arabian stop, hosted by the dreadful Crown Prince.

While McIlroy considered himself hypocritical for watching last weekend’s heavyweight bout from Saudi Arabia, he is passing up a reported $2.5 million offer on moral and incovenience grounds, notes G.C. Digital.

"I’d rather play a couple of events on the West Coast and not have to travel all the way to Saudi Arabia," he said. "It’s just not something that would excite me.”

McIlroy hasn't revealed the early part of his 2020 schedule, but last season competed at Kapalua, Torrey Pines and Riviera Country Club. While travel and adhering to a winning formula are part of McIlroy's reasons for skipping the Saudi event, there is another.

"There's a morality to it as well," he said.

Els Sticking To Data Over Personality For His Captaincy Wisdom

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Even though Ernie Els believed certain pairings were a given based on personalities, his 15th Club-supplied data has said otherwise.

As Ben Everill reports for PGATour.com, the International team’s awful record in this event means Els has to side with the data over his gut.

Els won’t reveal his International pairings until Wednesday afternoon (Tuesday midnight ET) when the five Four-Ball matches are revealed, but he’s not about to waver. Data takes precedent over personality.

“I just have to keep my head down and keep stressing to the team it is about just that -- the team,” Els said. “The guys know where they stand. It’s very clear of what we expect and what we are doing on Thursday and Friday, especially.

“I have changed a little bit here and there where if a guy is not far off and they fit personality-wise, but I am really sticking to my data. We have to try something different. We have to play the guys where the planning points.”

Now we’ll get to see just how much analytics compete on a stage like Royal Melbourne.

USGA, R&A Punt On Amateur Status: Two Years Planned For Modernization Process

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While the issues are complex, that no definitive answers are coming for nearly two years on amateur status seems both odd and not surprising.

However, given California legislation that will expedite pay for college athletes and the crumbling notion of what it means to be an amateur golfer, mean waiting two years is too long.

For Immediate Release:

USGA AND THE R&A TO MODERNIZE RULES OF AMATEUR STATUS

LIBERTY CORNER, N.J., and ST. ANDREWS, Scotland (December 9, 2019) – The USGA and The R&A are conducting a review of the Rules of Amateur Status to make them easier to understand and apply.

The comprehensive evaluation is part of the continued joint effort to modernize the Rules by reducing complexity and ensuring the Rules effectively guide how the game is played today.

As part of a review process that began earlier this year, the governing bodies will seek the perspectives of golf’s stakeholders as an integral component of the review process, including elite amateur golfers, golf event organizers, national golf associations, professional golf associations and other industry partners. 

All the same boilerplate stuff from the distance study releases. But go on…

The aim is to provide the golf community with a modernized set of the Amateur Status Rules in late 2021, with the goal of an effective date of January 1, 2022. 

Thomas Pagel, senior managing director of Governance at the USGA, said, “One of golf’s greatest benefits is that it can be played by all ages and played for a lifetime. It is our goal to ensure that the fundamental concept of what it means to be an amateur golfer is clear and retained to promote fair competition and enjoyment for everyone, while still addressing many issues that seek to protect the game. This is a forward-thinking approach and engaging golfers is a key component of doing what’s best for golf.”

Grant Moir, director – Rules at The R&A, said, “We will be looking at the Rules of Amateur Status carefully and considering ways in which we can modernize them and bring them more into line with the way the modern sport is played. The code remains a fundamental framework for amateur golf and we will be listening to the views of players, officials and associations to give us a fully rounded view of how we can improve them.”

More listening to the players to shape rules related to the players. What could go wrong?

Meanwhile, what’s an amateur status press release without a mention of the dreaded hole-in-one prize issue?

In a separate move, effective January 1, 2020, the USGA and The R&A will introduce one change to Rule 3-2b of the Rules of Amateur Status, which regulates hole-in-one prizes. The Rules will no longer limit the prize an amateur golfer may win when making a hole-in-one outside a round of golf, including “stand-alone” and “multiple-entry” hole-in-one events. It is hoped the change will help to promote the game and cater to new audiences as well, and eliminate unnecessary restrictions for event organizers. 

New Rule 3-2b will read as follows:

Rule 3-2b. Hole-in-One Prizes 

An amateur golfer may accept a prize in excess of the limit in Rule 3-2a, including a cash prize, for making a hole-in-one during a round of golf on a golf course.

Now, about the takedown notices and amateur status threats aimed at teenagers who post a video on YouTube…

Rory: Reed Taking More Heat Than Most Because "It's Him"

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I rarely disagree with Rory McIlroy much these days as he’s become one of the game’s sharpest observers.

But his view of Patrick Reed’s blatant lie-improvement at the Hero World Challenge fails to inspire.

From today’s Morning Drive interview with Robert Damron and Paige Mackenzie, as reported on by G.C. Digital:

"I don’t think it would be a big deal if it wasn’t Patrick Reed. It’s almost like, a lot of people within the game, it’s almost like a hobby to sort of kick him when he’s down," McIlroy said Monday on "Morning Drive".

Said McIlroy: "I think the live shot isn’t as incriminating as the slow-mo. It’s hard, because you try to give the player the benefit of the doubt, right? He’s in there, he’s trying to figure out what way to play the shot.

“It’s almost like it’s obliviousness to it rather than anything intentful, in terms of trying to get away with anything.”

However, added McIlroy, “It doesn’t make it right what he did.”

The full interview is better than the text given how uncomfortable McIlroy sounds having to address Reed’s nonsense: