The Other Team Event Hanging Over This Week's Ryder Cup

The PGL’s Andy Gardiner

The PGL’s Andy Gardiner

All signs suggest the disruptor golf leagues declared dead multiple times by Tour toadies are, miraculously, still hanging around. There may even be a conversation or twelve this week between Vice Captains and players about who is in and where.

The Saudi’s and their SGL, a rip off of all things Premier Golf League only with a Middle East-heavy schedule?

Or will the new Strategic Alliance keep everyone a happy PGA Tour/European Tour camper?

Judging by Phil Mickelson’s remarks to Gary Williams, the PGA Champion is still very much interested in the proposals. Armed with major championship exemptions for another few years, his fearless jabs at the PGA Tour model suggest he’s open to the ideas.

Here is a link to the interview portion where Williams and Mickelson discuss the wraparound schedule, PIP and team league proposals merge:

A few curious and noteworthy comments by Mickelson:

  • He said of the wraparound, the Tour is “going away from that next year”. Not sure if that was a slip up or slip of the tongue regarding the 2023 schedule and beyond.

  • Mickelson lamented that only 26% of the revenue goes to the players and agreements requiring the Commissioner’s approval. He said that while players use the engine of the PGA Tour to be successful, “we don’t make a majority of our revenue from the PGA Tour” we don’t own our media writes, and YouTube “make millions” off it, citing Bryson’s 6th hole tee shot at Bay Hill earlier this year. The clip does have 1.4. million views and in YouTube money, that’s not much barring a massive sweetheart deal with the Tour.

  • He says “top guys are being taken advantage of” and believes the PIP money offered by Ponte Vedra “sounds like a lot” but in the “big scheme” doesn’t “even come close to being equitable.”

  • Mickelson said the “competition is going to be good” for all.

  • He said for the first time “the top players are being valued by the PGA Tour” and the players are “so far down the line on, kind of, the bullying tactics that have been used to suppress the top players on the PGA Tour,” that this will all come down to what’s best for fans.

  • He said it’s “tough when only 4 people have a vote” and of the PGA Tour, says “I’m not sure we have, internally, the structure to fix it.”

On the PGL side, co-founder Andy Gardiner gave an interview to Golf Monthly and reminded how this week’s event is the inspiration for the concept:

If you can bring any of the brilliance of the Ryder Cup into a more regular format, then it’s got to be a good thing.

It’s easier for a fan to have allegiance to a team than it is to an individual.

Some individuals can have it – that’s where Tiger was utterly brilliant because he was so dominant that you could fall in love with him as the dominant player, or you could be fascinated by him.

But what everyone else was doing was backing the underdog because everyone else was an underdog.

What he did was to ignite both sides.

You had one group who wanted to see him win everything and you had those who wanted someone else to win.

Ryder Cup Course Setup: How Low Will They Go?

Screen Shot 2021-09-19 at 8.39.21 PM.png

Today’s Quadrilateral kicks off Ryder Cup week looking at course setup ploys dating to the 1950s and how in many ways the gamesmanship was taken to strange new places in the last two Cups.

Plus, I wonder not very subtly whether Whistling Straits a different beast for the home team? And round up some random preview reads and Tweets.

Two items I don’t want you to miss just in case reading about course setup ploys in one newsletter is asking a lot on a Monday: Ward Clayton has the stunning tale of Skip Alexander’s place in Ryder Cup lore. This was a totally new one to me and fascinating to learn about.

And The Fried Egg offered this vignette and discussion of the venue:

State Of The Game 115: Ryder Cup Preview With Andrew Coltart

Screen Shot 2021-09-15 at 8.23.50 PM.png

Andrew Coltart’s a six-time European Tour winner, former Ryder Cupper, current Sky Sports commentator and proud Scotsman. He joined Rod Morri, Mike Clayton and yours truly to discuss all things Ryder Cup and a little Solheim Cup as well. I think you’ll really enjoy this one, especially some of Coltart’s insights into this year’s team.

You can give Andrew a Twitter follow here. He will be in Wisconsin next week covering the event for Sky Sports.

Links to your favorite podcast app landing pages for SOTG are here, or you can listen via this embed:

Steph Curry To Join Golf Channel's "Live From" As Part Of New High 8-Figure NBC Deal

Screen Shot 2021-09-14 at 7.49.14 PM.png

Variety’s Matt Donnelly reports on Steph Curry’s “sweeping, first-of-its-kind talent deal with Comcast NBCUniversal” that will feature Curry all over NBC and Universal, including next week’s Ryder Cup.

The “high eight-figure” agreement includes Curry’s Unanimous Media and covers all of the conglomerate’s various businesses.

It’s an impressive, if not urgent, move from Comcast NBCU, led by Brian Roberts and Jeff Shell, to secure talent with mass appeal in a landscape littered with blank checks from the streamers. NBCU has always touted its vertical integration program “Symphony,” but the Curry deal looks and feels like an aggressive play to realize the full power of its portfolio.

First up for Curry on the sports side is joining NBC Sports’ Golf Channel for coverage of the ultimate team golf event, the Ryder Cup. He will create original content for the channel’s acclaimed “Live From the Ryder Cup” coverage and GolfPass, which will be featured internationally on Sky Sports.

In the New York Post story there was this B-speak gem:

Aside from the Unanimous deal, Comcast NBCUniversal said its been developing a “symphonic cross-portfolio approach” of entertainment content deals with talent like Meghan Trainor and Miley Cyrus, Seth MacFarlane and Justin Lin.

Quadrilateral Ryder Field Trip Attendance Report And Uniforms First Look

Screen Shot 2021-09-13 at 10.23.21 AM.png

Steve Stricker had his second small ding in as many days. First it was Billy Horschel not being on his radar and now it’s the “entire team” practice session lacking three key players.

As I note in this Quadrilateral for paying subscribers, there is a legit excuse for two but Koepka’s no-show has to be causing concern about his ability to play. Particularly given the violent nature of his wrist collision with an East Lake tree root.

I also cover the uniform unveiling for Europe on Monday and they appear both strange and embarrassingly expensive.

Ryder Cup: Teams Take Shape

Screen Shot 2021-08-29 at 7.33.15 PM.png

I watched the BMW Championship with a keen eye on the Ryder Cup race. I’m hear to report: it’s amazing what a week can do.

Because it sure seems both Captain’s are down to one tough decision based on points races, recent play and recent Tweets about driver shafts.

I cover all of that in today’s Quadrilateral for all to read, though only paid subscribers get to make their nominations for those last picks.

Spieth: “I’d rather play better at the Ryder Cup than in the Tour Championship"

Screen Shot 2021-08-21 at 8.22.17 PM.png

Nice spot by Golf.com’s Josh Berhow to catch this sensational quote from Jordan Spieth on Wednesday’s Pat McAfee Show to plug the new FanDuel partnership. While the Ponte Vedra Police are probably wondering if they should charge his fine account, most golf fans will love Spieth for his Ryder Cup passion.

“I’d rather play better at the Ryder Cup than in the Tour Championship,” he said. “… We never get team sports, so to be able to have team sports — when you win a championship in team sports you get your parade, right? For us, that’s the Sunday afternoon after winning a Ryder Cup on U.S. soil, where everyone sticks around and you get to kind of party with everybody. That’s our parade. That’s what we look forward to.”

And chasing FedExCup points, is what he also meant to say.