Monday At The 2022 U.S. Open
/All live on tape from Brookline.
Join the Quad family and thanks to all who have been so supportive.
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
All live on tape from Brookline.
Join the Quad family and thanks to all who have been so supportive.
Doug Ferguson files an AP report on PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan’s booth visit—finally!—blasting the Saudi Arabia government backed golf league. Facing questions from Jim Nantz, a severely overdue dicussion about the money source took place on national televsion.
Speaking of the folks who brought us 9/11, journalist carvings, beheadings galore and high oil prices because it’s fun for the Crown Prince—Monahan offered this:
“It’s not an issue for me, because I don’t work for the Saudi Arabian government,” Monahan said, a veiled dig at the notion of being a free agent. “But it probably is an issue for players who chose to go and take that money. I think you have to ask yourself a question: Why.
“Why is this group spending so much money — billions of dollars — recruiting players and chasing a concept with no possibility of a return?” he said. “At the same time, there’s been a lot of questions, a lot of comments, about the growth of the game. And I ask, ‘How is this good for the game?’”
Monahan also focused on the relative integrity of PGA Tour competition compared to the first LIV stop.
“You’ve got true, pure competition, the best players in the world here at the RBC Canadian Open, with millions of fans watching. And in this game, it’s true and pure competition that creates the profiles and presences of the world’s greatest players. And that’s why they need us. That’s what we do,” Monahan said.
Commissioner Jay Monahan joined the final-round broadcast to discuss the state of golf and the PGA TOUR. pic.twitter.com/UhvtDcHiup
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) June 12, 2022
While we already knew of these were the focus, the June 8th specifics suggest as much as a thirty percent reduction for the longest of long hitters. Stachura writes:
The original proposed change was to raise the test swing speed for the Overall Distance Standard from the current 120 miles per hour to 125. The June 8 announcement now proposes studying a test speed “between 125 and 127 mph and will include studies of the effects of these test speeds on the launch conditions and aerodynamics of the golf ball.” At the maximum, that speed would be more than 12 mph faster than the current average clubhead speed on the PGA Tour but only a little more than two mph faster than the two current fastest swings on tour, Cameron Champ (124.76) and Branden Hagy (124.41).
As the USGA’s John Spitzer previously indicated when the speed being considered was 125 mph, nearly all of the balls played on tour would be non-conforming under the new standard, and of course many of those balls are also among the most purchased balls on the market.
The bigger set of changes proposed in the June 8 notice, however, would not affect average golfers, but could dramatically alter the performance of drivers at the elite level. The new proposal suggests tournaments or tours could institute a “model local rule” for equipment that would severely roll back how springy faces are and how forgiving drivers are on off-center hits.
As Stachura notes, these are just proposals and may have been crafted to begin a discussion, listen to the inevitable whining, and negotiate to a place that would keep courses relevant and anticipate the next generation of decathletes reared on modern stuff.
The notice also appears to have taken a few things off the table: grooves, changing the size of the ball or minimum ball spin.
Interested parties have until September 2nd to get their comments submitted. To date the manufacturers have been largely silent on the proposals.
It’s an action packed Sunday edition of the Quadrilateral as the U.S. Open is upon us.
I’ve got a quick recap of the crazy, if embarrassing week in London before we learn more about the 2022 U.S. Open host via historian Fred Waterman. Plus, all you need to better appreciate the storied course including two embeds I’ll post here as well:
I’ve seen some wild stuff in this PGA Tour v. LIV situation but in a lot of ways, the likely fissures in the sport have only just begun based on CBS’s opening to Saturday’s RBC Canadian Open.
Nick Piatstowski at Golf.com summarized it here.
After showing some golf and maybe selling the leaderboard of 5 world top 18’s a wee bit hard—it is a doozy of a final group Sunday with Finau, McIlroy and Thomas—Jim Nantz explained how the LIV event in London had just concluded.
"Charl Schwartzel with his first win of any kind in six years, ranked 126th in the world, he was the victor of this 54-hole event of the tour that’s Saudi backed,” Nantz said.
Any kind and Saudi backed. That’s a declaration of war in the Hello Friendsphere!
Oh but it got better.
Faldo, speaking after clips of PGA Tour players talking:
“We’ve got two totally different golf tournaments. One, we play for tournaments and national championships over here. And the LIV Tour is what, 54 holes and no cut, shotgun start, you know, sounds crazy.
“And the other thing that is very noticeable is the players that have left. Obviously they’re in mid-40s, they’ve been out here on Tour, they’ve been battling away and they probably know they can’t win out here against these youngsters. So they’re taking the easy option to go over and try and win a boatload of cash.”
Then Nantz turned up the heat after admitting that CBS’s relationship with the PGA Tour is something they’re proud of.
“But I think about — what I keep hearing from people, too, is a sense of disappointment, even a little betrayal. They’ve always been told the story, and I know it was true, that at some point in their careers the dream was to play on the PGA Tour, build a legacy, build your future financially.
“And the Tour’s been good to them. It’s a Tour that’s come into these communities for decades and made these communities better than how they were when they first got there. I’m talking not millions; I’m talking billions of dollars into these communities.”
He hit the billions word hard, as you can see in the video I tweeted of Nantz’s remarks:
Finally watched the Jim Nantz and @NickFaldo006 @GOLFonCBS intro to the @RBCCanadianOpen today. Hello Friends and former friends of the @PGATOUR! 🔥♨️ pic.twitter.com/G54JzebBEE
— Geoff Shackelford (@GeoffShac) June 12, 2022
Credit CBS for addressing the topic at the top of the show along with disclosure of the obvious Tour partnership and conflict. And for doing it in a way that came off as genuinely believing in what the traveling circus format has done for communities on the calendar. These are points not emphasized enough in this entire debacle.
But all parties will have some soul searching to do after their partners failed to take the disruptive threats seriously until it was too late. The Global Home has never publicly suggested LIV’s money source is one their members should not be associating with (unless you count vague references in leaked memos).
So that’s why Nantz noting the Saudi source Saturday was significant.
Either way, we’ve just watched a series of events emblematic of intense coddling that is now coming home to roost when players are not always held to account publicly for their actions, are held up as the greatest to ever play the game, have excuses regularly made for them when making a poor decision, and often believe—in key cases—they are the game.
There are some fabulous details in Sean Zak’s Golf.com story looking at two rules situations at the inaugural LIV Golf Invitational. That young man’s mane of Slugger White’s might be thinning grey by the time he lands back in the States!
In the first instance, a caddie signaled to another player what club was used. White decided to issue a warning even though the caddie in question is a pro jock. And Slugger also made a request to fill divots. Charming. So they don’t know the rules or etiquette.
On brand in Saudi golf land!
In the second incident, also involving J.C. Ritchie of South Africa, well, it’s less a clear violation but speaks to the integrity of the competition…
Phachara Khongwatamai, of Thailand, the third player in Ritchie’s group, was playing so well Thursday that many of his shots were being shown on the event’s coverage. Ritchie, noting the action of the cameras around them, was concerned that viewers streaming at home might have seen the infraction and thought it had been overlooked. That was Ritchie’s first question when he approached White near scoring.
“If something like that happens out there,” he asked White Thursday, “do you want me to just be quiet?”
White, it appeared, was unsure what to say. It was an odd question, to be sure, but Ritchie’s player support followed with the same query. What do you want us to do?
“Well, you have a fiduciary responsibility to the rest of the field,” White said.
“Did something happen out there?” I asked Ritchie as he headed in to finalize his scores.
His player support turned around and said, “No. Nothing.”
Phil Mickelson embraces Golf Saudi’s Majed Al Sorour (John Phillips/LIV Golf/Getty Images)
Former PGA Tour winner Joe Ogilvie has retired and gone into managing private equity but took to Twitter to offer this fascinating analogy of the current affairs pitting the PGA Tour vs. the Public Investment Fund Of Saudi Arabia.
Professional golf has just entered the unbundling phase. @TigerWoods first professional @PGATOUR event was almost 26 years ago, which led to the bundling of talent on one tour. Purses on the @PGATOUR went up, TV revenue went up and quality of all tournaments were elevated.
— Joe Ogilvie (@ogilviej) June 10, 2022
@PGATOUR had a massive advantage, 3/4 majors are on US soil , tournaments were better, purses much larger and players only had to traverse 3 time zones. World golf had no chance and the flywheel started. Finchem created the WGCs and #FedExCup, global talent was hooked.
— Joe Ogilvie (@ogilviej) June 10, 2022
Then along came negative interest rates. This bizarre idea conjured up by central bankers came along in Europe in 2014 (Japan & Sweden were 1st) and got progressively crazier through 2019. This caused private equity money to explode, with seemingly free money, new ideas are born.
— Joe Ogilvie (@ogilviej) June 10, 2022
Rival #golf tours started to come out of stealth mode around 2018, which makes sense. If $1 today is worth less than $1 10 years from now, why not spin up a professional golf league? #COVID paused things, but then the greatest asset bubble in history ensued.
— Joe Ogilvie (@ogilviej) June 10, 2022
Now there was not 1 rival tour (@premgolfleague) but 2! @LIVGolfInv pressed the accelerator down to the floor w/the greatest funding source in the world, at the exact same time the bubble started to burst and inflation exploded. Convenience and money are really compelling.
— Joe Ogilvie (@ogilviej) June 10, 2022
The same exact thing that brought the global golfer to the @PGATOUR, (convenience and money,) @LIVGolfInv multiplied by 3-5X. Rhymes a whole lot with what @netflix did, shot a money cannon straight through Hollywood…it also unbundled the TV/cable package. So what comes next?
— Joe Ogilvie (@ogilviej) June 10, 2022
@PGATOUR is in a pickle. They have the legacy & resources to compete, they also have relationships. You know who is the #ObiWan of golf? Chairman Fred Ridley. @LIVGolfInv killed it on their debut. Many more will jump ship, the money is too compelling, these guys run a business.
— Joe Ogilvie (@ogilviej) June 10, 2022
I doubt there is another league, unless @DPWorldTour partners w/ one…interest rates are going up & the money spigot is shutting. I doubt the guys who have jumped ship are banned forever by the @PGATOUR, eventually there will be bundling again.
— Joe Ogilvie (@ogilviej) June 10, 2022
The ball is in the @PGATOUR’s court but the clock is ticking. The golf world awaits a plan, hope they come up with a good one…
— Joe Ogilvie (@ogilviej) June 10, 2022
Next week’s U.S. Open is the first in Boston since 1988 and also the first since 9/11 when 15 of the 19 hackers were from Saudi Arabia, as was ringleader Osama bin Laden. As most know by now, the hijackers had multiple problematic ties to the government, with much of the information only coming out thanks to the persistence of victim families. And of the terrorists at Al Qaeda, like like LIV Golf, enjoyed Saudi funding.
Two flights hijacked on that awful day from Boston’s Logan Airport eventually flew into the World Trade Center, killing thousands.
With all of this horror in mind, families of 9/11 victims have sent a letter to Phil Mickelson, Dustin Johnson, Bryson DeChambeau, Patrick Reed and Kevin Na expressing outrage for participating in the new Saudi-backed LIV Golf league, reports the New York Post’s Brian Wacker.
“As a freedom-loving American, I am grateful to have the freedom of choice where I work and who I work for, and I respect your right as well,” wrote Terry Strada, the organization’s national chair and a mother of three whose husband, Tom, was on the 104th floor of the north tower of the World Trade Center during the attacks. “As a 9/11 widow, I feel compelled to help you understand the level of depravity the Kingdom engaged in when it knowingly sent government agents here to establish the support network needed for those hijackers.
“As you may know, Osama bin Laden and 15 of the 19 September 11 hijackers were Saudis. It was the Saudis who cultivated and spread the evil, hate-filled Islamist ideology that inspired the violent jihadists to carry out the deadly 9/11 attacks. And, most egregiously, it is the Kingdom that has spent 20 years in denial: lying about their activities, and cowardly dodging the responsibility they bear. Yet these are your partners, and much to our disappointment, you appear pleased to be in business with them.
“Given Saudi Arabia’s role in the death of our loved ones and those injured on 9/11—your fellow Americans—we are angered that you are so willing to help the Saudis cover up this history in their request for ‘respectability.’ When you partner with the Saudis, you become complicit with their whitewash, and help give them the reputational cover they so desperately crave—and are willing to pay handsomely to manufacture. The Saudis do not care about the deep-rooted sportsmanship of golf or its origins as a gentleman’s game built upon core values of mutual respect and personal integrity. They care about using professional golf to whitewash their reputation, and they are paying you to help them do it.”
Phil Mickelson embraces Majed Al Sorour, CEO of Saudi Golf Federation
— Phil Mickelson Tracker (@TrackingPhil) June 9, 2022
📸: John Phillips / Getty Images pic.twitter.com/Uai6rZyVdn
Lisa Antonucci with all of the need to know info, including TV times.
Photos from practice and the opening ceremony.
All sorts of fun “content” including the USA team trying to hit a 1-iron from Ben Hogan’s 18th fairway plaque.
Welcome to #CurtisCup week 🙌 pic.twitter.com/jTQ5NFHcuV
— The Curtis Cup (@CurtisCup) June 7, 2022
Merion dialed for The Curtis Cup 👌🏻 pic.twitter.com/cDrstQ60yj
— Stephen Britton CGCS (@sbrittonturf) June 7, 2022
Ben Hogan famously used a 1-iron to force a playoff and win the 1950 #USOpen at Merion.
— The Curtis Cup (@CurtisCup) June 9, 2022
Players from this year’s #CurtisCup Match got to see the iconic club up close and recreate Hogan’s shot with a replica. pic.twitter.com/9uAhRc3RdV
We all get that Phil Mickelson didn’t like Alan Shipnuck’s book or the things he said about the Saudis. But for Mickelson, ravaged by gambling debt, to ultimate land a big payday from the Public Investment Fund should put a smile on his face. This is what he’s always dreamed of, growing the game at a rural upscale London club with some of the game’s least likable former stars and young guns who were in the right place at the right time!
So you’d think he might let bygones be…uh no.
Shipnuck flew to London last minute without a credential to cover the LIV Invitational at Centurion, was later granted a press pass, and when he turned up for Mickelson’s post-round remarks, was ordered to leave after being seen by Lefty. Alan’s post and
Well, a couple of neckless security dudes just physically removed me from Phil Mickelson's press conference, saying they were acting on orders from their boss, whom they refused to name. (Greg Norman? MBS? Al Capone?) Never a dull moment up in here.
— Alan Shipnuck (@AlanShipnuck) June 9, 2022
Here's a snippet of video of @AlanShipnuck getting removed from Phil Mickelson's post-round interview this evening at the LIV event outside of London. Not shown: one of the security guards twice putting hands on Alan, who on both occasions said, "Do not touch me." Video by @CNN https://t.co/zQRTKfUNwd pic.twitter.com/r5jj0ysibe
— Fire Pit Collective (@firepitstories) June 9, 2022
Not a great look there for Mickelson instructor Andrew Getson or Greg Norman, who seem to be enjoying the moment.
Later on, Shipnuck revealed that he felt a presence behind him as he quarreled with security and shared his texts with Norman. Who, it turned out, was watching it all and not looking a day under 100.
You cannot make this shit up! I texted Greg Norman before someone sent me this video - I had no idea he was lurking behind me. pic.twitter.com/thgdMlfTAR
— Alan Shipnuck (@AlanShipnuck) June 9, 2022
The memes are flowing…
As always, this is available weekly for free, with long previews of all editions. Sign up here, it’s going to be a busy U.S. Open week for the Quad’s vast editorial operation.
While they sound happy to see both go, the amount of First World dirt spilled on Bryson DeChambeau to Golf Digest’s Dan Rapaport suggests his impending LIV departure for a $100 million advance really stings.
And it should. DeChambeau is a draw. Reed is not and never will be.
DeChambeau’s defiant and often erratic behavior began shortly after he played his way onto the PGA Tour in 2016. At an AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am early in his career, DeChambeau unleashed a profanity-laced tirade on a volunteer who failed to spot his errant ball. The incident was reported up the chain of command and, per sources familiar with the tour’s operations, almost certainly resulted in discipline. The tour didn’t speak to the incident, as is their long-standing policy, but according to one tour player, a similar situation played out years later at the Rocket Mortgage Classic.
In the summer of 2020, during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, tour officials and volunteers were instructed to be particularly conscious of where people could and could not go. After pounding range balls long after sundown, DeChambeau attempted to enter a building without his credential. When he was denied access, he grew agitated. Shortly thereafter, a tour official addressed the incident with an adamant DeChambeau, who was dumbfounded that the volunteer did not recognize him. This was the same week he objected to a cameraman following him for too long, after which he took a thinly veiled shot at the PGA Tour.
The story goes on to detail how Justine Reed had a direct line to a Tour executive who had to play the role of Team Reed concierge. Hope the benefits package for whoever that is included therapy and extra vacation time!
Mickelson, Norman, Johnson, Nicklaus and Tiger make news.
The news of Tiger’s U.S. Open WD got a special midday edition of The Quadrilateral.
Geoff Shackelford is a Senior Writer for Golfweek magazine, a weekly contributor to Golf Channel's Morning
Copyright © 2022, Geoff Shackelford. All rights reserved.