"[Long Drive] is a sport built solely on the outcome of one very specific physical movement in the same way javelin or shot put or high jump are"

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My State of the Game colleague Rod Morri was not as caught up in last week’s Long Drive championship and Bryson DeChambeau’s inspirational top 8 performance. While Long Drive is a fascinating way to show off alternative skills and real athleticism given what goes into it, Morri’s reminder is a good table setter for the upcoming “skill” discussion (assuming the governing bodies decide to do anything significant, a huge if at this point).

Morri writes for Golf Australia:

As dumb as it sounds to say out loud, there are a few things that make golf ‘golf’ and one of the most important is the multi-dimensional nature of the skills required to play it.

From the 300 yard tee shot to the three foot putt (and everything in between), the game is an endless test of fine motor skills, raw power and the ability to think critically.

Most sports don’t have anywhere near as many layers as golf and those that do tend to have teams made up of specialists in different areas.

Cricket has predominantly either batters or bowlers with genuinely world class all-rounders being the smallest group in the game.

Long drive has almost none of this. It is a sport built solely on the outcome of one very specific physical movement in the same way javelin or shot put or high jump are.

It lacks all – or more accurately, any – of the nuance of golf where the outcome of any given shot accounts for only a small part of the whole.

Basically, a dumbing down of the sport. But isn’t that pretty much where golf leadership wants the sport to go in hopes of reaching a younger audience? So why would they do anything?

Bryson Steals The Long Drive (Streaming) Show

Let’s call it the Golf Channel bounce.

In its transition to an all-PGA Tour focus all-the-time, the long drive property built-up by NBC and Golf Channel was abandoned a couple years too soon.

A weird, almost security-camera vibe to the streaming coverage didn’t stop the coveted young demographic from enjoying Bryson DeChambeau’s terrific showing (final eight) in the post-Golf Channel, re-imagined-on-a-shoe-string-budget World Long Drive Championships

Golf.com’s James Colgan covers the backstory of how long drive reached the point and is now resurgent thanks in large part to Bryson DeChambeau’s performance this week. Heck, maybe there’s a sports network out there that’ll take a chance on them? Cheap content!

When you have drama like this, who wouldn’t want to put this on TV:

Bryson To Take His Shot At Long Drive

Bryson DeChambeau announced he’s been invited to participate in the event formerly known as “World Long Drive” the week after this year’s Ryder Cup.

You have to admire the willingness to take a shot, though sadly it comes after Golf Channel attempted to sell the property before mothballing it last year.

Perhaps Bryson’s presence will create a new TV or streaming opportunity?

The current rightsholders explain the new approach to “Long Drive” and while it will not be a “world” event this year, they are forging ahead.

Report: Golf Channel Puts World Long Drive Association On The Market

Golf.com’s Josh Sens with news of Golf Channel and parent company NBC putting the World Long Drive Association on the market.

A spokesperson for Golf Channel, which owns and operates the WLDA, told GOLF.com that the network is looking to unload the tour due to a range of pandemic-related factors, including dwindling sponsorship dollars, safety concerns and travel restrictions for what is “a truly global sport with hitters from around the world.”

“Given the current environment and challenges being presented by Covid-19,” the spokesperson said, Golf Channel is also “looking to focus on its core business of media.”

Golf Channel acquired the WLDA in 2016.

Maurice Allen On "Being Black In A White Sport"

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Maurice Allen, the 2018 World Long Drive champion, shared his thoughts in a GolfDigest.com guest piece on “being black in a white sport.” The thoughts are jarring and upsetting but well worth your time to digest.

Allen also goes pretty deep into some of the bizarre psyche’s permeating parts of the game and which we all have possibly sensed, but maybe tried to not think about.

Of course there are things like this…

In my part of the game, the long-drive arena, we’re supposed to be flashy, to be entertainers. Except white long drivers are praised for being colorful and flamboyant, while I’m called a showboat.

But this is the paragraph that proved most unnerving and applicable to way too many elements of the sport.

That’s what breaks my heart about golf. It’s supposed to be a game of integrity. I’ve found it to be anything but. I’m not talking about it being elitist. I’m talking about its entitlement. To me, that word means something different. Because when you’re entitled, you have a responsibility to use that privilege in a meaningful way. Instead, golf acts as a club. It’s often hard to get in, or it makes excuses for the errors of those in the club. We have given so many excuses for foolishness that you delay change. You’re not dealing with the actual situation. If we have a problem, we have to address it.

That's Embarrassing Files: World Long Driver Prematurely Celebrates, Then Snaps His Driver

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This one has it all for Will Hogue: the premature celebration followed by an effortless club snap after finding out his World Long Drive shot finished off the grid and was unable to put his next in play. The finals are set for Wednesday night on Golf Channel.

393! Maurice Allen Avoids Hitting Any Of Those Killer Bugs, Wins World Long Drive

There is a golf ball there...amidst the bugs. Or are they bats? Or night-flying raptors?

There is a golf ball there...amidst the bugs. Or are they bats? Or night-flying raptors?

A year after an early elimination when he was a World Long Drive favorite, Maurice Allen returned to Winstar resort and battled some of Oklahoma's largest insects to hit a 393-yarder to edge Justin Moose in the 2018 World Long Drive. Allen's long drive came on his eighth and final shot. 

On the women's side, Phyllis Meti beat Chloe Garner for her third World Long Drive title. 

Allen's final shot might have you playing the ball a bit more forward next time you tee it up. You might also throw in some extra bug spray for that trip to Winstar. 

Sorry: World Long Drive Succeeds On Many Levels

I couldn't disagree more with my GolfDigest.com colleague Joel Beall who felt robbed watching the World Long Drive Championship, suggesting what he saw reinforced why it's a "fringe event." He also suggests the Long Drive needs new presentation and format ideas, but as someone whose watched the event the last few years, including in person in 2013, I'd counter that the extended match play format had players better prepared when we got to the final nights. I just wish the landing grid was about 10 yards wider.

But more to the big picture status of the event: I love Long Drive because it genuine presents real athletes using their athleticism in a different way than PGA Tour players, featuring real stories of golfers doing amazing things to a ball. Beall is right that some of the PGA Tour driving distances make today's 400-yarders in the Long Drive seem less impressive, but considering the contest faced some headwinds, I found the numbers pretty astounding.

It's also refreshing to see different forms of golf succeed beyond the weekly stroke play. But golf is so tradition-based and uptight that the theatrics presented in the Long Drive make many uncomfortable. I get that. But as a lover of tradition, I'm also open to anything that shows how golf can be embraced in divergent ways that ultimately are about exposing us to people of extraordinary skill.

Meanwhile, the news was positive for new Long Drive owner Golf Channel, as Tuesday's rating for the live Round of 16 was up 263% over 2014, while the final night saw a 43% increase over 2014. Both ratings were in the vicinity of last week's Frys.com Open numbers. With replays and NBC airing in December, the Long Drive will be seen by many more eyeballs than any of the fall PGA Tour events.

Here is GolfChannel.com's video of the final match won by Tim Burke, now a two-time long drive champion.