Friday
Feb182005
Scoring at “The Glass”

In the Feb. 18 Golf World, Tim Rosaforte offered up this paragraph in his “Quiet Please” column. The bracketed comments are mine.
“The great ball/distance debate is heating up again, but lost in the 62 shot by Phil Mickelson at The Glass last week [The Glass? Is that like, near The Point, The Bay, The Grove, The Hay and The Beach, you know?], and the driver-wedge game being played by Lefty and the other big hitters on the PGA Tour, is that the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am tournament record of 20-under 268, shot by Mark O’Meara in 1997, remains in the books. [Uh, Phil missed tying it by 1, does that mean if he tied it or broke it that there would be cause for alarm?] Ultimately, course conditions and the human nervous system will balance out the home run ball. [Haven’t there been like a jillion stories in the last week with Tiger and Phil saying those course conditions - say narrowed fairways – are meaningless because they just bomb driver no matter what?] Like defense in Super Bowls, it’s still the short game that wins tournaments [yes, flip wedges into 450 yard par-4 would qualify as short game winning tournaments], and they haven’t invented a ball that goes straight under pressure. [Uh, bad news, the ball goes pretty straight for these guys under all conditions.]”
