Twitter: GeoffShac
  • The 1997 Masters: My Story
    The 1997 Masters: My Story
    by Tiger Woods
  • The First Major: The Inside Story of the 2016 Ryder Cup
    The First Major: The Inside Story of the 2016 Ryder Cup
    by John Feinstein
  • Tommy's Honor: The Story of Old Tom Morris and Young Tom Morris, Golf's Founding Father and Son
    Tommy's Honor: The Story of Old Tom Morris and Young Tom Morris, Golf's Founding Father and Son
    by Kevin Cook
  • Playing Through: Modern Golf's Most Iconic Players and Moments
    Playing Through: Modern Golf's Most Iconic Players and Moments
    by Jim Moriarty
  • His Ownself: A Semi-Memoir (Anchor Sports)
    His Ownself: A Semi-Memoir (Anchor Sports)
    by Dan Jenkins
  • The Captain Myth: The Ryder Cup and Sport's Great Leadership Delusion
    The Captain Myth: The Ryder Cup and Sport's Great Leadership Delusion
    by Richard Gillis
  • The Ryder Cup: Golf's Grandest Event – A Complete History
    The Ryder Cup: Golf's Grandest Event – A Complete History
    by Martin Davis
  • Harvey Penick: The Life and Wisdom of the Man Who Wrote the Book on Golf
    Harvey Penick: The Life and Wisdom of the Man Who Wrote the Book on Golf
    by Kevin Robbins
  • Grounds for Golf: The History and Fundamentals of Golf Course Design
    Grounds for Golf: The History and Fundamentals of Golf Course Design
    by Geoff Shackelford
  • The Art of Golf Design
    The Art of Golf Design
    by Michael Miller, Geoff Shackelford
  • The Future of Golf: How Golf Lost Its Way and How to Get It Back
    The Future of Golf: How Golf Lost Its Way and How to Get It Back
    by Geoff Shackelford
  • Lines of Charm: Brilliant and Irreverent Quotes, Notes, and Anecdotes from Golf's Golden Age Architects
    Lines of Charm: Brilliant and Irreverent Quotes, Notes, and Anecdotes from Golf's Golden Age Architects
    Sports Media Group
  • Alister MacKenzie's Cypress Point Club
    Alister MacKenzie's Cypress Point Club
    by Geoff Shackelford
  • The Golden Age of Golf Design
    The Golden Age of Golf Design
    by Geoff Shackelford
  • Masters of the Links: Essays on the Art of Golf and Course Design
    Masters of the Links: Essays on the Art of Golf and Course Design
    Sleeping Bear Press
  • The Good Doctor Returns: A Novel
    The Good Doctor Returns: A Novel
    by Geoff Shackelford
  • The Captain: George C. Thomas Jr. and His Golf Architecture
    The Captain: George C. Thomas Jr. and His Golf Architecture
    by Geoff Shackelford

The fate of golf would seem to lie in the hands of the Royal and Ancient Golf Club and the United States Golf Association. Can we expect that they will protect and reverence the spirit of golf?
MAX BEHR


  

Tuesday
Jul202010

Scenes Of St. Andrews Volume 1

Posting will be intermittent the next few days so there'll be lots of images to look at. Here are just a few shots from the town during Open Championship week. Click on the image to enlarge.

 

 

 

Tuesday
Jul202010

"As far as I can tell NOBODY is writing off Tiger Woods. And, frankly, by all the available evidence, we SHOULD be writing off Tiger Woods."

Joe Posnanski files a different take on the state of Tiger's game.

And frankly… there’s good reason to write him off. This may sound cruel but I actually mean it as the opposite of cruel: More people SHOULD be writing off Tiger Woods.

First, he will turn 35 at the end of the year. There has been talk that this means Woods will still be in his golfing prime for the next few years, but history tells a different story. Since 1970, the average age of major championship winners is 32, and things tumble off for golfers after age 35. Fewer than a quarter of the major championship winners have been 36 or older. The only players since 1970 to win multiple majors after 35 are: Jack Nicklaus (4), Gary Player (4), Ray Floyd (2), Nick Price (2), Vijay Singh (2), Mark O’Meara (2), Angel Cabrera (2), Padraig Harrington (2).

More to the point, Woods has been dominant for a dozen years — which is a long time to dominate in golf. The greatest golfers have had a fairly short window of time when they dominate, and when that window closes, they stop winning major championships.

Monday
Jul192010

First Open Question: All Time Great Performance, Or Luck Of The Draw?

The Champion poses at the Swilken Bridge Monday after a press conference (click to enlarge)Or a little of both?

I'm pretty sure if Tiger, Phil, Lee, Ernie, even Paul, Rory or Martin posted the winning margins Louis Oosthuizen did, they'd call it one of the great performances in the history of the game.

There's little question he ended up having a great draw, but remember back to Thursday it was thought to be the wrong end of the draw!

Thoughts?

Monday
Jul192010

"i did tell a reporter that the conditions were ridiculous , bc that is what they were."

Thanks to read Amol for spotting this Jason Dufner post about Friday's wind and the suspension of play:

just a note about the delay on friday, so everyone has a clear idea of what happened. not that it matters much now 2 days latter, but it clears my name a little bit

had a 10ft putt on the 7th hole, as i placed the ball down it rolled away aprox 2ft. At that point i called a official over to make sure on the rule. was told to play it where it was, remarked the ball. Went to put the ball down again, rolled away another half a foot. The official saw it this time and got on his radio to report to whoever in the rules department about what was happening. Told to wait for another official to come over. Tell the next official what had just happened, he then gets on his radio to report what has happened to who i assumed was the central rules office. He then tells me to wait while they figure out what they want to do. 3-5 mins pass, the 2nd rules official then tells me to putt. i take 30 secs to putt, and miss. Then i have a 6 inch putt to tap in, as i go to stroke the ball, it is rocking back and forth, i turn and ask if that is considered a moving ball??? He tells me to mark and then proceeds to blow the horn 20 secs later to suspend play. At no point did i tell anyone i was not playing or that i refuse to play in these conditions. just wanted to clear the air with the real version of what had happened, instead of what tv or everyone else may have assumed to happen. i would never quit or tell a rules department when we should play or not play. and i did tell a reporter that the conditions were ridiculous , bc that is what they were. hope that clears a little up to all that have followed or commented on this topic. all the best to golfwrx followers. jason dufner

Monday
Jul192010

"I think the 17th tee has been a great success in terms of stiffening the test of that hole."

Peter Dawson today on the 17th hole's setup and performance:

Q.  Just going back to the golf course for a moment, the 17th hole we spoke about before the championship began, and you said, Peter, that players have been very complimentary about the changes that have been made.  They were all quite critical of the amount of rough up the left‑hand side and felt it was out of character with what was on the rest of the golf course.  What are your thoughts on that?  And also, why did you change the boundaries of the golf course so late in the week?  What was the thinking there?

PETER DAWSON:  Well, I do agree with Graeme that the rough left of 17 ought to have been somewhat thinner, but it grew away very rapidly amazingly in the two or three weeks running up to the championship, having been pretty much how we wanted it two to three weeks ago.

I think the 17th tee has been a great success in terms of stiffening the test of that hole.  I said that at the beginning of the week, we were hoping that the road might come more back into play, and by gosh, it did.  We had far more people on the road this year through the back of the hole than I've seen at previous Opens in recent times.  To that degree we are very pleased with the hole, and the player comments by and large have been very positive.

I heard about Graeme's comments.  I was out with Graeme when he was here practising and didn't receive any such comments, so I'm not sure if he's been misquoted or not, but the player reaction by and large has been extremely good. 

He definitely was not misquoted, as it appears in the transcript of McDowell's presser:

Q. Can I ask you about the changes made to the Road Hole and what level of influence it will have on determining the outcome of this championship?

GRAEME McDOWELL: Yeah, I mean, the Road Hole has obviously been steeped in drama over the years here at the British Open at St. Andrews, and it's a difficult hole, and they've made it more difficult. I think architecturally the tee box fits in beautifully, just like it's been there forever. It really looks like part of the golf course. It looks really good.
You know, if anything, it's probably going to make me play the hole a little bit more conservatively because you're going in with 4- or 5-iron into a green, which was really difficult to hit with an 8-iron. The wind today was in out of the left, so I hit a really good drive and I had 170 to the front edge. So I had like a 6-iron onto the front edge of the green, and that's going to be my target to probably three out of the four pins.

The left rough there is probably some of the thickest on the golf course. You know, they've taken a hard hole and made it really, really hard. Yeah, there's going to be a lot of drama there. Like I say, I think guys are going to play it more conservative than they have. I don't think they're going to be taking pins on. When you have a 7- or 8-iron in your hand, it's pretty tough to ignore a pin. When you have a 4- or 5-iron you can ignore a pin. I see that as the only change. I see less bunkers because of it and I see less balls in the road because of it. So from that point of view, perhaps it might take the drama out of it. We'll see.

The other press conference highlight, showing a new level of attention to detail to bunker design by architect Dawson:

Q.  What's an inclinometer?  Obviously it says what it does.  But is that a proper name?  Secondly, what was the angle of the face in 2005?  And who decided and what was the thinking behind it not being the same this year as then?  And fourthly, was the face of the bunker reverted three weeks ago?  I read something about that before.  Are they all connected?

PETER DAWSON:  What happened three or four weeks ago was just a tidying‑up exercise.  The fundamental construction of the bunker was earlier than that.

An inclinometer is a proper name.

I don't know the answer to 2005; I can't remember, but I think it was three or four degrees steeper.  And the reasoning behind it was that we wanted to give the players some kind of chance of getting out rather than no chance.

Monday
Jul192010

Sunday's Dunvegan Message

Some of you asked why I didn't post the Sunday message from the Dunvegan, but they were a bit slow to post it (I checked twice!). Finally I saw it this morning.

Monday
Jul192010

2010 Open Championship Clippings, Vol. 2

Starting with the opening graphs, here's James Corrigan's lede:

Jack Nicklaus, Seve Ballesteros, Nick Faldo, John Daly, Tiger Woods... maybe the name Louis Oosthuizen does jar a little on this list. It shouldn't. For the manner in which the South African won the 139th Open here yesterday would have made any of his fellow St Andrews champions proud. He did not merely defeat his rivals, so much as crush them deep into the sand beneath ground.

Phillip Reid in the Irish Times:

WHO NEEDS an unpronounceable Icelandic volcano, or even a vuvuzela, when you’ve got a being by the name of Lodewicus Theodorus Oosthuizen – pronounced “Wuhst-hy-zen” in the Afrikaner farmlands of South Africa from where he hails? Get used to the name.

Steve DiMeglio in the USA Today:

In a magical township once home to castles and cathedrals, where pathways are paved with cobblestones and structures are bruised from conflicts with storms blowing off the North Sea, a man known as Shrek to his friends delivered a fairytale ending.

Larry Dorman in the New York Times:

Throughout a march toward the British Open championship that went from improbable to inexorable with each stride down the Old Course’s hardening fairways Sunday, three things about Louis Oosthuizen did not change: his demeanor, his swing tempo and his resilience.

And the moment it seemed his grip on the claret jug might be slipping, when he missed a 15-foot putt for par on the eighth green and his lead over Paul Casey shrank to three strokes from five, Oosthuizen did what he had to do if he was going to win.

In some post play analysis, Lawrence Donegan notes this about Sunday's final pairing:

The body-language experts were on hand as the South African and Paul Casey, his playing partner for the day, were on the practice green, hitting a few putts before heading to the 1st tee. The unanimous verdict was that Oosthuizen looked the calmer of the two; serenely going about his business while the Englishman was the one initiating conversation. Oosthuizen looked equally composed out on the course, despite the inevitable pressure that comes with leading an Open. Scheduled to play in Sweden next week, where he only gained entry to the Scandinavian Masters by invitation, Oosthuizen can expect a warm reception from his fellow pros, although perhaps no one will be as delighted as Ernie Els, whose South Africa-based foundation nurtured the youthful golfer's talent. And there was plenty of talent to nurture.

Brian Keough reviews Rory McIlroy's week, quoting the 21-year-old who was gracious in defeat:

“I’m sure I’ll wake up in the morning and just look the fact I was 16 under for three rounds of golf around St Andrews in the Open and had just one bad round - it’s fine.

“I couldn’t help but think about it going up the last hole. You know, if I had just sort of stuck in a little bit more on Friday and held it together more, it could have been a different story.

Andy Farrell points out one key difference for Tiger this time around the Old Course compared to '00 when he didn't land in a bunker.

But it was the bunkers that got him. At the fourth he left a shot in a greenside bunker and at the seventh he drove up against the face of a trap and had to hit out backwards. Both mistakes cost double bogeys.

"I've got to keep building my game, putting things back to where they're more consistent day in, day out," he said. "I got to build that positive momentum and not have those holes like today where it breaks momentum."

The SI Roundtable guys had this to say about Tiger:

Shipnuck: It was a very, very hard week to putt, because of the wind, the huge undulations, the graininess of the greens, and the daily changes of the speed of the putting surfaces due to wind and rain. So I wouldn't read too much into Tiger's struggles. He'll make putts again someday, but never like he did as a fearless, carefree twentysomething.

Hack: Tiger's switching putters mid-tournament was the ultimate indication that he is in the wilderness — 99 putts over the first 3 days? What's next, a move to the long wand?

Karl MacGinty on what had to be one of the strangest sites of the weekend: Padraig Harrington grinding away on the practice tee and chipping green.

Clearly, no efforts were being spared in Harrington's bid to get his act back together as he toiled away for hours at a time under the watchful eye of his Scottish coach Bob Torrance.

With mind-guru Dr Bob Rotella and a couple of representatives of Wilson, his golf club manufacturer, also seen in attendance on Saturday, it had all the appearances of a brainstorming session.

Derek Lawrenson on what might be Monty's last Old Course Open.

Monty? Head down, shoulders slumped, he harrumphed his way over it, in time-honoured fashion. On the 17th hole, there had been one final glare at a spectator who probably blinked at the wrong moment. Heaven forbid he would look like he was enjoying his final minutes playing at the Home of Golf.

It all added up to yet more ammunition for the Monty haters, of course, but painting him as some one-dimensional Mr Grump has always been an exercise in stupidity.

Asked why he hadn’t posed on the bridge, the Scot replied: ‘That’s for the winners of this world. In fact I was thinking of walking on the plank that runs alongside it. That seemed more appropriate.’

The USA Today's Michael Hiestand on the first ESPN telecast:

Yes, it was anesthetizing. As ESPN host Mike Tirico  noted as a leaderboard graphic aired over a camera shot of St. Andrews' streets, "the bus on the right is the only thing making a move." Analyst Curtis Strange noted when Oosthuizen took at eight-shot lead over playing partner Paul Casey after 12 holes, "It's like a nail vs. a hammer — not much of a battle." (As for local color, Strange suggested quaffing Guinness was like drinking motor oil.)

And finally, also about the telecast, more from the SI gang:

Evans: Too much moralizing about St. Andrews and not enough golf. The roster was packed with major champions — Watson, Weiskopf, Strange, Zinger — but they weren't as sharp as guys who do TV golf on a regular basis. It's nice to see all the coverage, but ESPN could have taken a lesson from NBC or CBS on how a wonky golf telecast is better than one that has Peter Alliss trying to summon the spirit of Old Tom Morris.

Reiterman: The HD broadcast was amazing; I've never seen a British Open look so good. ESPN had a lot of bells and whistles that were nice, especially the live ball tracker. But did anyone else find it annoying, and even a little embarrassing, that the announcers kept pronouncing Louis's name two or three different ways? It's a unique name, but by Sunday you'd think they would have figured it out.

Sunday
Jul182010

A Few 2010 Open Championship Final Round Clippings

By no means a definitive list (it never is!), but here's what's been posted and worth a look before I head for one more stroll across the Home hole and to bed. Starting with the ledes:

Doug Ferguson, writing for the Associated Press:

Hardly anyone knew Louis Oosthuizen, much less how to pronounce his name. Not many will forget the performance he delivered at the home of golf to capture the British Open.

Damon Hack for golf.com:

There have been easier names engraved on the claret jug — whose newest addition is a Jambalaya of consonants and vowels — but if Louis Oosthuizen doesn't yet roll off the tongue, give it time. In the centuries of golfers making pilgrimages to these links, few have taken a journey so unlikely and turned it into a victory so dominant.

Lawrence Donegan in the Guardian:

The little-known Louis Oosthuizen is not little-known any more after today adding his name to the most exclusive list in golf; that of Open Championship winners at the Old Course in St Andrews.

Lorne Rubenstein on Oosty and his caddie, who has won his second Open.

His mental acuity and Zack Rasego, his caddie since 2003, helped him stay the course. Rasego, who is black, and who caddied for Player when he won the 1974 Open, refers to the two of them as a “rainbow team.”

They are, after all, from the rainbow nation of South Africa, which recently held a successful World Cup. When Oosthuizen walked up the vast 18th fairway Sunday, knowing he would embrace the claret jug as champion in a few moments, he thought of Nelson Mandela. He was winning the Open on Mandela’s 92nd birthday.

“It’s good to win for South Africa on Nelson Mandela’s birthday,” Rasego said. “It’s a fantastic day for us.”

Steve Elling on Louis and his relaxed demeanor.

Saturday morning, after sleeping on the 36-hole lead, Oosthuizen called over his friend Schwartzel, a pal from their junior-golf days in South Africa, shortly before Louis teed off in the final group of the day. He had some comedy video clips he was watching.

"He was showing me things on his iPhone," said Schwartzel, who waited three hours to congratulate his buddy behind the 18th green. "He was laughing, and it was an hour before he teed off. He's so relaxed."

Ron Sirak on the winner:

What this tournament lacked in excitement -- for the last three hours, the only tension concerned whether the engraver would spell "Oosthuizen" correctly on the claret jug -- it made up for in execution by its winner. Louis Oosthuizen, a Euro Tour member by way of South Africa, simply outplayed everyone on his way to a seven-stroke victory over Lee Westwood. It may have been dull, but it wasn't a fluke -- at least not this week.

Oliver Brown on runner up Lee Westwood:

As Lee Westwood walked desultorily on to the 18th green to receive his memento of another runner’s-up finish, he could have been forgiven for wanting to use the Silver Salver as a dinner tray.It would, to be sure, have looked lovely in his Worksop kitchen. But Westwood is tired of the consolation medals, weary of being cast as golf’s perpetual nearly man. With this gruff manner and general loathing of any airs and graces, he is not exactly a natural bridesmaid.

Melanie Hauser on third place finisher Paul Casey, who we forget was worried about his career future not that long ago.

In a way, Casey felt blessed just to be here. He tore his rib muscles at the World Golf Championship-Bridgestone Invitational last year, then tore them again at the HSBC Champions. “I’ll be honest,” he said, “it was scary. I was very worried about it.  I thought, is this something I'm going to be battling the rest of my career?  Am I done?  Will I ever be pain free?  I had no idea.”

Alistair Tait wonders if this is the start of a trend of American golf on the decline.

Scott Michaux on Tiger's interesting takeaway.

Masters at Augusta National: T4. No legitimate threat.
U.S. Open at Pebble Beach: T4. No Sunday charge.
British Open at St. Andrews: T23. No renewed dominance.

How disappointed is Woods that he failed to make hay on the fields he has previously plowed through?

"The good news is I've won half my majors not on these venues, too," Woods quipped as he exited the podium.

And Bob Harig adds this in his breakdown of Tiger's week:

Woods has now gone nine majors -- two of which he did not play thanks to injury -- without winning. It is his longest stretch without a major victory since he underwent swing changes in 2003 and '04.

And in truth, he was further off in the major championships in those years, with just one top-5 finish and only two top-10s. Don't forget, Woods tied for fourth at both the Masters and U.S. Open this year -- his best tournaments this season.

Jaime Diaz talks to Doug Sanders about making a return to the Old Course.

"People say, 'Mr. Sanders, we're so sorry you missed that putt,' and a lot of them have forgotten that the guy that won was the greatest player in history," he said during a brief conversation before the leaders teed off Sunday. "It's almost like for them, I was the winner."

With this win, Louis Oosthuizen style from the European Tour.

GolfDigest.com Sam Weinman files Birdies and Bogeys from the final day.

And finally, the PGA Tour's Daily Wrap-up.

Sunday
Jul182010

Trying The Rocca Putt After The 2010 Open Championship

Fans mingled around the 18th green at St. Andrews following 2010 Open Championship play. The GolfDigest.com production team of Iooss and Weinman filmed me taking a stab at the infamous Valley of Sin putt.

For the record, I did hit three practice putts, but this was the first filmed take...

Sunday
Jul182010

2010 Open Championship, Your Kneejerk Impressions

The Sunday scene at St. Andrews after play. Where else can fans do this? (click to enlarge)I'm at a loss for words and trying to file a 1000 words on a course that as usual, requires a book. Especially when I'm more convinced than ever that it's far superior to anything on the planet.

In the meantime, I want to share with you this transcript highlight from earlier in the week in case you were wondering about pronunciation.

Q. First of all, could you tell us exactly how you would like your name to be pronounced, please?

LOUIS OOSTHUIZEN: Louis Oosthuizen.

Got that?

So it has to rank as one of the strangest majors ever. Throw in the odd finish at Pebble Beach and my head is spinning after the Pebble-Old Course combo.

Your impressions of Louis, The Old Course and the week?

Sunday
Jul182010

2010 Open Championship Final Round

Kicks off with today's message from the government. This sign is posted at the 18th tee boundary fence.

Sunday
Jul182010

"I can't believe the R&A and USGA can't get together with the manufacturers and come up with something that is for the betterment and protection of the game."

So much great stuff in John Huggan's profile of Tom Weiskopf, and I'm quite sure where to begin (though it's worth reading for all of the stuff beyond distance rants):

"The problem stems from the fact that the USGA lost a lawsuit with Ping over the grooves on clubs all those years ago. Now the authorities are scared to get involved in another. But they are smart people. I don't see why they can't come up with a 'tournament specification' for the ball. That wouldn't mean that the amateur couldn't play or buy that ball. It would be just like it was over here when you guys had to change from the small ball to the big ball. Or they could roll the ball back over a period of time until they reach a predetermined point.

"The saddest thing is that the ball has taken so many wonderful courses out of play for the professionals. Look at what is being done here at the Old Course, with all these tees that are not even on the premises. I don't know what the solution is, but I can't believe the R&A and USGA can't get together with the manufacturers and come up with something that is for the betterment and protection of the game and those who play it at the highest level. Maybe they should have stopped the ball as soon as it became clear that they were going to have to mess with the Old Course.