Diaz on Haigh
Golf World's Jaime Diaz writes about Kerry Haigh
and the success he's had setting up PGA courses. Now his thoughts on
weather forecasting and moving up tee times? That's another story.
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
Golf World's Jaime Diaz writes about Kerry Haigh
and the success he's had setting up PGA courses. Now his thoughts on
weather forecasting and moving up tee times? That's another story.
Golfweek's Jeff Rude looks at the Tiger fiasco
and raises similar questions about the intimidation factor his presence
would have had. And he has some quotes from Stewart Cink at the end,
questioning Tiger's thinking.
Here's Tiger's press conference
at Firestone. Notice that the assembled scribes asked some decent
questions, despite attempts by a rally killer to change the subject.
And then there's the point-misser who puts the exchange out of its
misery.
Q. What did you do Monday?
TIGER WOODS: I was at home working, working on my game, trying to get ready for this week, make sure that everything is sound and solid.
Q. You obviously had to show up Monday. What did you do Monday morning?
TIGER WOODS: I was at home.
Q. What time did you leave Sunday night?
TIGER WOODS: After the delay.
Q. Did you look at the leaderboard?
TIGER WOODS: Yeah, there was three guys ahead of me, two guys tied and Goose at 1 with two par 5s. They're not coming back.
Q. It was a risk?
TIGER WOODS: Yeah, it was, but also it really wasn't, either. These are the best players in the world. Look at who's on that board. It wasn't like guys who have never been there before. If you have guys who had never been there before, then it might have been a different story, but each one of those guys had won major championships up there on that board.
Q. What's your favorite moment here, 21 under, playing against Furyk, finishing in the dark with headlights?
TIGER WOODS: Probably that one because I didn't want to come back on Monday, and Hal and I were racing around, and they asked us do you want to call it. We were on 17 tee, we can call it, and I looked at Hal and Hal said, no, I'm going for it. So we played quick and hit that shot, and the story behind that shot is that Stevie's favorite number is 21, and I was stuck at 20. He said when the ball is in the air, he says, "21." He knew it was the right club, and that's what made that shot so sweet.
Q. Were you watching Monday morning?
TIGER WOODS: I caught a piece of it. I caught it towards the end. I was in the gym working out. When I turned it on, I thought that Elk was hitting his second shot on 18, like, "what's he doing right there?" Then they showed a replay, and I was like, oh, he got a good break to get there. Then he ends up in a divot. Those are not very hard holes with the wind like it is. You can be pretty aggressive on those flags now, especially on 17. You couldn't get it close when we played it because it was straight downwind. Now it turns into the wind you see those guys backing the ball up. Nobody even sniffed at backing the ball up on Sunday.
Q. I'm working on a story on autographs up on ebay and things like that. What's your policy on that?
TIGER WOODS: It's frustrating.
Oakland Hills will be toughened for the 2008 PGA, writes Vartan Kupelian in The Detroit News.
Rick Bayliss, chief operating officer, said 90 percent [of the membership] voted in favor of renovations that will stretch the course to 7,300 yards but, more importantly, put renewed emphasis on the scoring game. At last year's Ryder Cup, the South Course played 7,068 yards. Championship par is 70; members play to par 72. "Adding length is only a small component of what will be done," Bayliss said. "The changes will be about angles and bounces. The greens complexes are our resistance to scoring."7300 in 2008? Child's play!
"We're thrilled with Rees' efforts," Bayliss said. "It's a great story to have him do this after his father came in to make the changes in 1950. The challenges Rees faces are the same. It's about challenging the players' abilities."
The late Robert Trent Jones massaged the original work of the legendary Donald Ross, who designed both of Oakland Hills' courses. The North Course, directly across Maple Road, complements its more famous sister layout and will not be impacted.
Erin Hills outside Milwaukee will get the 2008 U.S. Amateur Public Links.
David Fay, apparently with a straight face, called the U.S. Women's
Amateur Public Links "a very good test lab" for the U.S. Open. He said
"that both championships normally are in June." And that's about all
they have in common.
Erin Hills is owned by Bob Lang and designed by Dana Fry, Michael
Hurdzan and Ron Whitten with shaping by Rod Whitman. Gary D'Amato's
article notes that "the course will have multiple sets of tees but can
be stretched to more than 8,000 yards."
Now that's a yardage worthy of a major. Not this 7,300 stuff.
John Daly meets the family he donated $30,000 to after his 1991 PGA win. The family lost their father to a lightening strike at Crooked Stick during tournament week. Daly talked about it in his recent Golf Digest interview.
"It would be silly of us to remove a course like Baltusrol from future
consideration for USGA championships, including the U.S. Open. And we
haven't," David Fay wrote in a letter to the club he's a member at.
"On the other hand, the rest of the country might look at the greater
N.Y. metro area having four different courses in the so-called (and
definitely unofficial) de facto U.S. Open rota and howl about
geographic bias."
Translation: you're fourth in line behind Winged Foot, Shinnecock and Bethpage. Three's a crowd.
Apparently ESPN's "Around the Horn" windbags debated Tiger's decision
to fly home from the PGA Sunday night instead of sticking around in
case of a playoff. I didn't see it, but here's my first thought:
If you're Tiger, don't you stay around Monday, show up in the locker
room, hit balls on the range and hang around the practice green while
the guys are getting ready? Just to send the subliminal message, "I
think you guys are the biggest dogs in golf, I'm looking forward to
watching you throw up all over yourselves, and I'll see you on the 4th
tee in an hour."
Couldn't have hurt, could it? Weird stuff.
** This Reuters story says a playoff missed by Woods would have been one of the biggest blunders in sports history. Sounds fair to me. You?
Alan Tays in the Palm Beach Post talks to architects about the impact of technology and wonders when we'll see a 700 yard par-5.
"The Walker Cup was a joke," said Alice Dye, wife of fellow architect Pete Dye.
"I
know that Tiger is strong and I know Vijay is strong, but those 21- and
22-year-olds carried a par-4 up there that was 354 yards."
Not all architects feel this way. Just most of them.
"There's a lot of people who believe the game is being ruined by the distance," Tom Fazio said. "I'm not so sure that I fit in that camp. It's really just following the way it always has been. I don't see it being bad for golf, myself.
"Jack Nicklaus used to hit it 300 yards. Now there's just more of them (who can)."
Asked if 700-yard holes could be in the future: "I'm not sure that that will happen. The scientists say the golf ball can't go much farther than it goes now. Of course, I heard them say that back eight years ago."
Regarding Merion at the U.S. Amateur: "They won't be hitting the famous 1-iron," Fazio said. "They'll probably hit 5-iron or 6-iron or 4-iron."
Tays writes that a 700-yard par-5 is nothing new. Just see The International in Bolton, Massachusetts.
"You
stand on that back tee," said head pro Kevin Burnsworth, "you've got to
kill it 250 yards to get it to the fairway, and then 20 yards ahead of
that is the ladies' tee. So if you don't hit it 275, you're behind the
ladies' tee, which is a little embarrassing."
Joe Logan writes about the youth movement in amateur golf. The article also has a link to a nice U.S. Amateur site set up by the club.
Mark Wogenrich in The Morning Call also writes about Merion's desperation to host a U.S. Open.
He picks up this nugget from a recent CBS telecast:
''It's a matter of the USGA sitting down and saying, 'What's important
to us,''' announcer Jim Nantz said of Merion and a possible U.S. Open bid. ''Is it more important to sell a
lot of hospitality tents or is it important to take our great
championship to the best courses in America?''
And here's what the USGA Executive Committee's Craig Ammerman tells
Wogenrich: ''We're wary of saying to the corporate community, 'We're
having the U.S. Open in Philadelphia, so don't come,''' Ammerman said.
Do you find this a little strange?
Tiger Woods didn't bother sticking around the PGA Championship for the final four holes, even though he was the clubhouse leader with an outside shot at getting into a playoff. Woods didn't see it that way.
He said Tuesday morning he flew home to Florida after he finished at 2-under 278, knowing the five players either tied or ahead of him would not drop shots over the final holes at Baltusrol, including two par 5s at the end.
Looking at USGA.org's news page,
I can't seem to find anything that says the USGA and R&A made
the joint announcement at the Walker Cup about rangefinder. Jim Achenbach at
Golfweek broke the story a couple of weeks ago. Anyone know of an announcement?
To be honest, I just thought it'd be a nice time to run a photo of
the former, never-to-be USGA "city presense." It may become this web
site's official USGA logo.
USGA.org's Ken Klavon writes about
the whiten...err...renovation of the bunkers at Merion. No photos
included with the story. Part of the lean USGA.org look. Not much
on the official U.S. Amateur site either.