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


  

Entries in 2008 US Open (132)

Wednesday
Jun112008

Images From Torrey Pines, Vol. 8

The other day I was looking over the Lexus Evacuation vehicle (that's singular) and wondered how they could fit so many players and caddies into one car.

Then I stumbled on these "evacuation vehicles" parked nearby. They don't really look like Lexus' to me?

2008USOpenWedEvacuation.JPG

Wednesday
Jun112008

Images From Torrey Pines, Vol. 7

I was strolling the fourth hole and saw Vol. 2's beloved photographer taking a siesta under a Torrey Pine near the landing area (and what a view-spot he chose!).

2008USOpenWedPhotographer2.JPG 

2008USOpenWedPhotographer4.JPG 

2008USOpenWedPhotographer.JPG 

Wednesday
Jun112008

Torrey Story: First Round Preview

2008USOpenTorreyStory.jpgSeveral new posts have been put up, including an explanation about the state of the bunkers, a look at the 18th hole and a preview of Thursday's setup.
Wednesday
Jun112008

Images From Torrey Pines, Vol. 6

The view from the upper third tee this afternoon. With the sun out, crowds swelling and the course firming up, it feels like a U.S. Open.

2008USOpenWed3rdhole.JPG 

Wednesday
Jun112008

Images From Torrey Pines, Vol. 5

Robert Garrigus, sporting a 28 inch putter (!) and draining everything he looked at.

 2008USOpenGarrigusputter.JPG

Wednesday
Jun112008

Images From Torrey Pines, Vol. 4

Is there something wrong with when I find this to be the most attractive bunker on the property?

This is greenside at the North Course's 3rd green.

 2008USOpenNorthCourseBunker.JPG

Wednesday
Jun112008

Early Wednesday Torrey Story

2008USOpenTorreyStory.jpgOver at GolfDigest.com I've posted some thoughts on the architecture of the golf course and an update on today's course conditions taking a turn for the better, with more to come about a possible brewing controversy.
Tuesday
Jun102008

Letter from Saugerties: "The Pairing" Edition

Nice to hear from our friend Frank Hannigan, the former USGA Executive Director, who shares some thoughts on this week's Woods-Mickelson pairing.

Dear Geoff:

Pairing Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson together in the first two rounds of the US Open is like putting Judy Garland and Barbara Streisand on stage together, each doing her own thing at the same time.  The result would be discordant but the advance hype would be spectacuar.

The new USGA method of pairing takes the top 12 players from the "world" system and converts them into four groups of three. 
 
I'm surprised the USGA did not embrace an alternate system, that of the FedEx Cup to determine eligibility for the PGA Tour carnival of money during the fall.  Proclaiming FedEx points would surely have resulted in another million a year for the USGA which apparently exists to pile up money.  There was an analogy in a recet New York Times op-ed column in which a Harvard graduate pointed out that Harvard is the second richest institution in the country, second to the Bill Gates Foundation, hoards the money and is run poorly so that expenses are out of control.

The USGA switch to the new method would be more credible had it been announced in January rather than waiting until it was  slam dunk that Mickelson would be in the top 3. And how are we take a statement of self-praise in which the new system is being done in the face of what television wants.  Excuse me, but there is nothing television wants more than to have Woods and Mickelson paired.

Perhaps I am over-sensitive on pairings since I drafted them for US Opens beginning in 1968 and ending in 1988 when I left the USGA triumphantly.  Our method began with the tenet that the current U.S. and British Open should be together, with the US Amateur champion as the third man.

After that it was just about arbitrary. We followed a hallowed principle that the best players should be scattered throughout the day.  Who are the two best in the world?  Common answer: Nicklaus and Watson.  So Nicklaus would start at 9:10 on Thursday and 1:10 on Friday.  Watson's times were the opposite, 1:10 and then 9:10
 
The stars were spread throughout the day for two reasons, which I concede no longer apply, but illustrate how much golf has changed:

1.  Ropes to restrain the patrons from tee to green were not installed until 1954 at Baltusrol at the suggestion of architect Robert Trent Jones.  Putting a Woods and a Mickelson together would have been to incite a riot as the patrons fought like beasts in the fairways to establish position.

2.  There was a motive to enhance the spectator experience.   An in-shape patron could go out in the morning to follow Byron Nelson, have a bite to eat, and emerge to follow Sam Snead in the afternoon.   Today such an attempt would be meaningless since the USGA sells too many tickets so that nobody actually gets to see much at all.

While making my pairings I would sometimes yield to an inclination to be cute.   Too cute.  I once precipitated a disaster by pairing three former California amateur champions together.  Just for the hell of it.   Alas, two of the three were among the world's truly slow players.  When the gap ahead of them became intolerable, my USGA colleague PJ Boatwright, the absolute best at knowing and administering the Rules of Golf,  couldn't stand it and slapped a two stroke penalty on Forest Fezler.

When the round ended one of Fezler's fellow competitors launched an appeal to the entire rules committee.  The appellant was John Brodie, the best two-sport athlete of our time.  John said the fault was his, not Fezler's.   The committee, consisting mostly of lawyers,  said there was not enough hard evidence to convict Fezler.

The penalty was rescinded, thus assuring there would be painfully slow play in U.S. Opens forever.   The only way to deal with slow penalty is to install fear and penalized harshly even if some of the penalties are applied on shaky grounds. Back then we were striving for rounds under 5 hours.  There could be a 6 hour round at Torrey Pines.

Some players were acute and sensitive to pairings.   Many did not want to play with Arnold Palmer because there was simply too much noise and crowd movement.   Bud Jim Colbert implored me to pair him with Arnold on the grounds that it pumped him up.  I was glad to comply.  Tom Weiskopf, with whom I was on very good terms, once chewed me out on the basis that I had not paired him with two other major champions. He was right.

Pairings really don't matter that much. Jack Nicklaus couldn't have cared less. Not long after he played in an historic 4th round at Merion with amateur Jim Simons I was doing a magazine article and asked him what he remembered about playing with Simons.  Answer:  "Did I play with Jim Simons that day?"

Only once did I do a pairing that made me proud. I had seen Isao Aoki of Japan play at a British Open.   He was amazing, both his unique swing and a putting stroke with the toe pointed at the sky.  Aoki was then unfamiliar in the U.S.  I thought he deserved a big American audience.  So I put him with Nicklaus at Baltursol in 1980.

Nicklaus threw a little 63 at the field in round 1.  In fact, they both played so well that they were 1 and 2 after both the 2nd and 3rd rounds and thus played all 4 rounds together.  Nicklaus won by setting a U.S. Open scoring record, but so did Aoki  by finishing 2nd.

How long will the new USGA system of top 12 last?  Until there is another Tiger Woods.  

Woods was beyond compelling in his final season as an "amateur."  Woods had no status in the point system since had played in only a few pro events. If his equivalent ever comes around again I suspect the USGA will find a way to fit him in the top 12  - despite what television wants.

Tuesday
Jun102008

Images From Torrey Pines, Vol. 3

Tiger Woods on No. 18 during a 9-hole practice round with Jordan Cox of Stanford and Bubba Watson.

2008USOpenTuesTiger.JPG 

Tuesday
Jun102008

The Torrey Story, Continued

2008USOpenTorreyStory.jpgI've added posts on Tiger and Phil's press conferences (including Phil blasting the USGA's 13th tee) and a look at the Torrey Pines practice area. Check it out.
Tuesday
Jun102008

Images From Torrey Pines, Vol. 2

A man devoted to his craft. See if you can count the number of cameras.

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2008USOpenPhotographer1.JPG 

Tuesday
Jun102008

Tiger's Press Conference From Torrey

I broke down the golf course portion Tiger's sitdown with the scribes for GolfDigest.com, but there were a few other highlights worth noting, starting with this from Rich Lerner:

Q. A question about your website, what's the benefit to you in terms of being able to control the information that flows from your camp and control the message a little bit as opposed to the rest of us speculating?

TIGER WOODS: Well, it's a way for me to basically say exactly what's on my mind. I can say it to a few of you guys, but not all of you.

Ouch.

And this on the winning score possibilities:

Q. I don't think anyone's expecting anybody to go to 19-under par here. What would you imagine you'd have to shoot to win this tournament this week or anyone would have to shoot?

TIGER WOODS: Well, 18 would be good, then. (Laughter).

Q. What would you guess they might shoot?

TIGER WOODS: Oh, might? We've been trying to figure that out the last few days. As Loren asked about the uncertainty of the set up, we don't know. How many days are they going to play it up on 13? How many days are they going to play it up on 14? Same on 3. Are they going to keep us all the way to the back on 6. We just don't know.

If they play it all the way up, I'm sure it will be under par, without any doubt. If they play it all the way back and move some of the pins around, like on 16, get the left tee box and left pins, well then it makes it a whole lot harder.

It's really hard to answer because I don't know how they're going to play it. If they play it up all days then you'll say under par, for sure. Play it back every day, then you'll probably say over par. But since it's a mixture you don't know what it's going to be.

And it's a little bit frustrating as a player, because you always have an idea what the score is going to be going into the event. But this year it's a little bit different.
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