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 2015 Open Champ. (81)

Tuesday
Jul212015

BBC Apologizes For Peter Alliss…Twice

While ESPN had a great week under difficult circumstances according to Golf World's John Strege, BBC's coverage was pretty weak visually. While I couldn't hear the announcing, apparently Peter Alliss made a few remarks that haven't gone over well.

An unbylined Telegraph report says two comments in particular didn't go over too well.

Alliss, 84, had already sent social media alight on Sunday night with his comment about young Irish amateur Paul Dunne being hugged by his mother as he came off the course with a share of the third-round lead.

"Ah, that must be mum," said Alliss. "Perhaps he likes older women. I don't know but I hope I got the right one."

And this when Zach Johnson's wife Kim was shown congratulating her husband.

As the camera focused on her, Alliss mused about how the couple would spend the prize money: "She is probably thinking - 'if this goes in I get a new kitchen'," commented Alliss.

The BBC has one more Open to televise in 2016 before handing the rights to Sky Sports.

Monday
Jul202015

Putting Ultimately Ends Spieth's Grand Slam Quest

The AP's Tim Dahlberg considers the Grand Slam quest and suggests the putt which will ultimately haunt Jordan Spieth came at the 17th green.

He writes:

The Road Hole was playing so long into the rain and wind that Spieth couldn’t reach the green in two. No matter, because he plopped his pitch just eight feet from the hole.

“If I stood on 17th tee box and you told me I had that putt for par on the hole,” Spieth said later, “I would have certainly taken it.”

Almost shockingly, he missed it right. The best putter in the game didn’t make the one that mattered the most.

Ryan Lavner at GolfChannel.com points out the statistical and ironic notion of Spieth, the world's best putter, costing himself a shot not with loose ball striking, but with his blade.

Because after blowing away the field at Augusta and then watching Dustin Johnson crumble on the 72nd green at Chambers Bay, this time it was Spieth who cracked on the biggest stage.

The greatest irony? His magical short game – his greatest strength – was the part that let him down the most in his quest for a third major in a row.

Ranked first on Tour in three-putt avoidance, Spieth’s speed control was off all week, leading to a career-worst 37 putts in Round 2, including five three-putts, and a four-putt on the eighth green Monday.

Spieth's post round comments about his trouble with speed all week led to the miss that was so uncharacteristically poor: his first putt on the par-3 8th.

Q. Take us through 8. You said you made a mental mistake there.

JORDAN SPIETH: Yeah, I believe we played 8 and 17 as hard as anybody -- as hard as any group today, were those two holes. It was the hardest rain and the hardest wind at the same time of the day. We stepped on that tee box, and you'd like to maybe have a downwind hole where it doesn't really make that much of a difference, but when you look up from the ball and you're getting pelted in the face, it's a hard shot, and I just tried to sling one in there and I left it 40 yards from the pin on the green there, and it's just a no-brainer. If you make bogey, you're still in it. If you make double bogey, it's a very difficult climb, and there's absolutely no reason to hit that putt off the green. I can leave it short, I can leave if eight feet short and have a dead straight eight-footer up the hill where I'll make that the majority of the time. My speed control was really what cost me this week, the five three-putts the second round, and then just my speed control in general wasn't great. On that hole I had left so many of them short throughout the week, I said, I'm not leaving this one short, I'm going to get this one up there, and instead hit it off the other side of the green where it was really dead there, so that was a mental mistake on my part. Instead of being patient and just accepting eight feet from 40 yards  like I do on a 40-yard wedge shot, I instead was a little too aggressive with it when it wasn't necessary.

And this regarding taking putting from the practice green to the course and his first putt proximity talents.

JORDAN SPIETH: Yeah, it wasn't 100 per cent. It wasn't the way it felt at Augusta. I just didn't feel like I was getting aligned perfectly. My stroke was good. I had really good practice. On these practice greens you're not able to get a good feel for the touch. It's tough to get pace practice because they're so small, so I didn't have much of it this week, and I kind of had to go off my feels, when typically you've got enough room -- I did plenty of work on the golf course, it's no excuse, but as far as right before the round getting a pace for that day and the conditions and how the greens are cut, it's tough. You have to kind of go with it after you have one long putt. That was the struggle for me in this tournament was what my -- I think my biggest advantage over anybody in the world is, and that's my first putt proximity, and that was -- I think on the lower half of the field this week, and it certainly cost me at least a couple shots.

Monday
Jul202015

Your Thoughts: Zach Johnson Wins The Open Championship

The last Open at the Old Course was a runaway, this was a thriller won by one of the shortest hitters in the world and now, a likely Hall of Famer with his second major win.

Zach Johnson has won The Open Championship at St. Andrews. Paul Newberry's AP report.

Your immediate thoughts, reactions, takeaways, dashed Grand Slam hopes and highlights from another memorable week in St. Andrews.

My kneejerk take: the Old Course was regularly overpowered during the week and, due to the combination of softness and so little difference in the precision of today's players, wasn't able to separate the field quite as well as we'd hope. However, to see a tactician win over the Old Course defending champion in Louis Oosthuizen and red-hot power player in Marc Leishman (along with the world's elite in Spieth, Day, Rose, Scott, etc...) only reinforces the purity of the place.

And we still need a distance rollback at the professional level.

Monday
Jul202015

2015 Open Championship Final Round Notes & Comment Thread

An extra day should be worth the wait as any number of players stand a chance to win the 2015 Open Championship.

The weather forecast continues to look ominous during the key hours the leaders are on the course, though the gust numbers have come down, mercifully.

The traditional leaderboard.

The final round hole locations are here and maintain the streak of four straight days avoiding Peter Dawson's new second hole bunkers.

Monday
Jul202015

The Grand Slam Is Oh So Tantalizing Still Within Reach

I'm not sure the ramifications are clear to many outside the golf world, but Monday's final round offers a chance to witness history on many levels. Based on a nice total of votes (thanks!), 39% of you like Spieth and 24% see Louis Oosthuizen as the most likely winner.

Joe Posnanski tries to comprehend what Jordan Spieth is doing under pressure and with confidence like we haven't seen in some time.

But you know what? He can do it. On the back nine Sunday, he played as if he had already won the tournament and was just acting it out for the public. To watch someone be that confident, that assured, that poised is inspiring. It’s at the heart of why I love professional golf.

Jason Day could win on Monday. He’s an amazing player who keeps getting close and one of these days he will break through. Louis Oosthuizen could win on Monday. He already won an Open at St. Andrews five years ago and he understands how to do it. Padraig Harrington could win on Monday. He’s a three-time major champion who seems to have found his game again.

Frankly, two dozen people could win the Open on Monday because the field is bunched up and the golf course is exposed and shootouts are unpredictable. But it sure seems to me that while a lot of players believe they can win the Open, Jordan Spieth believes he will. There’s a wide chasm between “can” and “will.” I believe, too.

Ian O'Connor talked to Jim "Bones" Mackay, who came out to watch Spieth after finishing his round with Phil Mickelson.

Lefty was out of the tournament, and yet Spieth was pulling Lefty's caddie right back into it. Mackay was waiting near the 17th green, the small of his back pressed against that ancient wall, because he wanted to see a 21-year-old chase history on the greatest par-4 in the world.

"I just think the kid is special," Mackay said. "I think he's gifted between the ears. When I say gifted, I mean like Jack Nicklaus-gifted. Jordan is going to do amazing things because he's such a killer between the ears."

Monday
Jul202015

A Few Good Reads On Open Co-leader Paul Dunne

The chances of the Irish amateur Paul Dunne hanging around today at The Open Championship are slim, but stranger things have happened. Well, not since 1933 when Johnny Goodman won the U.S. Amateur.

Barry Massey is a member at Greystones and has watched Dunne develop, sharing some insights here (Thanks reader Joe.)

Brian Keogh at the Irish Golf Desk has coverage of Dunne and Padraig Harrington.

Tim Rosaforte in Golf World on Dunne's dad and caddie/mentor Alan Murray.

Bob Harig with thoughts from Harrington on the lad and his run.

Monday
Jul202015

Hope For Tiger? Duval's Open Resurgence

Going first out in Sunday's third round at The Open, David Duval posted a 67 and signaled that he's not ready to stop playing just yet.

While the chances of another 67 are unlikely given the weather forecast, Karen Crouse with some stellar insights from Duval and his veteran caddie Ron Levin into one of golf's most fascinatingly complex personalities. (Thanks reader Tim.)

Levin added: “He wants to win golf tournaments. That’s all he’s ever wanted to do. He didn’t grow up and say, ‘I want to be a golf announcer.’ ”

The broadcast booth is where noncompetitive players go to reinvent themselves. But for Duval, analyzing the performance of other players has reinvigorated his game.

“When you’re playing well, you forget immediately about the bad shots,” Duval said. “But when you’re not playing well and you’re struggling, you feel like everybody else is hitting it beautiful and perfect all time.”

Duval said, “Sitting up there when you’re announcing and recapping the tournaments, you realize, ‘Man, these guys hit some really ugly shots.’ ” He added, “Seeing that, it’s like, ‘Oh, yeah, everybody screws up and does bad things,’ and so it removes a little bit of the pressure of ‘I have to go out and play perfectly.’ ”

Sunday
Jul192015

Instant Poll: Who Will Win The 2015 Open Championship

Dustin Johnson (75) opened the door and a wide range of players took the opportunity provided by Sunday's benign conditions to move into Open Championship contention.

Jordan Spieth is well positioned to take leg three of the Grand Slam, but the weather forecast adds an element of intrigue for the leaders too. Either way, it should be a thriller!

The betting money is going to Spieth, Day and Oosthuizen.

Vote here:

Who will win the 2015 Open Championship
 
pollcode.com free polls

Sunday
Jul192015

2015 Open Championship 3rd Round Notes & Comment Thread

A big day for the Grand Slam prospects of Jordan Spieth, as he tees off with Sergio Garcia five strokes back of second round leader Dustin Johnson.

Alex Myers with the latest Grand Slamometer notes. Having watched Spieth's post-round presser, he was incredibly positive considering he came off a disjointed, 25-hour fiasco to finish a second round that included 37 putts, the most of his career according to Justin Ray.

Ray also noted that if history is any judge, Spieth would make an unprecedented comeback if he were to win after being 5 back through 36.

TheOpen.com's digital offerings are here.

The "Traditional" leaderboard.

Sunday
Jul192015

Tiger's Going To Check Up On His Spin Rates

There have been many awkward, empathy-inducing comments from Tiger Woods as he continues to struggle, but this might have been the saddest:

Q. Did you learn anything about your game this week?

TIGER WOODS: You know, it's kind of funny because I didn't -- we were talking about that the other day; I hit the ball solid. It's just that it wasn't getting through the wind. I don't know what was causing that, and it's something that we're going to have to take a look at, look at my numbers, see if the spin rates are on or not, but it was so frustrating because all my shots that I hit solid and flush into the wind, they just weren't carrying at all.

John Strege has this roundup of some takes on Tiger, including this from ESPN.com's Kevin Van Falkenburg who says we're seeing something unprecedented.

But after watching him trudge around the Old Course for three days, and seeing the melancholy look on the man's face when it was finally over, I no longer feel even a hint of schadenfreude. I feel only empathy.

When he took off his hat on the 18th green to shake hands with Jason Day and Louis Oosthuizen, he looked as close to broken as I've ever seen a truly great athlete look. He entered this event thinking he had a real chance to contend. He wasn't even close to making the cut.

John Huggan builds a case for Tiger being done.

Right this minute, Tiger is not capable of winning major championships. Nor is he capable of winning a regular tour event. He is, in reality, a well-below average PGA Tour player.

The numbers are instructive. So far in 2015, Tiger has hit 52.86 per cent of the fairways he has aimed at. That would make him the 194th most accurate driver (out of 199) on the PGA Tour. In ‘greens in regulation’, his percentage is 61.11, “good” enough for 190th spot. But the most egregious figure is his stroke average of 72.796. Only former Masters champion Mike Weir is worse. Little wonder then, that Woods is ranked the 241st best golfer on the planet.

Ryan Lavner at GolfChannel.com adds this and more about the spin rates comment:

“We're going to have to take a look at my numbers, see if the spin rates are on or not,” he said.

What happened to just hitting golf shots?

Now fully healthy, Woods has been working through this most recent  swing change with Chris Como for about nine months. It's unclear if he's made any progress at all. His good swings are very good. He pures it at home, and on the tournament range, and in practice rounds – or, in other words, when it doesn’t matter.

Doug Ferguson noted that Woods' preparation was strange, too

He looked lost on the Old Course.

"I felt like I was playing well enough to win this event," Woods said.

He arrived on Saturday to do a junior clinic for Nike - Woods typically is all about preparations at the majors - and then after practice rounds on Sunday and Monday, he didn't play another practice round on the Old Course until the championship started. Woods said he knew the course, practiced in both wind directions and wanted to conserve energy for what usually is a long week.

Sunday
Jul192015

Video: ESPN's Old Course Hotel Feature

ESPN's Gene Wojciechowski profiled the hotel once branded by Henry Longhurst as looking like a chest with all the drawers pulled out. They've remodeled it since and this week it's under lockdown to all but the beautiful people staying there. But the report is fun in addressing the many golf-related elements and reveals a shocker in the form of showing what is going on in side the faux railway sheds.

The video.

Sunday
Jul192015

Fresh And Innovative: ESPN's Open Championship Gadgets

Here in The Open media center, the big screens are divided into BBC for the left side of the house (Fleet Street and friends), and ESPN on the right side for the Yanks. Everytime I look up there's a vibrancy on the right and to the left, well, some glorious shots of birds or the estuary. During yesterday's greens-too-fast delay, ESPN appeared to fill the time with urgency and a news-gathering approach.

While we unfortunately can't hear the announcing, the pictures and extras have been eye-opening and innovative. A real standout has been the flyovers shown with light blue shading to delineate between landing areas depending on wind (they probably need to add a red zone for those who can carry it 320).

And anyone who has been to the UK knows the distinctive green contour dashes used in homage to Strokesaver's yardage guides.


Then there was this use of Protracer partnering with ESPN Visual Technology. We saw a version of this at TPC Sawgrass' 17th and while it was fun to look at, the Road Hole is a much better architectural canvas. ESPN has put it to good use:


In a press release the Protracer folks explain how it works:

Some of the Protracer systems on The Old Course are set in permanent locations while others are used to follow featured groups around the course. Due to the vast amount of different shot shapes crafted by the world’s top players when tackling a links course, The Open Championship provides an excellent stage for Protracer.

“We employ multiple Protracer systems which allows us to track shots throughout the golf course and from varying camera angles, including rail mounted robotic cameras, mobile units and camera towers. It all works very well and integrates smoothly into the production.” says Berntsen.

A new addition to this year’s Open Championship coverage on ESPN is a neat camera angle on the famous 17th hole on The Old Course. Set next to the green the camera shows tee shots as they are hit into the fairway, over The Old Course Hotel.

 “The new receive tracking system on 17 is a big value added to the broadcast, showcasing an entirely new perspective on ball flight and strategy.”

ESPN's coverage begins at 7 am ET Sunday and Monday's delayed final round coverage starts at 6 am ET.