Patrick Reed Continues To Bulldoze The Spirit Of The Rules

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Apparently no one told Patrick Reed to not touch the ball unless absolutely necessary. Golf’s like soccer that way.

And you certainly don’t do anything around the ball that could look like you are improving your lie. At least, in the old days before the PGA Tour transitioned to a players-first culture when Tim Finchem retired and marketers took over the executive ranks.

So even with an image-killing incident at the 2019 Hero World Challenge and other run-ins with lie improvement, Captain America has resumed his assault on the most important rule of all: playing the ball as it lies.

Sadly, his 2021 Farmers Insurance Open third round actions were not denounced by the PGA Tour in any way. Official Ken Tackett, who has stood down Bryson DeChambeau’s more absurd relief requests, was debuting in a new role for CBS that will see multiple rules staffers sit in to explain situations. Just a half hour into the new role he was put to a test and mopped up for Reed, sadly. In his defense, Tackett’s paycheck comes from the players. He technically works for Patrick Reed and a cult of personality based in Florida that believes PGA Tour golfers are above golf’s rules. Still, that Tackett could not call out Reed’s premature touching of his ball despite the incredulous reactions of CBS’s broadcast team, has a nefarious aging very poorly.

If you were not watching or following on social media this all sounds a tad silly so we’ll review the facts below for posterity. But there has been a great deal of focus placed on the way Reed’s ball bounced and then purportedly embedded. It is very true that it was almost impossible to embed and therefore need relief. However, Reed was clearly told by a volunteer that she did not see the ball bounce. Fine.

But any elite golfer does not engage in what Reed proceeded to do next: pick up the ball and drop it aside while declaring it embedded, but wanting a second opinion too. If it’s even possibly embedded, you mark and slightly lift up, holding the ball with two fingers to replace it as it sat, and do this preferably under the supervision of a playing partner or official.

Instead, this is what happened:

A careful or proper approach did not happen because Patrick Reed has a complicated relationship with playing the ball as it lies. Especially since after an incident like Saturday’s where he’s (reportedly) told his actions were “textbook,” as he claimed in post round interviews. (A follow-up interview of PGA Tour rules official John Mutch confirmed this to Golf Channel.)

Let’s review some of the evidence, starting with the tape of Reed approaching his ball and starting off ok by yelling to his playing partners he was checking for an embedded lie—but then spiraling from there.

The volunteer was wrong, the ball did bounce and while that was an unfortunate mistake, Reed picking up the ball as quickly as he could AND discarding it, instead of holding it in his fingers to replicate the lie should it not be embedded, suggested he had no intention of ever playing from that lie.

By the time rules official Brad Fabel arrived, there was nothing much for him to look at but the “lip” of the embed he apparently detected under finger after having asked where the ball had gone.

Then there is the bounce issue. The PGA Tour was supposed to have a rules official monitoring telecasts and this would have been a fine moment for that official to radio in that the tee shot bounced. This would signal that Reed’s ball probably did not embed. However, everything transpired quickly and with Reed having moved the ball, it may have all been moot.

The bounce shows an embed was highly unlikely:

After the round CBS stayed on many minutes past their allotted time to break down the situation and wait out Reed, who was busy on his cell phone. The entire time the CBS on-air was skeptical of the story and claims, including lead announcer Jim Nantz who interviewed Tackett after hearing Reed’s case. Tackett made an even less compelling case that Reed had conducted himself professionally the second time around.

Jay Rigdon at Awful Announcing covered the first effort just 35 minutes into the telecast, which was also did not inspire confidence.

Twitter was also not kind to the on-air official.

The quibbling will continue and Reed will have to live with the consequences. But make no mistake: he has openly exhibited a contempt for the spirit of the rules. The PGA Tour has not given any indication this is a problem.

In the good ole days this would have just been one of those “silly rules of golf” things that people could have mocked. However, with legalized betting and the PGA Tour’s hard push of that new revenue source, a cavalier approach to the rules and the players who bend them will ultimately prove disastrous.

PGA Tour Now Has A Live-Odds Leaderboard Devoid Of FedExCup Projections

No Titleist insignias next to player names, no FedExCup projections, just the tournament standings and the live odds from one of two options: PointsBet or, if you click “To Win (All)” at the top, a readout of all the PGA Tour’s preferred sports gaming (budget responsibly!) partners.

You can check it out here.

As for the algorithm putting Tony Finau at +550-+700 while in a multi-player second place tie at the Farmers Insurance Open? One that includes folks who’ve won more and more often at a similar or higher price? That’s a conversation for you and your preferred gaming outlet.

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When Asking For A Mark Might Have Saved Xander Schauffele A Shot (Or Two)

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As a connoisseur of backstopping gone bad I so rarely get to enjoy the spoils of the nefarious practice now that players seem to have gotten the message that ball marks are their friends.

Full enjoyment of this Farmers Insurance Open round one incident is not possible since we don’t know if Jordan Spieth was desperate to mark his ball, only to have Xander Schauffele prioritizing fast play.

But as Christopher Powers writes for GolfDigest.com, the doozy of a bad break led to a Schauffele bogey and Phil Mickelson quickly asking Spieth to mark the same ball that sent Xander’s pellet running.

The setup from Powers:

The hole is only 322 yards, and Schauffele had blasted his drive just left of the green, leaving him with a difficult sidehill lie to a tucked left pin. Up on the green, Jordan Spieth, one of Schauffele’s playing partners, had not yet marked his ball. Schauffele went ahead and hit anyway, and would you believe it, his ball hit Spieth’s and ricocheted all the way off the other side of the green. Take a look:

Again, there are two ways of looking at this: a very bad break, or he had it coming since he didn’t ask Spieth to mark his ball. Protect the field, as they say. Something tells us the fine folks on Golf Twitter will be leaning toward the “karma” argument, but we can’t be too sure.

I looked and found two Tweets from the Schauffele Legion. This either speaks to my searching skills or the audience size for round one of the Farmers.

Somewhere a gambler was happy as Spieth ended up beating Schauffele in a group match bet by just a a stroke for those where sports betting is legal.

Someone else wasn’t so happy though they have yet to blame the backstop gone bad for their financial suffering.

The offending shot in a small embed (go to GolfDigest.com to see it in a larger version):

Bryson Sets Launch Plan For Bay Hill's 6th Green

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We’ve long past the farcical nature of launch angle golf. Still, it should be fun to hear about drivable par-5’s around the time governing bodies are slated to update us on their distance insights.

Given that John Daly took his share of practice round cracks at Bay Hill’s sixth green, it’s only fitting to hear Bryson DeChambeau wants to try in the upcoming Arnold Palmer Invitational.

Luke Kerr-Dineen kindly did the transcribing from this Sean Zak chat with DeChambeau:

“If I play this year I will definitely do it,” Bryson told GOLF.com’s Sean Zak during a one-on-one interview last week, sponsored by CDW. “Number six at Bay Hill is one of those I’ve been eyeing. I think I can do some pretty cool things on it.”

Bryson added that the only thing that could throw a wrench in his plans is if the wind swirls unexpectedly. He won’t try it if the wind gusts into him, obviously, but if it’s a little downwind as usual, it’s a “100 percent go.”

Will January Torrey Glory Foreshadow U.S. Open Summer Success?

My Thursday Quadrilateral News and Notes turned mostly into an all-things USGA and U.S. Open edition, with a look at the 2008 Buick-U.S. Open combo and what we can learn watching this week’s Farmers at the 2021 U.S. Open venue.

Other notes include some revealing thoughts from Rory McIlroy and Xander Schauffele, two favorites at Torrey this year and the USGA’s return of U.S. Open qualifying.

Subscribing is easy here.

More on The Quadrilateral here.

LPGA's TOC Doubles PGA Tour's Amex Audience In Fruitless Head-To-Head Against NFL

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With the two NFL games drawing audiences of 41 and 44 million thereabouts, golf had little chance. There were more people trying to scrape the last bit of guac out of the bowl at any given time than watching golf.

Don’t believe me? Look at the numbers. With a very strong microscope.

For reasons known only to people who draw six and seven figure salaries, the LPGA Tour and PGA Tour continued their bizarre tradition of trying to finish against the NFL’s conference championship games.

The 2021 final rounds of the Diamond Resorts TOC and American Express Championship played out on NBC and Golf Channel respectively. Both were better-than-average finishes, with the LPGA averaging 557,000 viewers to the PGA Tour’s 297,000 according to ShowBuzzDaily.

The LPGA’s season opener drew an almost identical number last year on NBC.

And this, despite a pretty dreadful viewing experience caused by pace of play and a heavy commercial load, as written about by Will Knights at The Fried Egg.

As for the Amex, it also drew similarly pitiful ratings in 2020, landing between Vengeance: Killer Coworkers on HLN and Vet Exotic on National Geographic. The 2021 Amex final round was beaten by the event’s Friday and Saturday rounds along with every college basketball game aired last week but three. And there were some real stinkers on that long list.

The Amex’s Monday rebroadcast also failed to crack the cable top 150 shows, killing the “total audience delivery” case to the AmEx executives wondering how to justify the sponsorship.

Also, no rounds of the Abu Dhabi HSBC won by Tyrell Hatton over Rory McIlroy drew a discernible audience last week. And with five days left in January 2021, Golf Channel’s non-live golf coverage has yet to have a show crack the top 150 cable shows on any given day.

This is all a nice way of saying: week-to-week pro golf has a product crisis on multiple fronts.

CBS Returns With Dedicated Rules Official, New Music, Mini-Leaderboard And Drone Coverage

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After the last three weeks of minimalist PGA Tour broadcast coverage expect CBS to restore some order at Torrey Pines.

Last year’s Farmers Insurance final round started with CBS started its season also having to address and cover the death of Kobe Bryant, something Bryce Miller recapped for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

As for the broadcast goodies, look for a few new touches and don’t expect to see some of the pandemic-related experimental efforts from last year like Inside the Ropes and players wearing microphones. Carryovers include the live drone and other aerials we’ve also missed out on for a while.

For Immediate Release, with interruptions.

CBS SPORTS CONTINUES LEGACY AS LEADER IN GOLF COVERAGE AS NETWORK TEES OFF 64TH CONSECUTIVE PGA TOUR GOLF SEASON

Most Comprehensive Lineup in Network Television Featuring 20 PGA TOUR Events; Season Begins with Farmers Insurance Open on Saturday, Jan. 30 and Sunday, Jan. 31

Sellers Shy Assumes Role as Lead Producer for GOLF ON CBS 

Network to Debut New Elements for Broadcast Including a Constant Mini-Leaderboard, New Theme Music, Rules Official, and More 

CBS Sports continues its legacy as the leader in golf production as it tees off its 64th consecutive year of PGA TOUR coverage, as once again the network features the most comprehensive lineup in network television with 20 PGA TOUR events. 

Led by new lead producer Sellers Shy – only the third lead producer in CBS Sports’ storied golf history – the network, in collaboration with the PGA TOUR,

At least they didn’t go with “powered by the PGA TOUR”…

will debut new elements to enhance the broadcast, including a constant mini-leaderboard; new theme music; a dedicated PGA TOUR rules official; enhanced capabilities and presentation for SmartCart; live drone coverage, and more. 

Most intriguing will be the prospect full-time PGA Tour rules official dedicated to the telecast. Based on the CBS media call last week, we’ll see them at the SmartCart and hopefully get more use out of that for replays and highlights, ala Sky Sports.

The downside? An independent rules official as all football broadcasts have now might be more inclined to share stronger takes in controversial situations. But, as the release says, this is a collaboration.

As for theme music, I’m not clear who the composer is for those fans of Helmut VonLichten’s oeurve.

CBS Sports begins the season at the Farmers Insurance Open next weekend on Saturday, Jan. 30 (3:00-6:00 PM, ET) and Sunday, Jan. 31 (3:00-6:30 PM, ET), from Torrey Pines Golf Course in San Diego, Calif.

Jim Nantz anchors CBS Sports’ golf coverage, and is joined by lead analyst Sir Nick Faldo, along with analysts Ian Baker-Finch and Frank Nobilo. Lead on-course reporter Dottie Pepper, with Mark Immelman and Trevor Immelman, and reporter Amanda Balionis, round out the CBS golf announce team. Andrew Catalon and Colt Knost will join select CBS broadcasts as well. 

CBS Sports Network will air ancillary golf programming throughout the season as well, beginning on 
Monday, Jan. 25 (11:00 PM, ET), with COURSE RECORD WITH MICHAEL BREED featuring renowned golf instructor Michael Breed and co-host Greg DuCharme discussing the latest in the golf world. Additionally, FALDO FORMULA, featuring Sir Nick Faldo, will begin its second season in April. The network also will air classic PGA TOUR telecasts each week leading up to the tournament on CBS.

The CBS Television Network also will broadcast six PGA TOUR Specials and six Korn Ferry Tour Specials, along with multiple COURSE RECORD WITH MICHAEL BREED and FALDO FORMULA episodes, throughout the season leading into live golf coverage. 

Nice upgrade for those two shows to get the network slot.

For all PGA TOUR events this year, CBS Sports’ full coverage will be available to stream live in markets across the U.S. via the CBS All Access subscription service, with additional coverage on CBSSports.com, the CBS Sports app, and CBS Sports HQ, the 24/7 streaming sports news service. ViacomCBS’ existing subscription video on-demand and live streaming service, CBS All Access, will be rebranded as Paramount+ on March 4. 

I can envision Paramount Plus becoming Jim or Sir Nick'’s go-to for the pre-round voice warm-up. Nothing like alliteration.

Sellers Shy debuts as lead producer, with Steve Milton as director, for CBS Sports' golf coverage. Sean McManus is Chairman, CBS Sports. David Berson is President, CBS Sports. Dan Weinberg is Executive Vice President, Programming, CBS Sports. Harold Bryant is Executive Producer and Executive Vice President, Production, CBS Sports. 

Last year, the PGA TOUR Season on CBS averaged 2.495 million viewers, up +17% vs. 2019 and marking the network’s best viewership average in five years.

Si Woo Kim Wins But Patrick Cantlay's Weekend Is The Real Eye-Opener

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Let’s table the whole PGA West Stadium Course-has-turned-into-Indian-Wells discussion for another day and instead congratulate Si Woo Kim on his final round 64 to win the American Express Championship. Also, a special salute to the PGA Tour staffer who computed that it’s been 1,352 since Kim’s Players Championship win. Seems it was only 2,352 days ago.

Even with some pesky breezes Sunday, the Stadium is no longer the course-too-hard-to-host-the-Hope afterr widespread adoption of Keto diets and analytics.

This does not in any way diminish runner-up Patrick Cantlay’s stunning weekend as reported on here by Adam Schupak at Golfweek.

Thanks to the PGA Tour communications team for sending out these incredible feats by the former UCLA Bruin and world No. 10:

  • He bested the course-record by two with a bogey-free 11-under 61, replacing a 9-under 63 set by Charlie Reiter in 2019

  • Cantlay was 18-under in his final 36 holes, tying the best score in relation to par in the final two rounds of a 72-hole event on Tour (Rocco Mediate/2003 Sentry TOC); eclipsed his previous best mark of 14-under in the final two rounds (2018 Shriners Hospitals/2nd)

  • Cantlay made 20 birdies in the final two rounds, the most in a 72-hole non-major event on the PGA TOUR (19/Kevin Chappell/2013 The American Express)

  • He made 11 birdies in the final round

  • Cantlay made 151 feet, 10 inches of putts in the Final Round, his most feet of putts made in a round of his Tour career

  • Sat T56 and seven strokes back after 36 holes before carding weekend rounds of 65-61

Jeremy Schilling also highlighted this about Cantlay’s weekend bogey:

Mark Hubbard Displays The "Snail" On National TV

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Well, it was on cable, the thing Comcast is phasing out faster than most it seems.

But on his way to a 76 and MC, Mark Hubbard pulled this out during round two of the 2021 American Express Championship (where a very nice leaderboard has developed).

Adam Schupak at Golfweek explained what it was all about:

Hubbard later explained that the maneuver is called the “snail”, a name that one of his former San Jose State teammates came up with.

“It usually makes for an automatic putt inside five feet,” Hubbard said. “Little disappointed I missed that one.”

The video:

2021 Sony Open Final Round Ratings Beat Out, Well, Not Much

2021 Final Round Sony Open overnight rating

2021 Final Round Sony Open overnight rating

With tee times moved up and going against the NFL’s Browns-Chiefs playoff game, the 2021 Sony Open drew pitiful ratings and reinforced the annual insanity of going up against the NFL.

According to ShowBuzzDaily the final round .19 meant an average of 305,000 viewers and just 30,000 from the 18-49 yo demo.

The four rounds as reported by ShowBuzzDaily:

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WGC Mexico Heading To Bradenton, Needs Sponsor And Probably, A Future Home

Tron Carter at NLU had the details first and while the WGC Mexico City is headed to Bradenton’s The Concession due to COVID-19 related “logistical challenges”, the PGA Tour’s press release would suggest the relationship with Grupo Salinas is both continuing and, probably over.

For Immediate Reading Between The Lines:

Due to logistical challenges posed by the COVID-19 pandemic, the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship will not be played in Mexico this year, the PGA TOUR announced in a memo released to players. This year’s event will be conducted Feb. 25-28 at The Concession Golf Club in the Bradenton-Sarasota area in Southwest Florida. There will be no change to the tournament’s eligibility requirements.

The tournament will now kick off a four-week Florida Swing that also features the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard, THE PLAYERS Championship and The Honda Classic. 

“The PGA TOUR is grateful for its continued partnership with Grupo Salinas as we navigate the unique challenges created by the pandemic,” said Ty Votaw, PGA TOUR Executive Vice President, International. “While we work toward returning to Mexico in 2022, we are appreciative of the collective effort to bring this event to a worthy venue in The Concession Golf Club, which is renowned as one of the top courses in the state of Florida.”

Returning to Mexico in 2022, so, why all the past tense usage…

For the past four years, the PGA TOUR and Grupo Salinas have fulfilled their commitment to grow golf in Mexico and Latin America, introducing the sport to thousands of new fans. In only four years, The First Tee Mexico, a non-profit organization for children and youth development, now has nine chapters throughout the country and will continue to provide educational programs and support based on key societal values such as honesty, integrity and teamwork. 

With two sold-out editions, the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship has shown to be a world-class event featuring the best players from across the globe.  

This is the part where they are supposed to mention looking forward to welcoming back the world’s best in 2022.

By bringing and hosting the World Golf Championships-Mexico Championship, Grupo Salinas has reaffirmed its solid commitment to promote Mexico’s compelling attributes and image before the world, reaching nearly one billion households within over 200 countries and territories. 
 
Given the one-year relocation from Mexico City, the TOUR is working to secure a title sponsor for the 2021 event.  

They fulfilled their mission and they won’t sponsor in 2021. We’ll see if 2022 happens there, or as Carter noted in his original Tweet, this WGC travels to another part of the world as part of the European Tour strategic alliance.

Athletes! Waialae Gets Last Minute Internal OB To Prevent Shortcut

18th at Waialae From Google Earth

18th at Waialae From Google Earth

The jocks have come flying out of the gates early in the season, fresh off their wintertime speed work to make up for equipment that all leveled off years ago. Couple that with a missing 18th green Sony Open grandstand, and PGA Tour officials installed in-course out-of-bounds Wednesday evening at Waialae. The goal: stop players from driving down the 10th fairway and having a short iron into the green.

From Brian Wacker’s GolfDigest.com story:

The out-of-bounds stakes run from adjacent the 10th green all the way back up the hole to within 30 yards of the 18th green. Someone must have forgotten to tell Rory Sabbatini, though—or he simply hit a bad tee shot—because he ended up going out of bounds and made bogey on the hole.

A year ago, Brendan Steele was clinging to a one-shot lead on the final hole when he over-hooked his approach and his ball landed on the 10th. He got a free drop because the grandstand was in his line of play but could only make par. When Smith birdied the hole, it forced a playoff, with Smith taking the title on the first extra hole.

After seeing the stakes on Thursday, Steele believes his ball still would have been in bounds, although he thinks the stakes will be an appropriate deterrent.

“But if you know it's out-of-bounds, you probably don't hit it over there, either,” Steele said.

Internal OB is always a last resort. It’s particularly unusual when it has to be installed the Wednesday prior to a tournament starting Thursday and on a course the Tour has visited annually since 1965.

But this is life in the world of launch angle golf.

One other eyebrow-raiser from Wacker’s story involves the Redan-ish 17th, which was softened last year after Tom Doak’s restoration and is playing tougher this year for a different reason. From Cameron Smith, last year’ runner-up:

“I think 17 and 18 are the biggest ones,” Smith said. “With how firm [17] green gets, sometimes you can use that grandstand as a bit of a backboard to a back pin. So I think it makes the hole tougher definitely for sure.”

The notice posted regarding the 18th:

AT&T Pebble Beach: Pro-Am Format Taking The Year Off Due To COVID-19

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A wise call. And cue the calls for “good riddance” ignoring that it’s annually one of the highest-rated events on the calendar that attracts interest from non-hardcore fans, not to mention major charitable contributions due to the pro-am.

The field remains at 156 but the tournament will only be contested at Pebble Beach and Spyglass this year. Nick Taylor is the defending champion.

For Immediate Release:

2021 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am to be played without traditional pro-am format 
Tournament will continue to maximize local charitable impact with support of title sponsor AT&T

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, FLORIDA – The PGA TOUR, in conjunction with AT&T, the Monterey Peninsula Foundation and Pebble Beach Company, today announced that the 2021 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am will be played without the traditional multi-day pro-am format due to local COVID-19 circumstances in the Monterey Peninsula. The professional portion, featuring 156 players, will be played as scheduled, February 8-14, 2021, and will be held on only two courses: Pebble Beach Golf Links and Spyglass Hill Golf Course.

“We are incredibly grateful for the commitment of our title sponsor AT&T, corporate partners, PGA TOUR, Pebble Beach Company, Monterey Peninsula Country Club and volunteer community,” said Steve John, Tournament Director and Monterey Peninsula Foundation CEO. “While we will truly miss watching the actors, musicians, athletes and other amateur participants that make this event so special, we are pleased to continue on with the professional competition, enabling the Foundation to support nonprofits in Monterey, San Benito and Santa Cruz Counties. Our charitable giving will target basic needs like food insecurity, educational inequities and health inequities brought on by the pandemic.”

The AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, which will celebrate its 75th anniversary in 2021, had previously announced spectators will not be on-site at this year’s event. Through the unwavering support of AT&T, the second-longest running title sponsor on the PGA TOUR, the tournament will continue to maximize charitable contributions in the area. Since 1947, the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am has generated more than $176 million for charities in Monterey, San Benito and Santa Cruz Counties.

“While the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am may look different, AT&T is proud to continue our legacy of supporting the Monterey Peninsula Foundation and is committed to ensuring a positive impact on the local charities who benefit from the tournament proceeds each year,” said Lori Lee, CEO of AT&T Latin America and Global Marketing Officer. “It’s unfortunate that we won’t be hosting the amateur portion of the tournament, but the safety of the fans, the players and the volunteers is our top priority. We look forward to welcoming the fans and the amateur players back next year.”

In addition, a pro-am will be conducted Wednesday morning to support local charitable giving. The ‘Every Shot Counts’ pro-am will allow participants the opportunity to help drive grantmaking by targeting four key initiatives. Just as every shot counts, every dollar contributed will be invested by Monterey Peninsula Foundation in critical areas brought on by the pandemic. Over the last five months, the PGA TOUR has successfully hosted Wednesday pro-ams, an integral part of tournament week. With a limited number of amateur participants, the pro-am is conducted in accordance with a comprehensive health and safety plan, including COVID-19 testing.

Since the tournament moved to the Monterey Peninsula in 1947, the final action has unfolded on the iconic holes of Pebble Beach Golf Links. The tournament plans to return to the traditional pro-am format – conducted over three courses – in 2022.

“This was a very difficult decision, but the right one given the recent surge in COVID-19 cases,” said Bill Perocchi, Chief Executive Officer of Pebble Beach Company. “Since the beginning of the pandemic, we have put the health and safety of our guests, employees and community first. We know this will create challenges for many local charities this year, but we are confident that the incredible giving associated with this event will continue well into the future. We appreciate the support from Monterey County and the State of California in helping to ensure a safe and successful professional tournament, as well as from our partners at AT&T, the PGA TOUR and the Monterey Peninsula Foundation.”

The 2021 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, which was won by Nick Taylor in 2020, will be broadcast by CBS, Golf Channel, PGA TOUR LIVE, DIRECTV’s “PGA TOUR Experience” and PGA TOUR Radio. Fans also can follow along the tournament’s social media channels on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

“The AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am’s lineup of celebrities competing with the PGA TOUR’s best players with the Monterey Peninsula as the backdrop has been a perfect marriage of sports and entertainment since 1947,” said Tyler Dennis, Executive Vice President and President, PGA TOUR. “The PGA TOUR and our partners have maintained that the health and safety for all involved with our events and the communities in which we play is our No. 1 priority, and for that reason – together with AT&T, the Monterey Peninsula Foundation and Pebble Beach Company – we feel strongly this decision, while difficult, was the right call to make given the current environment. We thank our title sponsor AT&T for their support of this reimagined event and for the positive impact that will continue in the region through the charitable initiatives of the Monterey Peninsula Foundation.”

Waste Management Down To 5000 "Extremely Limited Number Of Socially Distanced Fans"

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Originally slated for 8000 and down to 5000 fans now, is anyone really going to feel comfortable given the Waste Management Open’s (A) method of counting attendance figures (B) inevitable desire to maintain the party atmosphere (C) potential to set a terrible example and set back efforts to welcome back fans safely.

Either way they march on eager to push the boundaries with apparent PGA Tour blessing and now, just 5000. Josh Frigerio reports.

"We remain hopeful we can host an extremely limited number of socially distanced fans at “The People’s Open”, and in light of the current COVID climate, we have decided to further reduce our attendance to fewer than 5,000 fans each day," Tournament Chairman Scott Jenkins said in a statement.

Another oddity?

The Tour stop in Arizona sits between four events in California. Which, as GolfChannel.com’s Rex Hoggard notes in this not particularly subtle questioning of the upcoming effort to play in California, is the state most facing incredible strain on medical resources.

This was once an issue for the PGA Tour in visiting a region as part of its restart, but so far has not led to pivot in scheduling in 2021.

Los Angeles Times, Jan. 11, 2021: “Darkest days for L.A. doctors, nurses, EMTs: ‘The way most people leave is by dying’”

Despite an ongoing stay-at-home order and aggressive lockdown rules, health officials in Los Angeles are bracing for what they believe will be a post-New Year’s transmission peak in “a few weeks.” The Genesis Invitational, which benefits the Tiger Woods Foundation and is seen as the anchor of the Tour’s West Coast swing, is scheduled for Feb. 18-21 at Riviera Country Club. How that timing fits in with the ongoing crisis and a potential peak in COVID-19 cases remains to be seen, but the Tour and Levinson remain resolute.

Following seven months of competition since last June’s restart across dozens of states and international boundaries, the Tour is confident with its plan and its place in every community where it plays.

“In every state where we go, we work very closely with the local authorities - whether that’s health officials, local leadership, governor’s offices - and make sure they understand what our program entails to the point that they are comfortable with us conducting our events,” Levinson said. “Our program is designed to take every step possible to mitigate risk, the environment in one state or another doesn’t change that.”

The Tour’s protocols, which have been widely applauded, won’t be changing but given the current crisis in California, the scrutiny on those protocols is sure to intensify.

The Genesis made official that no fans will be at Riviera this year.

Props To Sony Open: COVID-19 Testing All Volunteers At This Week's Event

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The PGA Tour’s Sony Open tees off in its traditional spot following Kapalua and Jim Mendoza looks at how the event has prepared to host players (but no fans) in the COVID-19 era.

This was particularly impressive:

Pro-Am players and volunteers will also undergo COVID-19 tests.

“We’re proud to say are one of only two events on the PGA Tour this year that will test every single volunteer,” Stosik said.

The tournament usually needs about 1,500 volunteers, but fewer are needed for the 2021 open.

“We’ll be close to 800 or 900 this year. One of the areas where we actually need more volunteers is in ShotLink,” Stosik said.

Earlier this week Jhonattan Vegas tested positive for the virus and will quarantine in Honolulu but results from the volunteer testing have not been reported. That would be of interest, not at the expense of folks should they have it, but to show that the testing possibly helped prevent someone from unknowingly spreading COVID-19.