Going Forward, Bryson Won't Be Discussing Possible Alternative Start Lines

After the PGA Tour installed internal OB earlier this week, Bryson DeChambeau has learned his lesson.

No more teasing potential bold approaches to courses.

Last week’s Bay Hill winner telegraphed a possible alternative route to the 18th hole and the PGA Tour Rules staff responded with OB stakes left of TPC Sawgrass’ 18th.

And now Bryson, in contention again this week, learned a valuable lesson.

Q. What was your reaction when they told you about the internal OB on 18?

BRYSON DeCHAMBEAU: I understand it. I probably shouldn't have said anything. Knowing that now, I won't, now I won't ever say any lines that I'm taking anymore, but that's okay. I understand it. I've got no issues with it. I understand why, from a safety precaution reason, totally get it. But I'm going to keep myself a little quiet next time for lines that I'm going to try to obtain.

This was also fascinating in explaining why he looked left of the lake:

Q. Do you even have a driver play off of 18? Is there one?

BRYSON DeCHAMBEAU: No. Not with my dispersion.

Q. What would you be doing? You'd be trying to aim it where?

BRYSON DeCHAMBEAU: I'd be trying to hit a rope hook down the same kind of curve of the fairway.

Q. It just doesn't make sense?

BRYSON DeCHAMBEAU: If I overdraw it it's in the water. If I hit it just a little straight it's in the trees. There's nothing -- I've got nothing there. That's why I was thinking about going down 9. Dangit.

And if there was any doubt about not previewing future alternative lines, well he’s off to a good start.

Q. I know you said you didn't want to talk about where you might start cutting angles after what happened this week, but when you look at courses going forward for the rest of the season, are there places where you feel like you can do what you did at No. 6 last week?

BRYSON DeCHAMBEAU: Not as drastically as what I did at No. 6, but there are holes where it gives you a much better opportunity to have an advantage on that hole, if it can be played in the way that I'm going to try. It's a little bit bigger risk, but maybe it's a bigger reward.

Q. I'd ask you where but clearly you don't want to tell me.

BRYSON DeCHAMBEAU: Sorry.

17th At TPC Sawgrass: 23% Of Balls Miss The Island On A Pretty Calm Day

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Antics on 17? On a pretty calm day by Ponte Vedra standards? Fun! Unless you were playing.

The 2021 first round antics will go down in Players history as one of the stranger days on this much-studied hole. Similar carnage has occurred but never on such an agreeable day weather-wise.

From Ryan Lavner’s GolfChannel.com report:

The 17th hole measured 143 yards in the opening round and was the second-hardest hole on the Stadium Course. On a teeny par 3 that required no more than a 9-iron, and oftentimes just a pitching or gap wedge, the hole surrendered just 30 birdies, had an average proximity of 27 feet and doled out plenty of pain.

There were 13 double bogeys and nine others, two of which were extraordinarily awful. In all, 35 shots – a whopping 23% – found the water.

“That’s not a fun hole today,” Nick Taylor said, and that’s coming from the guy who hit one of the best shots of the day: to 5 feet.

It’s the most talked- and written-about par 3 in the world – and for good reason, amplified by the setting and its position in the round, so close to the finish line, with such potential to be a round-wrecker.

I saw very few shots go in where I thought, oh he was hosed. It appeared most were just a little aggressive or slightly pulled their tee shots. That upper left hole is awkward in that the hole location is just left of center for a righthander, meaning it’s easy to hit a slight (or full) pull.

Ben An was 1 over for the day when he made 11, second only to Bob Tway’s 12, doubled the last for 83.

An’s brush with history got plenty of social coverage:

An posted this later on:

NBC had it’s patented slow-mo reaction cam and boy did it get work Thursday. You can also see Kevin Na’s back went out on him, as it’s prone to do. And before he posted 81 and WD’d. As he’s prone to do.

Every Shot Live Reminder To Players: "Be mindful of what you say and do on course"

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Apparently creeped out the Big Brother vibe of the text, multiple PGA Tour players shared the above text from the Global Home. At least one player even posted an apology in advance on social media:

This is all prompted by Every Shot Live that debuted last year for one round:

Live streaming of every shot hit at THE PLAYERS Championship will get underway Thursday morning from TPC Sawgrass. Nearly 100 cameras will capture roughly 31,000 strokes taken over approximately 430 rounds played.

The feature will be available free Thursday via PGA TOUR Live on NBC Sports Gold.

Trying To Figure Out The TPC Sawgrass Bias Against A Bias

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I love Justin Ray not because he’ll crunch the numbers so we don’t have to, but he genuinely uses the new trove of statistics in such creative ways.

In his latest installment for PGATour.com, Ray tackles the utterly bizarre lack of back-to-back winners at TPC Sawgrass. And also attempts to detect any rhyme or reason as to who might succeed there.

Besides learning there are two events with longer droughts without having a back-to-back winner, I also learned there may be no explaining the lack of any discernible TPC Sawgrass bias.

In 2018, Webb Simpson won his first PLAYERS title despite losing strokes to the field on approach shots. A staggering 95% of his strokes gained for the week came on shots around the green and on putts.

Contrast that to the winning formula McIlroy utilized the following year, when 85% of his strokes gained came in the form of tee shots and approaches. He gained less than 5% of his strokes on the field with his putter, the lowest percentage of any PLAYERS champion the last 15 years.

Those jumpy trends persist throughout recent history when analyzing PLAYERS champions. In 2018, Si Woo Kim gained more than 35% of his strokes over the field on tee shots. In 2007, though, Phil Mickelson actually lost strokes on his tee shots, but managed to win thanks to spectacular iron play.

Cirque du Bryson Arrives In Ponte Vedra: Internal OB Added In The "Interest Of Safety"

TPC Sawgrass’ 18th hole without tournament tents (Google Earth)

TPC Sawgrass’ 18th hole without tournament tents (Google Earth)

All Bryson DeChambeau did was mention he might consider driving left of TPC Sawgrass’ 18th hole lake after Sunday’s Arnold Palmer Invitational win. And Tuesday the PGA Tour was putting up internal OB stakes to discourage the play in the “interest of safety, volunteers and other personnel.”

From Bob Harig’s ESPN.com report:

Bryson DeChambeau was not cited, but the rule was clearly put in place after the winner of the Arnold Palmer Invitational on Sunday talked about trying to drive his tee shot over the lake on the 18th hole for what he said would be an easier shot to the par-4 green.

"I have thought about sometimes on 18 going left into 9," DeChambeau said after his victory Sunday. "We'll see, with the stands and everything, if it's even worth it ... it just gives you a better shot into the green, personally, where you can just hit it a little long and you're always going to be OK.”

The official statement from the Tour:

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Golf Channel’s Todd Lewis reported this nugget later on:

I think it’s well established that no single chintzier setup element exists than internal out of bounds. It goes against everything that made people start whapping wobbly balls around a cross-country path before indoor plumbing and floss.

Naturally, the safety notion is absurd given that you stand a much better chance of getting hit by a 325 yard incoming Titleist while minding your own business than in that area at TPC Sawgrass.

But this adds to the Bryson legend and hopefully highlights the distance issue in a way that hits home. At the Global Home.

Ratings: API Way Up For 2021 Bay Hill Final Round

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Bryson DeChambeau’s one-stroke win over Lee Westwood proved to be a ratings bonanza by modern day standards.

ShowbuzzDaily.com with all of the numbers.

While a 2.36 might not look huge, NBC’s 2021 Arnold Palmer Players Championship Extended Preview Show Presented By Mastercard was up 49% over last year’s 1.67 for Tyrrell Hatton’s win.

The API—excuse me, APPCEPSPBM—rating is especially impressive in this age of declining numbers, cordcutting, regular sports competition and a telecast sporting a heavy commercial and promo load.

Early round coverage on Golf Channel was also up for all of the early shows and Sunday’s pregame show also cracked the top 150 cable shows. I believe that makes it the first or second non-live tournament coverage broadcast to draw a discernable audience.

The loser in all of this?

The LPGA’s Drive On Championship, going up against the action at Bay Hill, failed to rate Sunday with live final round (at the same time!?) coverage. A shame too, as the Golden Ocala course added some zest to a strong leaderboard. But when you insist on Sunday finishes against a PGA Tour schedule staple, these things happen.

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**NBC sent this release on ratings to date.

PGA TOUR VIEWERSHIP ON NBC UP 30% IN 2021 

Combined GOLF Channel/NBC PGA TOUR Viewership Up 24% vs. 2020

Arnold Palmer Invitational Viewership Up 49% vs. 2020; Sunday’s Final Round Viewership on NBC Peaks at More Than 5.6 Million Viewers

8 of 10 PGA TOUR Events on GOLF Channel/NBC in 2021 Have Delivered Audience Increases

26 Tournament Telecasts on GOLF Channel/NBC Up At Least 10%

STAMFORD, Conn. – March 10, 2021 – NBC Sports has produced significant viewership gains for the PGA TOUR to open the 2021 calendar year, delivering a 30% year-over-year viewership increase on NBC and a 24% increase for GOLF Channel/NBC tournament coverage through last week’s Arnold Palmer Invitational, according to data provided by The Nielsen Company. 

Twenty-six tournament telecasts on GOLF Channel/NBC have seen at least 10% viewership growth in 2021 compared to the first two months of 2020, and eight of the 10 PGA TOUR events on GOLF Channel/NBC in 2021 have posted year-over-year viewership growth vs. comparable coverage of the same event, most notably:

  • Arnold Palmer Invitational on GOLF Channel/NBC up 49%

  • Waste Management Phoenix Open on GOLF Channel up 38%

  • AT&T Pebble Beach on GOLF Channel up 29%

Following are viewership highlights from last week’s Arnold Palmer Invitational on GOLF Channel/NBC:

  • Sunday’s final round viewership on NBC averaged 3.9 million viewers, up 49% vs. 2020.

  • Final round viewership on NBC peaked at more than 5.6 million viewers (6-6:15 p.m. ET) as Bryson DeChambeau defeated Lee Westwood by one shot.

  • Saturday’s third round on NBC was the most-watched sports event of the day, averaging 2.5 million viewers, up 41% vs. 2020.

  • Most-watched second round (GOLF Channel), third and final rounds (NBC) for the API since 2018.

The season began at the 2021 Sentry Tournament of Champions on GOLF Channel/NBC (Jan. 7-10), which delivered:

  • Most-watched first and third rounds on GOLF Channel since 2018

  • Most-watched final round on GOLF Channel/NBC since 2017

  • Most-watched second round on GOLF Channel since 2016

Additionally, the final round of the Waste Management Phoenix Open (Feb. 7) averaged 3.7 million viewers, up 29% vs. 2020 final round coverage on CBS. Lead-in coverage on GOLF Channel averaged 1.3 million viewers, up 83% vs. 2020.

"When you do your report on @JordanSpieth you gotta let him hear the speech."

So much to love here with this major Jordan Spieth fan. The depth of knowledge, the delivery, the assuredness and of course the pure audacity! Oh, and so grateful that this video was captured by a fan instead of a scribe, who would face credential revocation for sharing.

State Of The Tour '21: Monahan Addresses Tiger, Vaccination, Mask Enforcement And Distance Issue

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You know the old saying, if at first you don’t succeed, go on CNBC again!

For reasons unknown Commissioner Jay Monahan was booked on CNBC a year after the disastrous TV deal rollout as markets crashed. At least this time, the screen wasn’t soaked in red though the shine factor was better than most.

CNBC’s Joe Kernen is that guy who spends too much in the 19th hole grill, knows just enough to be dangerous and doesn’t really listen to answers. He’s the guy who asks how your Uncle Steve is doing, only to be informed Steve died in a fiery car crash, and then tells you an adorable story about how terrible of a cart driver Steve could be.

So if you want to squirm, the clip with Kernen repeatedly asking Monahan questions about Tiger Woods and not taking hints that little can be said at this point, here it is. The second clip isn’t working on the CNBC site, but it does contain one noteworthy remark from Monahan. He reveals a $160 million haul for charities in 2020, down from $200 million in a normal year.

More informative was his pre-Players press conference featuring some solid questions and answers.

On vaccinations, this approach was encouraging to hear and should have a positive impact if players participate:

Q. You mentioned in December that there would be no mandate for players to get vaccinated. I'm wondering with three now on the market, has there been any update or what's the plan with the vaccine being made available to players? Is there any sort of update on that front.

JAY MONAHAN: Well, we are certainly encouraged by the incredible progress that has been made with the vaccines, by virologists, and I think from our perspective right now, we're partnering with the National Ad Council, we're going to participate, alongside many other leagues, in an upcoming campaign around vaccination. We're going to do everything we can to educate all of our players on the facts behind vaccination.

And then, as it relates to being prepared, I think one of the unique things about our sport is that, while we're going to do everything when the time is right and when we're able to provide vaccination to have our players, caddies, their families, all of our constituents in a position to get it, our players also -- we got 94 players from 29 countries and territories, they live all throughout the world, so I think the most important thing right now is education, and then we're going to do everything we can to support vaccination for our players when it's appropriate to do so.

And while I have no idea what Golf Incorporated is nor do I want to, it’s good hearing him single-out layoffs as the most trying part of his last year:

Q. For you personally, I'm just wondering, outside of a year ago this week, what was your most trying moment during this last 11 plus months and what has been maybe your most triumphant or rewarding moment as you've carried on?

JAY MONAHAN: You know, I'll start with the positives. I think that the way that our sport came together and the way that sports in general came together. But you look at all the golf organizations that we partner with, I don't think there was ever a period of time where we worked more closely together, more honestly together, more directly together. Had a lot of hard conversations about what we thought we needed to do for our sport and we operated as, as I think you've heard several of us say, Golf Incorporated.

I think that served the game very, very well, and to see the game flourish as a result of that and see more people coming into our game, more people making golf their thing, and for the game to become more and more welcoming and inclusive in the process, I think big picture wise that's very positive.

I think there were a lot of challenging moments. It's hard to pick one, but as the leader of this organization when you have to let great people go and you have to furlough workers and you have to take some of the steps that we take, those are things that I'll never forget, and I still feel today. That's the kind of thing that'll always stay with you.

A mask enforcement question was needed given the obvious difference, at least on TV when fans were shown, between Scottsdale and Bay Hill:

Q. Last week at Bay Hill there were numerous people that were fans that weren't wearing masks, and though you have people out there asking these people to mask up, their responses are usually not polite when they say they're not going to. The question is, how do you enforce a program that seems to be almost unenforceable considering the amount of volunteers that are involved with the mask situation versus the people that are out there?

JAY MONAHAN: You do the absolute best that you can. We're now five events into the return to fans, and we're working closely with each one of our tournament organizations, our volunteer leadership team. We continue to stress the importance of it.

While there are some, I've been encouraged by the number of people that have been wearing masks. And while I have seen some that aren't, and we want everyone to be wearing masks and we're going to continue to reinforce that, I like the actual progression that we've been on, and I think you'll see more growth on that front this week.

I know Jared and Troy and the teams here have spent a lot of time and energy enforcing those guidelines and protocols and being in position to do that. You'll see signage everywhere. I drove home from Bay Hill on Sunday night. As I got within a 10-mile radius I got my app alert from THE PLAYERS Championship, reminding me of all the safety protocols.

Good job app team! Hopefully he didn’t look down at his phone too long.

This was a good question about spacing out featured groups. The answer? Not so much.

Q. Was there any consideration given, on tournaments going forward, with a limited number of fans, to on the featured pairings, when you put them back-to-back, like last week that's where everybody was on Thursday and Friday. Was there any consideration given to only doing one and spreading out the stars, so to speak, to allow for more outdoor golf distancing?

JAY MONAHAN: Well, I think that's something we'll continue to look at. I mean, we've got 154 superstars here this week, and I think our fans are here to see them all. But that is a reality, and that's something that I know we've talked about and we're mindful of as we do featured pairings and as we stage our events week in and week out.

That is a buried lede, btw. The field is now 154 at The Players because 144 was not enough when you have 154 superstars.

And for your gobbledygook answer of the day? On distance:

Q. Last month the USGA and the R&A released some results of the Distance Insight Project. It drew pretty strong reactions from some of the players. What was your reaction and kind of your stance right now on that whole distance debate?

JAY MONAHAN: Yeah, I think that's the second time that that Distance Insights Report was released. You know, the USGA and the R&A, they're our industry partners. I think when they came back and released it, released the fact that they were going to go to a period of notice and they were going to reinstitute that project, to me they're taking back up the work that they stalled after the pandemic last year, and this is a long-term subject that they're exploring, and we as industry partners are going to participate. We've been invited to participate and collaborate. That's exactly what we're going to do.

Ultimately I think where we'll end up will be a place where, from a PGA TOUR standpoint, I think if you're a player, if you're a fan, I think the excitement that you see here week in and week out, that's something that you'll continue to see as we go forward and as we debate that subject. I think it's -- everybody needs to be patient here. As they've said, it's a project that's going to take a number of years to get a recommendation and a result, and we're excited to participate in it.

I'm not surprised with the reaction. It's a subject that generates a lot of debate. I'm proud of our players for expressing their thoughts, and we'll continue to express ours in the context of those discussions. But as I said earlier, I think, as an industry, these are the things that we need to work together, need to work through short-term items and we need to work through long-term items in the best interests of the game, and that's the approach we're going to take in those discussions.

At this point, given his past remarks showing resistance to the USGA/R&A stance, this series of delay-tactic answers is a positive step forward.

Can The Players In March Foreshadow Masters Glory?

3rd at TPC Sawgrass in March, 2019 (Geoff Shackelford)

3rd at TPC Sawgrass in March, 2019 (Geoff Shackelford)

We’re in year three of the Players back in March, but only one tournament completed so far.

But from 1982 to 2006 the TPC Sawgrass hosted the world’s best as the last big pre-Masters championship. While three weeks now separate these two great tournaments, we’re still so close that a little analysis is warranted.

As I did with Riviera and Bay Hill a few weeks ago, I wanted to see how Masters winners and runner-ups fared at the Players. Here it is for Quadrilateral subscribers.

And this traditional reminder: The Quadrilateral is a newsletter dropping once a week for free to all. You can read back issues here, join the paid subscriber base here and get all newsletters, or check out the website for a full explanation here.

"The PGA Tour pro who saw COVID-19 coming"

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COVID-19 has been awful, unpredictable and it remains hard to fault most leaders for decisions they made with so many unknowns.

So it’s a bit much though not unexpected to see the PGA Tour trying to weave a fresh narrative related to last year’s Players Championship cancellation.

Two long features with identical details went live today (here and here) carving out the executive decision-making as historic, if slightly caught off-guard by last year’s cancellations in other arenas. Golf was the last major sport to shut down and did so reluctantly.

The Tour tried to forge ahead with a disastrous TV deal rollout and the Players even though warning signs of potential trouble were in place for weeks.

Lee Westwood, who stayed in England, could see the PGA Tour was moving slow to grasp reality. Lucas Glover lamented the lack of a proactive approach. And C.T. Pan was also not surprised by the direction of the virus and withdrew on Players eve (the only player not compensated for his time as a result).

GolfDigest.com’s Dave Shedloski caught up with Pan about his foresight, which looks downright prophetic compared to that of executives who still allowed a concert and first round to go on with fans, then told fans they could not come for round two before eventually cancelling the tournament.

Though it pained him to do so—truly, because the Players Championship is one of his favorite events—Pan withdrew that morning from the tour’s flagship tournament after it became obvious the strange new virus that he had heard about for months not only had gained a foothold in America but now was beginning to rage across the country. The coronavirus pandemic was taking hold.

“Yes, things happened fast between Arnold Palmer and Players, but to us, given what we had heard, we didn’t think things moved fast enough overall,” he said hesitantly, not wanting to offend or be critical of anyone. “Honestly, it’s hard to track the original time, but it seemed to have started back in November [2019] in China. It took only a few months to really spread with the European countries hit first. No one was really ready for it anywhere. The WHO [World Health Organization] was not telling us much. All I’m trying to say is that by last year at API it was already here.”

DeChambeau Outlasts Field At Bay Hill Where They Dared To Play The Ball Down Sunday!

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It was a livelier weekend than most at Bay Hill. And in between the Players promos, the Players reminders, Players featured groups, the Players history, gobs of commercials, more promos and a few synergistic aerials of Universal Orlando, we saw some compelling golf even if it took the leaders a stout 4:30 or so to get around in twosomes.

But most impressive of all? On Sunday they played the ball down. Like grownups have managed to do for a few hundred years!

The grit!

The stones!

As I wrote for The Quadrilateral’s loyal supporters, it wasn’t entirely on the up-and-up rules-wise over the weekend and at least Roger Maltbie can still call it like he sees it. But anticipatory preferred lies won’t end well for all involved.

Regarding Bryson DeChambeau’s Arnold Palmer Invitational Presented by Mastercard win, it came on a windy final day where the 17th and 18th played unbelievably tough:

Golf.com’s Michael Bamberger on another wild and wacky DeChambeau win:

When DeChambeau smashed a drive on the par-5 6th hole almost within spitting distance of the green, he raised his hands, Rocky-style. When Westwood followed, in spirit but not remotely in length, he raised his hands, too. He was having himself a good time, his girlfriend-caddie smiling beside him. He earned $1 million for finishing second. And that’s rounding it down.

Bryson made that winning putt on 18, and he shook the ground right through his Pumas. The connection to Arnold was complete. How many golfers have won the U.S. Amateur, the U.S. Open, Jack Nicklaus’ tournament (the Memorial) and Arnold’s tournament? TWO! Tiger and Bryson. That’s some club. Bryson said that Tiger sent him a text Sunday morning.

While there was rightful focus on DeChambeau’s drives, his “long” approach play was the difference according to former Golf Channel stats guru Justin Ray:

Runner-up Lee Westwood delivered a fun play on DeChambeau’s Saturday reaction:

But it was Bryson’s second straight insanely bold play at 6 and a few other moments that proved to be the biggest highlights:

Tiger Texts Bryson "Out of the blue" Before Bay Hill Final Round

News on the status of Tiger Woods has been almost impossible to obtain. Ryder Cup Captain Steve Stricker, who shares an agent with Woods, said he had not “heard too much lately” and said it’s way too early to talk about an assistant captaincy role for Tiger, reports Golfweek’s Steve DiMeglio.

News related to his accident continues to focus on the investigation, with the USA Today calling out the LA County Sheriff for not taking into account Woods’ past accidents and prescription drug issues.

So against that limited backdrop, it was a bit of a shock to hear that Woods was texting Bryson DeChambeau from his hospital bed.

After his Arnold Palmer Invitational win, DeChambeau shared this:

Q. Can you talk about, a little bit more about the text you got this morning from Tiger?

BRYSON DECHAMBEAU: Well, it was obviously personal, I would say, for the most part, but pretty much to sum it up, he -- he texted me this morning out of the blue and I wasn't expecting anything. When I got that text, I'm like, wow, that's pretty amazing that he is thinking of me when he's in his tough times that he's going through right now. So I just texted him, I said, Keep moving forward, keep going forward. You're going to get through it. You're the hardest working person I've ever met and you'll persevere through this pretty much. One of the things that we talked about was, it's not about how many times you get kicked to the curb or knocked down. It's about how many times you can get back up and keep moving forward. And I think this red cardigan is not only for Mr. Palmer, but I would say it's a little bit for Tiger as well, knowing what place he's in right now.

Bryson Drives It 370 Yards At Bay Hill's 6th

He’s been pondering driving the green, gave it a bit of a look Friday and on Saturday of the Arnold Palmer Invitational but the wind wasn’t quite to his liking. We don’t know the wind numbers because NBC is resting their on-screen windometer for bigger events. Or it’s a COVID thing.

Saturday with apparently a wind to his liking, Bryson DeChambeau took the boldest line known in tournament history during a third round 68. He trails Lee Westwood by one heading into Sunday’s final round.

From Brentley Romine’s GolfChannel.com story on DeChambeau’s bold play:

"For the most part, that's a shot that I know I can do, and I was able to accomplish that," DeChambeau said. "I would have done it without the fans, but the fans definitely edged me on a little bit and it was fun to give them what they wanted."

Feeling the energy, DeChambeau stepped up to the plate, gave it a mighty lash and watched the ball sail over the water. With the ball still in the air, DeChambeau raised both arms in the air and pointed to the sky.

"It was amazing," DeChambeau said. "It felt like I won a tournament there."

Almost.

Romine also shared these numbers. Look at that 23 yards of roll! More than 5% of the 370!

Here are some of the numbers:

• Carry: 347 yards

• Total distance: 370 yards

• Clubhead speed: 137 mph

• Ball speed: 196 mph

• Smash factor: 1.43

• Launch angle: 11.9 degrees

• Apex: 124 feet

The big shot and World Long Drive reaction.

Roundup: This Special API Week Edition Of Not Playing It As It Lies

This week in the PGA Tour’s assault on play it as it lies was busier than most!

We start in reverse order with round three of the 2021 Arnold Palmer Invitational where preferred lies (lift, clean, place) were invoked due to “anticipated wet conditions.”

The same golf course that was turning crispy Friday afternoon is apparently going to require preferred lies Saturday afternoon. The forecast does call for rain but as of 1:05 pm ET the drops had not fallen.**

A similar precog approach happened at Pebble Beach earlier this year. The AT&T is spread over two courses and equity was the goal for players spread between Spyglass and Pebble over the opening two rounds.

But the API is played at just one golf course, the conditioning has been raved about and did I mention rain had not fallen yet?

Next in assaulting the original founding principle of the rules, we go back to the API’s round one where Patrick Reed demonstrated he’s learned absolutely nothing from Torrey Pines earlier this year.

As this clip shows, he continues to spend an inordinate amount of time touching everything around his ball:

And last but potentially least, I’ve got this unidentified player below at 17-18 taps in his line. Could be 16. You get the idea.

While technically this is allowed under the rules, it’s a rather blatant example of bending the spirit of the rules. As many warned when the USGA/R&A softened standards on spike mark tapping, this kind of thing would eventually happen.

But this is also a reminder for those who care: the rule change was made in the name of repairing “damage”. How long before a player brings out their beloved (smooth) foam roller to ensure they have no “damage” to contend with?


**Other than a few drops and brief shower, the rain never came.

But the Tweets were fun.