Guardian: Premier Golf League "Pressing Ahead" With Events For Golf's Independent Contractors

Despite the news-dumped landmark strategic alliance announcement between the European Tour and PGA Tour, The Guardian’s Ewan Murray says the Raine Group’s Premier Golf League is forging ahead with event plans.

The Raine Group, venture capitalists who came close to an agreement with the European Tour, believe the finest golfers in the world – as independent contractors – can still be coaxed to play in competitions not sanctioned by the sport’s traditional tournament organisers.

There remains concern among some at the upper levels of professional golf that, by coming closer, the PGA and European tours are not boosting the market by allowing competition. Meanwhile, Raine are not going away.

It would take major contraction or a financial collapse of the European Tour for a full PGA Tour monopoly to take hold. And great news! The European Tour is “categorically” flush after laying off 68 people and the world is grand shape. Never better.

Anyway, Murray suggests the PGA Tour presented an offer the European Tour could not refuse.

Documentation seen by the Guardian understood to have been shown to the European Tour board cited, as examples, potential scheduling conflicts and increasing the number of minimum events that players must enter to retain PGA Tour status. The notion of PGA Tour qualifying events in Europe, the lobbying of major championships regarding eligibility criteria, pressure on broadcasters over coverage and impact on the Ryder Cup were all even mooted as possible outcomes. As things stand, the PGA Tour has no formal involvement in the Ryder Cup whatsoever.

A Ryder Cup bluff. Bold.

Of course, none of the threatened actions Murray reports would do anything to improve the product of either tour in any scenario. The ploys merely hold off an existential threat. That’s no small thing, but also demonstrates how far some folks are going to hold together the current model even as the times will inevitably demand some type of pivot by all tours.

Ponte Vedra Shuffle: "Structural moves to strengthen our core business...and to prepare for further collaboration with the European Tour"

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They love to lay off the little people and add more VP’s down in Ponte Vedra, so beyond the normal comings and goings the below memo includes references to the recently news-dumped alliance with the European Tour.

The headline below for serious golf fans must begin with a huge congratulations to Slugger White and Mark Russell, both officially retiring after 40 years of service to the PGA Tour and hearing more slow play gripes than two men ever should.

Salud on a great run and many more happy days on the links!

Here is the missive “sent on behalf of Commissioner Monahan” to players that also found its way into my inbox:

I am pleased to announce a few structural moves designed to strengthen our core business -- Player Relations and Competitions -- and to prepare for further collaboration with the European Tour as we advance the optimal global golf structure to the benefit of players and fans around the world.

Optimal global golf structure. Nothing like jargon to raise red flags.

Tyler Dennis is promoted to EVP & President, PGA TOUR, a member of the Commissioner’s Committee, reporting to Andy Pazder, and will, in addition to his current responsibilities, focus on relationships with our global player membership base as well as relationships with title sponsors given his broad Competitions, Player and Tournament experience and perspective.

I believe the Commissioner’s Committee guarantees jet seat access on PGA Tour Airship 1, but I’ll get back to you on that. As opposed to the Executive Leadership Team…

Dan Glod is moving to an elevated role as SVP – Player Relations, a member of the Executive Leadership Team, reporting directly to Ross Berlin and working closely with me, Andy and Tyler. Dan’s roles of increasing responsibility at the TOUR, including leading the Korn Ferry Tour, working with THE PLAYERS Championship, and multiple roles in Corporate Partnerships including most recently leading our business development efforts, will allow us to further reinforce the importance of Player Relations to our core business and all of the outstanding work that Ross Berlin and his team have done. As part of this, Dan will be focusing on the partnership we have with our players and how we can help them grow their business while at the same time augmenting the PGA TOUR’s business around the world.

I’m detecting a theme here. Player Relations is very important. You’d think they were sponsoring or paying to cover the tournaments with this level of catering to a small group, 50% of whom will not be Tour members in five years thanks to technology-induced parity. But I digress…

As part of this focus and evolution of Player Relations, Phil Marburger and Mack Horton are also taking on additional new areas of focus for us and are being promoted to Vice President. Phil and Mack will continue to report to Ross, working closely with Tyler and Dan.

In the Competitions area, Andy Levinson is promoted in his role to the Executive Leadership Team. We are all grateful for Andy’s exemplary leadership in the area of our Health & Safety Plan, which underpins our safe and ongoing Return to Golf during these challenging times. Andy will continue to take on additional responsibilities under Tyler. Likewise, Kirsten Burgess is promoted to Vice President, and we are grateful for her outstanding leadership in the Competitions Administration area and her team’s role in ensuring our return to competition after the cancellation of 11 PGA TOUR events and a completely re-worked schedule culminating in a full FedExCup season finish.

Full meaning full purse payout, and don’t you forget that!

As many of you will have seen in Tyler’s note yesterday, we have a number of changes in the Rules and Competitions Area. After 40 years on the job, Mark Russell and Slugger White will soon be retiring and we will have an opportunity in the coming months to celebrate their remarkable careers. Longtime Rules Officials Dillard Pruitt and John Lillvis will also be retiring.

Gary Young will continue to lead this department, and Steve Rintoul, John Mutch, Stephen Cox and Ken Tackett are all promoted to the role of Senior Tournament Director on the PGA TOUR.

Congrats to all.

Brian Oliver is working with Talent & Culture on plans to replace Dan’s responsibilities in Business Development.

Talent & Culture. [Eye roll emoji goes here.]

Additionally, given Austin Flagg’s strong prior experience with key sponsors and partners, and the critical experience he has gained in every area of our business working closely with me during this pivotal year, I have asked him to transition back to the Sponsorship/Partnership area to take on a role with increased responsibilities under Brian. With John Wolf’s experience in Player Relations and Tournament Business Affairs, he will transition to the Office of the Commissioner, working closely with me, Ron and Allison to coordinate high level priorities and scheduling.

Please join me in congratulating everyone on their new roles.

And as we work to advance the optimal global golf structure to the benefit of players and fans around the world.

New Tour Alliance Aims For Co-Sanctioned Events Around The Open, Post-FedExCup

Now that I’ve gotten your attention…yes, actually, it takes no imagination at all to picture the above-mentioned in the headline. But that was the one “reveal” Keith Pelley gave Sportsmail in a Monday interview following last Friday’s news dump of a PGA Tour-European Tour alliance.

This should have happened ages ago in the form of WGC’s or when geographically logical:

Starting in 2022, look for co-sanctioned events in Britain for players on both tours built around the Open at St Andrews and in the autumn following the end of the FedEx Cup.

‘Those are areas offering great opportunities where we’ve agreed to look closely to see what we can do,’ said Pelley.

‘I can’t tell you how refreshing it is to sit in the room as partners rather than competitors. It totally changes the dynamic.’

‘Those are areas offering great opportunities where we’ve agreed to look closely to see what we can do,’ said Pelley.

Well, a room being a Zoom call for a while still.

There was also this image from Pelley:

‘We come together with the shared desire to make a global schedule and when you have that as your opening objective, everything can flow,’ said Pelley.

‘I can’t get into specifics and pontificate about tiers because we haven’t had what I would call our white-board meetings, where everyone empties their minds and gets creative. I just think the possibilities are endless.’

Endless until they go to those creativity killers on the player boards where most good ideas go to be tabled for slow play discussions.

Response To Pelley's Claims Of European Tour Financial Health: "No strategic alliance joy for the 68"

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Back in April Keith Pelley was lamenting the difficult financial times. Job losses were predicted, etc.

In abruptly announcing a new PGA Tour alliance, Pelley scoffed at a Twitter assertion that the European Tour was in poor financial shape.

It’s a particularly strange stance given how there would be complete understanding amidst a pandemic that things were not perfect.

The result of Pelley’s obvious truth distortion now leaves him open to some pretty and deserved criticism. Not for joining forces with the PGA Tour. No as Alistait Tait writes in a superb post, the lying seems crude given the spector of the Tour letting go of off a huge portion of the staff. It’s 68, Tait writes.

Since the tour is in “robust financial health” any chance of those 68 getting their jobs back? Or maybe the Tour IS in “robust financial health” because it shed those jobs.

This pandemic has hurt every business. Many people in all industries have lost their jobs as a result. Golf is no different. However, many companies have stuck by their employees, retaining them for the good days that surely lie ahead. That’s certainly true for those companies that are in “robust financial health.”

And what about the tour’s current employees at its headquarters at the Wentworth Club (pictured)? What does this strategic alliance mean for those good men and women currently working their youknowhats off to keep the European Tour circus running right now? They must be worried about the future.

He goes on to write about “redundancies” and the pain felt by those let go. It’s well worth a few minutes. Oh and the closing line is a killer.

McGinley On Alliance Of European and PGA Tours: Stars Playing Together "Premier League style"

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As a member of the European Tour’s Board of Directors, I didn’t expect Paul McGinley to tip his hand much in this Sky Sports piece endorsing the PGA Tour alliance announced Friday.

As I reported Friday, the board McGinley sits on had been briefed on the offer and opened the European Tour books to Raine Group. And on a careful reading and even a shred of imagination there is plenty to read into McGinley’s endorsement.

After calling the deal the “right partnership” for the European Tour and the sport, he gets to some of the primary motives of the “alliance”:

The idea is that we become a little bit more international in terms of the schedule of the world's top players, so they're able to visit other places and play in other events on the European Tour.

Three of the four major championships are played in America every year and a lot of the World Golf Championships have migrated back to the USA. I think the players can eventually expect, hopefully from a European point of view, a more international flavour to the world's best events.

Hope you got that in writing! Because given the opportunity, the American organizations given the chance to go international with top events have a mixed track record.

More from McGinley:

This is a way of working together to get everyone back to playing under one umbrella, which will help bring a little bit of a better narrative to what golf is all about.

It's a simplification of the sport to try to create a real top tier of professional golf, Premier League style if you like, with gateways for the players underneath that to then get into that style of event.

Sounds familiar. Oh right, that’s the Premier Golf League concept.

Anyway, here’s the big reveal: “a real top tier” of professional golf, the main philosophy behind the PGL, is the goal if the often-xenophobic PGA Tour membership can be ignored for some form of international symmetry to happen. McGinley says that’s the goal here.

It has been pre-empted a lot by the coronavirus pandemic and the PGA Tour deciding that this is a route they want to go down. The PGA Tour have previously been a little bit hesitant and a little bit American-centric in what they've done and how they've viewed things.

It is going to take a little bit of time to develop, as this is a very raw relationship at the moment that's just starting out, but I think there's more of an understanding now that the PGA Tour need more of an international element to what they do. The European Tour is the obvious place for that.

It has been the obvious place for a long, long time. And thanks to a “compelling” offer from the Raine Group, the two Tours finally figured out how much they need each other. A least for now.

Video: The Annual Alfred Dunhill Championship Wildlife Roundup

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The Alfred Dunhill Championship traditionally delivers the best nature shots of the golf year. And as always, the European Tour broadcast provided plenty of images from Leopard Creek’s location next to Kruger National Park.

This handy roundup was posted by the European Tour social team:

Pelley Insists European Tour "Categorically" Not In Financial Hole; Says PGA Tour Alliance Came Together In 72 Hours

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Chief Executive Colorfully Coordinated sported a less-than-comforting black-on-black motif for Friday’s hastily-arranged Zoom to spin the European Tour’s “landmark strategic alliance” with the PGA Tour.

Based on the reports by those partaking in the call, Keith Pelley remained light on details about the surprising Thanksgiving Friday announcement. Skepticism was in order given that it’s traditionally a day reserved for only Grade A, First Team, All-World news dumps.

The Daily Mail’s Derek Lawrenson noted the 72 hour mention by Pelley and suggested the announcement was meant to torpedo an upcoming announcement.

The alliance has been years in the making but came together in the space of 72 hours as both tours look to kill off the upstart Saudi-backed Premier Golf League. 

The PGL have promised untold millions to the top players and were rumoured to be ready to make a big announcement next month regarding a circuit for the elite they hoped would be up and running by 2023.

Alistair Tait attempted to parse Pelley’s comments and found the missing details disconcerting.

You’d have thought after four and a half years of talking to PGA Tour counterpart Jay Monahan they’d have laid out some basic plans of where this strategic alliance was going to take the game. No. Just airy-fairy stuff cobbled together over 72 hours. Why the rush?

“You might ask, why now?” Pelley acknowledged. “Jay and I have been talking about working closer together for the last four and a half years. I've always said golf is very fractioned with four major championships and two professional organisations. This was just a moment in time when everything aligned.”

Who said stars can’t align during Thanksgiving week in a pandemic?

Tait goes on to analyze several components to the deal and it’s well worth your time.

Sky Sports’ Ali Stafford features the most Pelley quotes, including this jargon-laced doozy. It was the COVID that did it:

"I think the whole process made us realise, you know, we are in this game together, and we have so many synergies. We are both committed to growth and globalisation of golf, and I think the Covid showed us that actually we shouldn't be competing against each other.

"We should be pulling together and aggregating our skills and our best practises, our commercial streams to ultimately benefit both tours and the game of golf, which has seen an incredible boost, and I think what we can do together, it really gets me excited."

Probably the biggest reveal came with the following quote, placed high in Brian Keogh’s Irish Golf Desk assessment of the call.

But Pelley vehemently denied it was tantamount to a first step towards a merger, explaining that the deal came about after it turned down “a very compelling offer” by the private equity group fronting the breakaway Premier Golf League, Raine Capital, “to take the European Tour to another level but in a different direction.”

“Compelling” and using “another level” only adds intrigue to this bizarre late-year news dump.

Bezuidenhout Wins Alfred Dunhill To Continue His Impressive Rise

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South African Christiaan Bezuidenhout held off Sean Crocker to win the 2020 Alfred Dunhill Championship at Leopard Creek. And while the 26-year-old’s second win came over a so-so field, Bezuidenhout picks up a win in his native land, comfortably moves inside the all-important world top 50 (41st), and has solidified himself as a player-to-watch heading into 2021.

But as Brentley Romine reminds us, it’s the Bezuidenhout journey that is even more incredible.

Bezuidenhout has much to be proud of. For those who need a refresher, here are the spark notes: Bezuidenhout nearly died when he was 2 years old after unknowingly drinking from a Coke bottle that had been contaminated with rat poison. The poison took a toll on his body, affecting his nervous system and causing a stutter, which in turn led to bouts with anxiety and depression. When Bezuidenhout turned 14, his doctor prescribed him medication that helped him “enjoy my life again,” Bezuidenhout wrote last year in a blog post for EuropeanTour.com, but the beta blockers were also a banned substance, and despite Bezuidenhout being adamant that he filled out the proper paperwork, he was disqualified from the 2014 British Amateur and subsequently banned for nine months.

“It felt like my life was over. ... I was inconsolable,” he wrote in the same post. “However, I eventually turned this into energy to help me come back stronger.”

His emotional post round interview and the Director’s Cut of the final round highlights.

Watch highlights of Christiaan Bezuidenhout winning the 2020 Alfred Dunhill Championship from Leopard Creek. ► SUBSCRIBE: http://et.golf/Subscribe Welcome to...

What's Missing From The PGA Tour-European Tour Strategic Alliance News?

We knew the sides were talking months ago. Then news on a mega-tour merger went silent as the focus turned to merely getting 2020 golf tournaments off the ground.

Then we got the Friday-after-Thanksgiving news.

Belaboring the cynical timing of Friday’s “landmark strategic alliance” announcement could grow tiresome, but it’s also hard to filter much of anything out of the detail-light European Tour-PGA Tour release without returning to the odd rush to share so little detail.

This much is apparent: Jay Monahan joins the European Tour Board of Directors and with it, he brings a check of an undetermined amount to own a stake in their impressive television production operation. Less apparent: how much of that is an investment in a media operation versus a quick way to help the European Tour’s finances?

In a call with UK writers, ET Chief Keith Pelley refuted the idea that this was about finances:

But as the AP’s Doug Ferguson writes: “The announcement comes toward the end of a devastating year financially for both tours. The PGA Tour has lost more money than Europe because of its size, though it had more in reserve to handle the crisis.”

Setting the finances aside, this looks like the PGA Tour blocking a European Tour acquisition/merger/strategic partnership/just friends/whatever-you-want-to-call-it deal with the Raine Group. They are holders of the proposed Premier Golf League that was declared dead back in March.

The dance of living dead!

Golfweek’s Eamon Lynch exclusively declares today’s announced deal another nail in a coffin purportedly already six feet under when the pandemic loomed. Lynch writes:

The historic alliance announced Friday between the PGA Tour and European Tour came after months of tense negotiations, and fended off a rival bid to take a stake in the European circuit by the private equity group fronting the Premier Golf League, multiple sources have confirmed to Golfweek.

Back in March Lynch wrote the PGL “scheme” was “condemned to failure”, which begs the question, why the need for today’s fending off deal? Lynch explains this way:

The prospect of Raine Group — and by extension, Premier Golf League — gaining a foothold through the European Tour caused dread among executives at the PGA Tour, which views the PGL as a potential existential threat should it successfully lure major stars away with the promise of huge paydays.

There is life after death!

A number of sources said the Raine Group proposal was always unlikely to win favor with the European Tour’s board and was being used as leverage to secure better terms from the PGA Tour, which was keen to ensure the PGL did not secure the infrastructure and tournament network from which it could launch its own rival operation.

After checking in with sources who have knowledge of the Raine Group’s efforts, negotiations between the private equity firm and European Tour had advanced considerably this summer.

Around 50 meetings had taken place this year.

Zoom’s with the player board and Board of Directors had taken place after Raine was given full access to European Tour financials, including the Ryder Cup. That was a risky leverage bluff by Chief Executive Keith Pelley but it does appear to have led to a last-minute deal where the PGA Tour wrote a check to stave off a rival. A dead one at that.

But as one source put it, “To paraphrase Mark Twain: reports of the PGL’s death are greatly exaggerated.”

Beyond the questions of financials and dead proposals, what does this mean for players, fans and sponsors?

For now the alliance appears to be a survival move with benefits TBD. Fans might eventually get a better world schedule that will undoubtedly be streamlined due to the pandemic. Players, however, will face the prospect of a monopoly that some like Rory McIlroy openly lamented with the Premier Golf League’s more controlled franchise infrastructure. And sponsors? Perhaps there is a better solution to the WGC, Rolex, Race to Dubai and FedEx elements that seem to clash instead of delivering better golf tournaments.

Until more exciting details come forward, Andy Johnson’s take sums things up:

PGA Tour Acquires Share Of European Tour Productions, Board Seat For Jay Monahan In "Landmark Strategic Alliance"

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The European Tour and PGA Tour have finally decided to join forces. And what better day to share this news than than the ultimate Friday news dump window, Black Friday!

Wait, what?

Blow is the PGA Tour release, dropped on the Friday most Americans focus on getting 60% off an air fryer and anything but looking at news. While light on detail despite seemingly positive news for the two Tours, it is hard to get past the odd timing and brevity of the release.

Here is the PGA Tour copy followed by one notable omission when compared with the European Tour’s version.

EUROPEAN TOUR AND PGA TOUR ANNOUNCE LANDMARK STRATEGIC ALLIANCE

* Historic move brings golf’s two leading global Tours together in partnership

* Alliance allows for further collaboration on scheduling and commercial opportunities

The European Tour and PGA TOUR today heralded a significant new era for global golf with an historic announcement of a Strategic Alliance.

The landmark agreement will see golf’s two major Tours explore all facets of collaboration, working together on strategic commercial opportunities including collaborating on global media rights in certain territories.

Certain territories. Tantalizing!

This will come through part of the agreement which sees the PGA TOUR acquire a minority investment stake in European Tour Productions (ETP), the European Tour’s Media Production company, which produces and distributes content internationally. 

That’s the lead news in this? I mean, we all love ETP and they certainly do a fine job but uh, ok. More likely it gets top billing because this was the easiest way for the PGA Tour to send a check that keeps the lights on in Wentworth.

The Tours will also work in partnership on a number of other areas including global scheduling, prize funds and playing opportunities for the respective memberships. Further details of these areas will be announced in due course.

That would have been my lead!

Now to the air quotes…

Keith Pelley, Chief Executive of the European Tour, said: “This partnership is an historic moment for the game of golf and is a fantastic opportunity for both the European Tour and the PGA TOUR to explore ways to come together at the very pinnacle of our sport and work in unison for the benefit of the men’s professional game.

First thing we’ve learned: Tour remains in all caps for the PGA, not for the European.

 “Today’s announcement is the formalisation of a closer working relationship between the Tours in recent years. It was one which was crystalised earlier this year when both Jay and I were part of the working group containing representatives of the four Majors and the LPGA, a group which helped shape the remainder of the golfing calendar for 2020 during unprecedented times.

 “We shared the challenges of working through a year neither of us could have ever imagined and we found definite synergies in many areas of our respective Tours. That gave us the impetus to move forward together and arrive at this momentous announcement we are making today.”

So momentous we are dropping it on a Friday with only one significant detail about acquisition of a minority share in a money-losing in-house television department? Whatever you say Chief Executive!

 Jay Monahan, Commissioner of the PGA TOUR, said, “We are thrilled to announce this further strengthening of our partnership with the European Tour, and we look forward to working together for the benefit of the men’s professional game and for golf fans around the world.”

And that would be the end.

Here is the one difference between to the two press releases sent to media, included by the European Tour but not the PGA Tour when its release landed 24 minutes later (but included in the PGATour.com online version):

One element of the partnership which can be confirmed today is the fact that PGA TOUR Commissioner Jay Monahan will take a seat on the Board of the European Tour.

A board seat is a pretty big deal. It means Monahan gets a close look at all of the European Tour financials, including the Ryder Cup. And from the player’s perspective, this particular bit of news should prompt multiple questions including, “why wasn’t Keith Pelley afforded a similar seat on the PGA Tour Tour Policy Board?”

Just guessing here, but that would have required assembling the current board, a lot of lawyers who’d charge double to work on Thanksgiving, and doing a major re-write of the PGA Tour by-laws that would have taken more time.

In Europe they’ve lately been handing out board seats monthly so clearly it was an easy move for the European Tour to add Monahan. Still, it raises questions.

More analysis to come…

439 Yards: It's The Agronomy And The Altitude!

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The European Tour kicked off three weeks in South Africa with a bang that got plenty of attention on social media: Wilco Nienaber’s 439-yard drive during the Joburg Open’s first round.

The huge number took on added interest Sunday when Nienaber contended, ultimately finishing second to Joachim Hansen.

But the 20-year-old and his prodigious length—a 337-yard European Tour average in limited starts—has been mentioned by South Africans who witnessed his victory in the 2019 South African Amateur.

Like America’s Cameron Champ, it’s the effortlessness of his swing that might be more shocking (aided by those fairway heights, as a few remaining desperadoes like to claim.)

That’s Tony Johnstone and Alison Whitacker on the call from Randpark, elevation 5000 feet:

Final round highlights:

Joachim B. Hansen launched a late fight back to clinch a two-shot victory as local favourite and long-time leader Wilco Nienaber faltered over the closing st...

The Sound Of Silence: Ways To Spice Up Quiet Golf Broadcasts In A Time Of Pandemic

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The Return To Golf needs to start thinking about a Return to Sound.

After taking in this week’s ZOZO Championship at Sherwood Country Club and watching how other sports have adapted to the times, it’s clear professional golf needs to keep adapting to the bizarre times. Quickly.

The PGA Tour has kept their business going but it’s begun to feel like just that: doing enough to keep the doors open and cash flowing. And I realize this will be a big ask while the main focus is on keeping things safe. But as an entertainment “product” (gulp), it’s losing ground. Broadcast enhancements are needed. Immediately.

With the ongoing pandemic likely meaning 2021 golf will be played, at best, with very limited galleries, the natural melatonin that is a golf broadcast requires immediate rethinking to retain fans and sponsor interest.

To review: pro golf was the first major sport back and without fans, managed to make a broadcast work. That was thanks primarily to CBS going all in on extras, particularly in the sound department. Credit also goes to the players who were willing to wear a microphone. Since only the last nine holes felt like golf in the time of a contagious virus without crowds, the “Return to Golf” worked.

But those return events were in July and August before the NBA, NFL, NHL and Major League Baseball came along and used recorded sound effects and other visual tricks to simulate a full house vibe. Golf tournaments have fallen behind.

From a television viewing perspective, the ambient noise piped in to offset the dystopian sight of empty seats and fan cut-outs has made sports watchable. Piped-in roars and even the boos take games back to a level of viewing normalcy that only feel strange when the camera pulls back to reveal and empty stadium.

Set against these modifications, golf telecasts now feel as uncomfortably quiet as they do in person. At best, I’d call the in-person experience at the two events I’ve been to as feeling akin to a college tournament. At worst, the vibe is funereal. (Note: both events I’ve attended as a media member were played in California with limits on volunteers, “hosted experiences” and family members, which undoubtedly added to the somber sensibility.)

Justin Thomas confirmed after Sunday’s final round that the silence impacts his on-course mojo.

“I've got to find a way to kind of just stay a little bit more focused out there,” he said. “It's crazy, but sometimes it's hard to just kind of keep the killer instinct and stay in the zone when it's as quiet as it is out there.”

After walking around Sherwood at last week’s ZOZO and August’s PGA Championship, it’s clear that outside of events welcoming back small crowds the next two weeks, any audible solutions benefitting the vibe will have to come from television. Piping in noise at the venues would be downright controversial and bizarre.

Take the first tee announcements where players have generally been introduced to silence or the kind of strained applause normally reserved for lame-duck politicians. Imagine a DJ piping in larger ovations for stars, but mere smatterings of claps for lesser-knowns? Nope.

How about going all Kelly James and creating a 21st welcome to the round?

The scenarios are uncomfortable to even ponder: would the players awkwardly waive to the non-existent crowd? Could they take a joke if James inserted an edgy line into his amazing schtick before starting out in a significant tournament?

It’d all end as soon as the first nearby player has to back off a putt.

Attempting to gauge which applause level to pipe in at the 18th green would be even trickier. Television could pull off some of these effects unbeknownst to the players. But the engineer in charge would have to be keeping up with changes to various holes or the player’s popularity. This would also require a sound effects person or two would have to be added to the team. Given the aggressive spending cuts at NBC/Golf Channel, an improbable move. 

So how about a recording of normal ambient crowd conversation around the clubhouse? Won’t work.

And music on the range—remember that European Tour experiment?—would seem weird and insensitive in a time of pandemic.

With PGA Tour players already over the wearing mic’s or doing mid-round interview ideas cooked up to improve their “product”, broadcasts have grown flatter than Matt Kuchar’s backswing. The situation has worsened since CBS ended an 11-week run where we enjoyed some great moments thanks to enhanced sound and other attempts at innovation. A few suggestions free of charge:

--Putting mic’s on players, their bags, tees and in cups (as Fox did), should continue to be a top priority. Hearing player conversations makes up for so much of the lost ambiance and almost makes us wish the crowds stayed away.

--Encourage more announcer conversations and debates centered around issues in the game to break up the rather monotonous role they play now as traffic cops and cheerleaders.  The NBC team broke off into a few chats about the way Bryson DeChambeau was approaching Winged Foot and the discussions were fascinating.

--Use on-course reporters to do a “forensic” on an incredible recovery shot we’ve seen. Encourage them to say why the would have played a certain shot differently if warranted. Again, anything to break up the quiet moving from shot to shot or showing what seems like a neverending stream of three-footers for par.

--Go to a third party source to discuss betting odds. Former players and traditional broadcasters are not well positioned to say much of interest on the topic of odds or prop bets. Even if a viewer is not a bettor or interested in the topic, betting debates can inject energy into the broadcast if they are willing to take a stance on a proposed bet.  Factors like course design and setup, or a player’s tendencies based on ShotLink data, liven up the “product” regardless of bets placed.

--Bring in third party voices to offer instruction tips. This is hardly a new suggestion, but given the spike in rounds played during COVID-19 and the sad end of most Golf Channel original programming, what better time than now to use telecasts to be more interactive for regular golfers? How about interviewing instructors who are out following their players about what they are seeing? Or asking them to give an impromptu tip?

--Birds are great and I’m sure they’ll be chirping at Augusta in two weeks. With surround sound, work those nature sounds, just make sure the mic’s are placed on property and not in the wrong region. (Years ago CBS was believed to be piping in bird sounds at Augusta and at Valhalla and it’s been a running joke ever since. Another reminder that little gets by viewers.)

—Put announcers in different places. Have them work as a range attendant, on a tee of a key hole as a marshal, as a ShotLink volunteer or as a group’s scorer. Put a microphone on them and instead of having them toss it to 16 from an on-site studio (not that towers are too expensive too), let’s hear what they are seeing and highlight the volunteer jobs that make a tournament tick. If Mike Whan can step in and work as an on-course reporter, golf broadcasters can try some different things too.

We all get that pro golf commissioners have plenty on their plates just keeping tournaments and sponsors going right now. But golf cannot afford to forget that broadcasts must evolve with the bizarre times. The Tours must demand more sound, more innovation and more creativity before its too late.

The European Tour Is In St Andrews This Week! Oh, Right, At The Fairmont

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Those thirsting for the original links won’t quite get it at the Fairmont St Andrews, a Sam Torrance design that looks overshaped and, well, isn’t Crail, Elie or the Old Course. But it beats the silliness of Shadow Creek!

Brandon Tucker offers this preview in case you saw St. Andrews on your European Tour listing and got excited. The fall Dunhill Links this is not, but we’ll take something seaside with St Andrews in the title no matter what. Lee Westwood headlines the Scottish Championship Presented by AXA.

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Links views 😍 #AXAScottishChamps

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Hatton Wins BMW PGA And Breaks The Hoodie Barrier

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Tyrrell Hatton secured a signature European Tour career win at the 2020 BMW PGA Championship, as Ewan Murray reports for The Guardian.

But as Golf.com’s Nick Piastowski notes, Hatton did so sporting a hooded shirt, aka a “hoodie”, making this easily the most significant win for an article of clothing oddly attractive to the coveted demo (for now).

Tyrrell Hatton shot a 5-under 67 on Sunday to win the BMW PGA Championship, one of the premier events on the European Tour. WHILE HE WORE A HOODIE. Midway through the round, he dropped into a tie for the lead, then peeled off four birdies on the back nine to pull away. WHILE HE WORE A HOODIE. The victory came on a Wentworth Golf Club course that he visited as a kid. WHILE HE WORE A HOODIE. 

Piastowski goes on to share the lively social media views on Hatton’s optional head covering.

Hatton lifted the “hood” for his trophy ceremony photos.

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Goodnight @tyrrellhatton 😏 #BMWPGA #RolexSeries

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BMW PGA: Wentworth Makes A 2020-Only Fall Return, Recalling Old Match Play Days

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Thanks to reader John for Simon Cambers’s New York Times look at historic Wentworth as the rescheduled BMW PGA Championship begins.

Wentworth held the Ryder Cup in 1953, but to many golf fans the club will always be remembered for hosting the World Match Play Championship, which it held from 1964 to 2007.

Staged each October, shown live on the BBC and often played in challenging autumnal conditions, each match was played over 36 holes, a test of stamina as much as skill. Though it later expanded to 16 players, it began as an eight-man knockout event, with Palmer the first champion, beating Neil Coles of England in the final.

Ernie Els, who won the event seven times and later helped to redesign the West Course, loved Wentworth long before he got to see it himself.

“The history speaks for itself, especially the World Match Play,” Els said in an interview. “All the great players played there. Growing up in South Africa, we’d read all about Gary and Jack and Arnold winning there. Then watching Greg, Seve, Faldo, [Sandy] Lyle and Woosie [Ian Woosnam] in the 1980s. It was an iconic tournament and venue.”