The Other Team Event Hanging Over This Week's Ryder Cup

The PGL’s Andy Gardiner

The PGL’s Andy Gardiner

All signs suggest the disruptor golf leagues declared dead multiple times by Tour toadies are, miraculously, still hanging around. There may even be a conversation or twelve this week between Vice Captains and players about who is in and where.

The Saudi’s and their SGL, a rip off of all things Premier Golf League only with a Middle East-heavy schedule?

Or will the new Strategic Alliance keep everyone a happy PGA Tour/European Tour camper?

Judging by Phil Mickelson’s remarks to Gary Williams, the PGA Champion is still very much interested in the proposals. Armed with major championship exemptions for another few years, his fearless jabs at the PGA Tour model suggest he’s open to the ideas.

Here is a link to the interview portion where Williams and Mickelson discuss the wraparound schedule, PIP and team league proposals merge:

A few curious and noteworthy comments by Mickelson:

  • He said of the wraparound, the Tour is “going away from that next year”. Not sure if that was a slip up or slip of the tongue regarding the 2023 schedule and beyond.

  • Mickelson lamented that only 26% of the revenue goes to the players and agreements requiring the Commissioner’s approval. He said that while players use the engine of the PGA Tour to be successful, “we don’t make a majority of our revenue from the PGA Tour” we don’t own our media writes, and YouTube “make millions” off it, citing Bryson’s 6th hole tee shot at Bay Hill earlier this year. The clip does have 1.4. million views and in YouTube money, that’s not much barring a massive sweetheart deal with the Tour.

  • He says “top guys are being taken advantage of” and believes the PIP money offered by Ponte Vedra “sounds like a lot” but in the “big scheme” doesn’t “even come close to being equitable.”

  • Mickelson said the “competition is going to be good” for all.

  • He said for the first time “the top players are being valued by the PGA Tour” and the players are “so far down the line on, kind of, the bullying tactics that have been used to suppress the top players on the PGA Tour,” that this will all come down to what’s best for fans.

  • He said it’s “tough when only 4 people have a vote” and of the PGA Tour, says “I’m not sure we have, internally, the structure to fix it.”

On the PGL side, co-founder Andy Gardiner gave an interview to Golf Monthly and reminded how this week’s event is the inspiration for the concept:

If you can bring any of the brilliance of the Ryder Cup into a more regular format, then it’s got to be a good thing.

It’s easier for a fan to have allegiance to a team than it is to an individual.

Some individuals can have it – that’s where Tiger was utterly brilliant because he was so dominant that you could fall in love with him as the dominant player, or you could be fascinated by him.

But what everyone else was doing was backing the underdog because everyone else was an underdog.

What he did was to ignite both sides.

You had one group who wanted to see him win everything and you had those who wanted someone else to win.

Why The PGA Tour Is Cracking Down On The Unruly Behavior It Encouraged

Wait, that wasn’t the headline to Adam Schupak’s commentary after last week’s PGA Tour announced plan to crackdown on “unruly” behavior.

It might as well have been since it’s a crackdown necessary, in part, because the get-young desperation got the best of them. Who could have seen that? Obviously not the Global Home’s high-priced adults.

Schupak writes:

The level of decorum at all professional sports has eroded, but as Rory McIlroy pointed out golf was different. It held itself to a higher standard. Yell, “Miss it, Noonan,” when a player was putting and you’d get a slap in the head just as in “Caddyshack.” But it wasn’t that long ago – before golf’s COVID bump – that the game was supposedly dying and the industry was collectively in full desperation mode, trying everything from 15-inch cups to Foot Golf to attract new golfers. The PGA Tour, facing a Tiger-less future, went so far as to build its current marketing campaign around an inclusive, “Live Under Par,” motto that encouraged selfie-nation to get close to the action, document their encounters and share it all on their various social media platforms. Oh, and can you fill out this release form from the Tour’s legal department so it can include you in its next boffo TV campaign.

The Tour was so willing to cater to a younger demographic that it tolerated the “Baba Booey” and “Mashed Potatoes” screams and welcomed the Cameron Crazies-like behavior from other sports.

"The success of the series will hinge on access and authenticity."

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The PGA Tour is certainly going down the right path in trying to develop a show with Netflix and in the vein of “Drive to Survive.” But it was hard to read Golf.com’s exclusive from Dylan Dethier and not laugh at the idea pro golfers will let us know much beyond how upset they were to get a dark grey courtesy card at Memphis three years.

Remember, these are people who won’t wear a microphone for fear we’d learn their state yardage secrets.

And unlike auto racing, it’s hard to do golf action or film the “teams” without distracting from the competition.

Dethier lays out the companies involved, including Rickie Fowler’s media company, and it’s already bizarre to see the references to players as the “cast”.

Still, the players under consideration are a high-powered bunch. The cast includes major champions, Ryder Cuppers and some half-dozen of the top 20 in the current World Ranking.

The success of the series will hinge on access and authenticity. Access will hinge on the final list of participants as well as their willingness to open up on the Tour’s weekly goings-on. Authenticity will depend on all parties allowing the sport’s most interesting subplots to play out on screen.

A few big questions remain: Which top players will sign on? How much off-course access will they grant film crews? Just how “real” will this reality television get?

I repeat, they won’t wear mic’s, do mid-round interviews or even let their caddies be mic’d up. Good luck producers!

Cantlay On The Symptoms Of Fan Behavior Issues, The "Ridiculous" PIP And The "Not Good" Tour Championship Format

Fresh off his BMW Championship six-hole playoff win, Patrick Cantlay met with media in advance of the Tour Championship. And while he’s always good in these interview room/Zoom situations, Cantlay offered unvarnished takes on the topics of the day: fan behavior, the root causes and this week’s season-ending format.

All of it is here, but the highlights:

Q. Rory mentioned that he was talking, I asked a little bit about Bryson and he said he felt sympathy for him. Having been, having played alongside him last week, just wondering what you feel.

PATRICK CANTLAY: I think it's a tough situation. I think, naturally, of course there is some sympathy because you don't want to see anybody have a bunch of people be against you or even be heckled. I think anybody that watches sports and sees someone being heckled, they don't like that inherently because if you imagine yourself as that person, it wouldn't feel good.

I think, unfortunately, it might be a symptom of a larger problem, which is social media driven and which is potentially Player Impact Program derived. I think when you have people that go for attention-seeking maneuvers, you leave yourself potentially open to having the wrong type of attention, and I think maybe that's where we're at it and it may be a symptom of going for too much attention.

But it can be awesome too because if you succeed and you act perfect all the time and you do the perfect things all the time, and then you also go for the right attention-seeking moves, you get like double bonus points because everyone loves you and you're on the perfect side of it. I think it's just a very live by the sword, die by the sword type of deal. And when you leave it to a jury, you don't know what's going to happen. So it's hard to get all 12 people on a jury on your side.

And if you're playing professional golf on the stage that you're playing on and 98 percent of the people are pulling for you and there are 10,000 people on the green, I don't know, what does that leave, 20 people that don't like you, even if 98 percent of the people like you? And if those 20 people have had enough to drink or feel emboldened enough to say something because they want to impress the girl they're standing next to, then, yeah, like, you're in trouble. Like, people are going to say bad things.

Golf, unfortunately, doesn't and probably shouldn't tolerate that. I think there's a respect level in golf and there's intimacy that the fans can get so, so close to you, and you're also all by yourself, and you don't have the armor of putting on Yankee pinstripes, and you don't have the armor of having, knowing that if you're on the Yankees and people hate you and you're playing in Boston, you can tolerate it for three hours in right field. But you only tolerate it because you know next week or on Friday you're going to show up and you're going to be in Yankee Stadium and no matter what you do, even if you fall on your face, you're going to have the pinstripe armor on and people are going to love you.

So golf is different in that respect, that if you only have 2 percent of the people that are very against you because you're polarizing and because you're attention-seeking, then you're kind of dead because those people are going to be loud, and they're going to want to say something to get under your skin.

And I think golf shouldn't let that happen. I think the Masters is a great example of a place that doesn't let that happen, and it's the greatest place to watch and play professional golf because of the atmosphere they create. I think if you look at the history of the game and you look at the respect that underlies the entirety of the history of the game, we shouldn't tolerate it, and we shouldn't celebrate that. We should celebrate the fan that is respectful and pulls for their side.

So it's a tough situation. It's a tough topic, but that would be my take on it and I'm sure it's not perfect, but after thinking about it a little bit, it's the best I can come up with.

Q. I thought you were reading from a script there. You actually made that up off the top of your head?

PATRICK CANTLAY: I'm looking around here. I don't see any prompters.

Yowsers that was good and the follow-up was perfect!

Regarding this week’s net championship to decide who wins the $15 million first prize, Cantlay can be added to the list of non-fans.

Q. It sounded from the very start of your comments that your focus is on playing good golf and shooting a good score and all that stuff. But I'm curious about something Rahm said a couple weeks ago that when they make the analogy of, Patriots can go 18-0 and still not win the Super Bowl, his answer was, Yeah, but they still finish second. And I'm curious what you still think of that and is there any part of you that is still annoyed about what happened two years ago?

PATRICK CANTLAY: I think, frankly, it's not a good format. I think it's obvious why they went to the format because the previous format was confusing. I think this format is less confusing. But I don't think it's a good format. I dislike the fact that we no longer have a TOUR Champion. So I dislike the fact that no one knows, when they look at the leaderboard, who shot the lowest round this week. I think the fact that Xander didn't get a tournament win for beating the field by two or three shots is absolutely criminal, not just because he's my friend, but I think that if that happened to anybody that would be criminal. And there has to be a better solution. I am not a mastermind on golf formats and there are lots of moving parts, so I'm not saying that I have the answer, there are lots of smart people and I guarantee you there must be an option for a better format out there than the current one we are playing in.

With that said, I am going to do the best possible job I can at winning in this format because that's all I can do. And in no way will that take, impact my ability to perform in this format. I think if you play the best golf this week, you're going to be in a great spot by the end of the week.

And back to the topic of the day…

Q. What's your PIP rating by the way? Do you know? Do you guys have access to look at it?

PATRICK CANTLAY: I don't know.

Q. Do they tell you?

PATRICK CANTLAY: I don't know. I got to be honest, I doubt I'm doing very well in that category. If I were to win any portion of the 10, I would let you know that I win in that 10 and I would be compelled to give all that money back to the fans that made it possible, because there's no way a person like me should be able to get into the top 10 of the PIP if not for people out there deciding that they want me to be in the top 10 and to try to get some of that PIP money for themselves. Because I, if I win PIP money, I am going to give it back to the people that made it possible in some way, shape or form. I won't take any of the PIP money. I think it's kind of ridiculous and I think it's, when I said there's a symptom of a larger problem, I think that's exactly what I'm talking about.

THE MODERATOR: All right. Thank you.

Get the hook, he’s saying way too many smart things!

Live Under Fear Of Expulsion: Monahan Rolls Out New Fan Code Of Conduct, Finally Addresses PIP In The Room

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Having managed to evade any hard Q&A sessions since The Players—we don’t count Strategic Alliance pressers here—PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan answered questions on an array of pre-Tour Championship topics. He made news with a new fan code-of-conduct-policy, a mix of news related to the Asia swing, and finally answered questions about the Tour’s secret Player Impact Program, aka, the in-house trust fund for favorite sons.

Given that Monahan ushered in the PGA Tour’s relentless Live Under Par campaign early into his tenure—come out, get drunk, be a young demographic we’re desperate to court, express your inner douchey bro, make yourself part of the event by being loud, and share it all on social—I expected a trace of remorse. Not even a hint of responsibility accepted for deteriorating fan behavior.

But you don’t make $9 million a year taking blame or even acknowledging anything is actually wrong.

With that, let’s go to the transcript, starting with this from his prepared remarks:

Looking ahead, the PGA TOUR is in a position for unprecedented growth over the next 10 years, starting with the 2021-22 season. Next season official prize money will increase by approximately $35,000,000 and the FedExCup Comcast Business TOUR top-10 bonus pool combined will grow by $15,000,000 to $85,000,000. This total of $633,000,000 in comprehensive earnings marks an 18 percent increase year over year.

But we couldn’t wait to use the pandemic to lay off some low-paid people. Wonder what else those people who just had to go shared as a trait?

Anyway, buried the lede there on the Comcast thingy getting a purse bump. Really great news for fans. Imagine if we could just get Comcast to take some of that money and put tracer on the 18th tee of a playoff event? The game would really grow!

We're also excited to kick off our new domestic media rights agreements with CBS, NBC Golf Channel, and ESPN in 2022. These media companies share our vision for the future and these landmark partnerships that run through 2030 will be a major win for our fans as we expand and innovate our content and its delivery.

That’s pretty light on detail.

The golf industry is working together like never before and despite the challenges of the pandemic, the continued growth we have seen in recreational participation and in growing and diversifying our sport, our global game has never been stronger. Thank you, and thank you all for your coverage throughout the year. On behalf of the PGA TOUR, I and we appreciate all you do and the sacrifices you make to cover us throughout this year, especially across this Super Season.

Yes, all eight of you invited to the call.

Wait, is there a tension in the air? Is someone looking more uncomfortable than normal?

Before I open it up, Laura, to questions, I just, I wanted to take a minute to address a topic that's been top of mind lately for our players, fans, and of course, for those of you in the media. I'm talking about fan behavior and the interaction with our athletes, when that behavior crosses the line and what we should all be doing to address it when it does.

Bet on the next Baba Booey with a preferred PGA Tour gaming partner? Wrong!

It's been a long season, yes, but it's been a fantastic season. 50 events, THE PLAYERS Championship, six majors, the Olympics, these four consecutive playoffs, two to start the FedExCup playoffs and here we are at the TOUR Championship. It's been historic and compelling at every single turn.

Your honor, direct the witness to answer his own question and to please specify between Playoffs and sudden-death playoffs.

All of that on the heels of a lot of pent up demand with people stuck at home separated from their favorite sports and athletes like never before due to COVID and the various and necessary health and safety protocols in place to ensure we can get back to playing. It's been frustrating at times for all of us and then we get the opportunity to finally engage with our favorite sports or teams or players.

And we’ve taken living under par too far?

Well, I think we can all agree that we have seen issues as of late across the sports landscape where that pent up demand plays out in an ugly way. Golf is not immune from unfortunate and disruptive behavior, although I would say that we do have the very best fans in the world. This is about just a few bad actors. And for the record, this isn't about any one particular player or one particular incident,

Of course not, no one thought of such a thing…

but in some situations it's apparent that we have gotten away from the very civility and respect that are hallmarks to our great game.

Where could fans get the idea they were were as much the story and should come out to tournaments and share their lamest yells, taunts and even record it?

We began working on an updated fan code of conduct program in 2020, but put it aside last summer when we were playing without spectators and needed our focus to be on implementing the complicated yet necessary health and safety plan.

Riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiggggggggggggghhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhttttttttttttt.

Once we began returning to normal capacity, we made it the highest of priorities to reinforce an environment at PGA TOUR events that allows for everyone to enjoy in a safe environment, and that is spectators players, volunteers, literally everybody.

New slogan: Talk Under Your Breath But Please Bet.

We have to be intentional about our expectations for fan behavior and I believe our fan code of conduct does that.

Intentional! Well, at least we know legal got their hands on these remarks.

By coming to a PGA TOUR event, you're expected to contribute to a welcoming and safe environment by refraining from and reporting any unsafe, disruptive, or harassing behavior. Comments or gestures that undermine the inclusive and welcoming nature of the game will not be tolerated, nor will any harassment of players, caddies, volunteers, officials, staff, or other spectators.

Media, too, right?

Fans who breach our code of conduct are subject to expulsion from the tournament and loss of their credential or ticket.

Live Under Fear of Expulsion!

Now, I would ask our fans, again, the very best fans in the world,

Yeah we got that the first time…

to take a moment and think about what it means to be a golf fan and to enjoy a PGA TOUR tournament. We're going to be leaders in this space. We're going to show everyone how easy it is to enjoy yourself at an event while also respecting the athletes in the field of play and the fans around you, many of whom are families with young kids who have a chance to be lifetime fans of the game themselves.

No you tried to take a new lead on that front and failed, miserably. Judging by the Live Under Par firesale and bon fires, you’re reassigning the folks who approved that, right?

Quite honestly, we should expect nothing less from each other, whether we're at a golf tournament or elsewhere in life.

The PGA Tour leading the way on civility after years of tolerating mashed potatoes and whitewashing the rare player run-ins with incivility? Rich!

Now to the questions…

Q. If I can just follow up on your last as it applies to the very real world situation with Bryson, would "Brooksie," would that qualify as [harassing] behavior?

JAY MONAHAN: I'm sorry, you broke up there.

Q. Sorry. Would "Brooksie" classify as harassing behavior when it's said to Bryson on a golf course?

JAY MONAHAN: Yes, and the reason I say yes is, you know, the barometer that we are all using is the word "respect," and to me, when you hear "Brooksie" yelled or you hear any expression yelled, the question is, is that respectful or disrespectful? That has been going on for an extended period of time. To me, at this point, it's disrespectful, and that's kind of behavior that we're not going to tolerate going forward.

Just think, some day historians will be looking at this transcript and saying, wait, “Brooksie” was grounds for ejection? Was that like some sort of dirty word? And why wasn’t it Brooksy?

Q. To follow up on that, have you talked with Bryson and Brooks and have you asked them to sort of ratchet down the, you know, kind of the back and forth that's going on here for the last few months?

JAY MONAHAN: I've had conversations with both players. These observations go back to pre-COVID as it relates to general concern around code of conduct at our tournaments and they certainly exist prior to that analysis that the team had led,

Teams were leading this long before the pandemic. Teams!

and so -- and I've been out over the last, at a lot of our tournaments this year, particularly since our return to play, and this issue isn't specific to one or two players.

And it sure seems like those pre-COVID chats you had with Brooks really resonated.

I think it's an opportunity to reassess overall civility at our tournament and fan behavior and reset the expectation through our fan code of conduct.

That's something that we have identified. It's something that I've talked to not only those two players, but a lot of our players about. It's something I've talked to our partners in the industry about, and we have all agreed that together we have got to come together and demonstrate what is truly exceptional about our game. And if you go back to the history of the game, the values of honor, integrity, respect that have been central fabric to the game since the point in time, our expectation is that that's what we're going to experience at our tournaments.

You see, problem is, lots of people recognized this but you wanted to chase a younger demographic and you surrounded yourself with too many marketing flacks who don’t really even like golf, thought it needed to become a party lifestyle brand, and it spiraled.

And I made the point earlier about families and kids, and we have volunteers that are giving so much of their time, and the game has never had more people coming into enjoy the game and experience it than we have had really over these last several months, and we want more people to come in. We just want to make certain that everybody can have a safe, healthy, and enjoyable experience, whether you're inside the ropes or outside the ropes and that's what we're intending to do.

Well that’s great, something most of us knew a few years ago and as it should be at a golf tournament. Let’s hope you catch the culprits behind that whole other dark chapter that led to this mess they put you in.

Let’s move on to Brooksie…Bryson.

Q. What are your concerns about having a player in Bryson, who very well could win this thing and who is one of the biggest stars on TOUR, not, not communicating with the media now, and what are his responsibilities in addressing some of the issues that you've addressed as far as fan conduct or anything else that comes up over the course of a tournament?

JAY MONAHAN: Yeah, listen, I think that as it relates to Bryson, listen, Bryson is a star. He has fascinated golf and sport fans around the world since our return to golf. He's also a young man that's growing and evolving, not just on the golf course, but off the golf course.

Yeah he’s building a new home, designing his 2022 Bentley, losing the weight he quickly gained, reading up on MRNA…

And I would just say to you that I look at this as a point in time. I don't think this is the way things are going to be for a long period of time. I'm hopeful that we'll get back to a steady cadence of communication that he'll have with the media.

Steady cadence of communication. Take that Finchem!

But he's working through some things and he's going to have my and our support as he continues to do so.

Well, can’t blame the media for violating his privacy.

Let’s take a break from the heavy stuff and read some good old fashioned gobbledygook.

And, listen, I think that as it relates to general fan behavior and any individual's role in it, I take it, I take that on as an organizational responsibility. We have had challenges in the past. We'll have challenges as we continue to go forward. And so long as we build the right systems, we effectively communicate with every one of our tournaments, we are planning and preplanning effectively, the marketplace knows the expectation when we're on-site, I think that we're going to, you know, we're going to get back to, we're going to get back to a great environment. We have a great environment. We'll continue to improve our environment at our tournaments going forward.

The shot clock expired at marketplace, sir. Back to the serious stuff.

Q. Have you ever considered, as they do in tennis, any type of a fine for players not fulfilling media obligations if they are indeed media obligations?

JAY MONAHAN: I would just say to you, in any instance, we're always going to focus on the player, the relationship with the player, understanding the player, trying to work with them to get to the right place and try and understand what's going through their heads.

You’re a golf tour, not a psychiatric hospital. But at least these independent contractors get hands-on support from their workplace.

And so a fine, I'm not sure what that is going to do for us in the long run.

Raise a little more for charity?

Ultimately we want the player presenting his best self when he's in front of the media, when he's in front of fans, and that's ultimately the goal for any player that's in a situation like that.

Lofty goals.

Q. It's my understanding that the player impact program will run through the end of the year, that it won't be a seasonal thing. I'm curious, without giving a specific example of a player, but I'm sure you've seen the list, can you give me an example of maybe content or an engagement that counts as added value when it comes to the metrics that you're using?

JAY MONAHAN: Well, we're using five different criteria, to all of which are equally weighted. And you look at Nielsen, your Saturday and Sunday time on television, to Google Search to Meltwater, to MVP Index, and to, bear with me here, it's at the back of my head, I'll come up with it. But each of these areas lead up to a player's ranking. And the bottom --

Q. Q Rating.

JAY MONAHAN: Sorry?

Q. I believe Q Rating was the one you were thinking of.

JAY MONAHAN: Q Rating, yes.

Who needs a Q rating when you have a Meltwater and MVP Index?

We really need to get clarification if that Saturday/Sunday time includes Playing Through and Eye On The Course time. Could swing the race!

The bottom line is when you look at any of those metrics, it's all about, for us, it's all about getting our players to engage in our game, help grow our TOUR, and help grow their own respective brands. And if you look at what drives engagement, it's on-course performance, and that's, that is part of the basis for the way the Player Impact Program was developed. You've seen how everybody's performed this year, and I think as we look at it and you think about the way that fans and the major story lines on the way fans have engaged, players have engaged fans through those channels, I think it's fairly intuitive.

Great, can’t wait for you to share the standings!

The point I would make is that we're up, you know, this year we're up 41 percent when you look at cross-channel consumption. We're up across every metric.

Let’s just all pause for a moment and remember our friend Tim Finchem who, in his prime, with his hair at its most dialed-in shade of North Florida auburn, never dropped a cross-channel consumption on us. Special moment here in PGA Tour history. Go on…

And I think that's, first and foremost, because of the quality of play, but I also think we're benefiting from some really powerful engagement from our players day-to-day and doing the things I just described.

Agreed, Brooks has been amazing this year.

Q. You kind of touched on some of this earlier, still having to endure the pandemic issues. Any consideration to bringing testing back for the players and support people or whatever on-site when the new season begins?

You get more cases if you test, haven’t you heard?

JAY MONAHAN: I think that the easiest way for me to answer that is that we're at, we need to respond to the realities of the pandemic and ultimately for us, that's a matter of working with our medical experts,

It went on and on. The answer was a no testing. Not even for bilateral pneumonia.

Let’s move on to the WGC HSBC, officially cancelled for 2021 according to Monahan, but the ZOZO will return to Japan after a one-year stop at Sherwood.

And about those World Golf Championships?

I think, to answer your question, you know, I see the WGCs continuing to play an important role in our schedule, but I also think you know that when you add our European Tour strategic alliance, when you have an organization that's continuously challenging itself to improve its product, improve its schedule, continue to provide the single greatest platform for top players in the world, everything becomes in play when you're going through how you might get there.

So, unfortunately -- with certainty, I can tell you that those two events are carrying forward, and long-term, I just think that we're going to continue to make them an important part of our consideration.

“For our consideration” is the new RIP.

Q. Could you confirm what Rex said, that the PIP is going to be through the end of the year? I'm not sure you really answered that part when he brought that up. And also, is the quote/unquote winner of this or the people that are in the money, so to speak, is that ever going to be made public?

JAY MONAHAN: It is through the end of the year, and we don't have any intention on publicizing it.

Such brevity!

Q. Why is that?

JAY MONAHAN: To us, it's a program that we created, was created by our players, with our players, for our players, and that's, that's what we decided that we were going to do when we created it.

For our players, by our players, to make our stars not leave us for another tour.

Q. On a scale of 1 to 10 with 1 being not at all and 10 being the apocalypse is upon us, how concerned are you that there could be a renegade tour starting in the next year or so?

I would have gone Defcon but then I can never remember if it’s 1 to 5 or 5 to 1. Anyway, he went the “I’m just focused on the business of my tour” which is, of course, total nonsense…

JAY MONAHAN: I'm a hundred percent focused on our business and excited to be here at the TOUR Championship to complete this unbelievable season, to go into 2021-2022 with not only an incredibly strong schedule with great committed tournaments, but to be fully sponsored coming out of, coming through a pandemic, for us to have record consumption over the course of this year, taking that momentum into next year, for the value of the platform that these players are continuing to play on, for that to continue to grow, for the close work and relationship we have with our players and the way that we're going to continue to not only evolve our TOUR, but also evolve our game.

No, you stay out of the game. Other folks have it covered. We have strong proof you are not to be trusted. #liveunderpar

So that's what I, you know, that's what I have been focused on, that's what I'll continue to be focused on and I think in life you always have to be cognizant of, No. 1, there should be zero complacency to anything you do and No. 2, someone is always going to try and do, someone is always going to try and take, compete and take something away from you. And I've operated that way every day of my life and I think that's why, with the great team I have surrounded by me, we're going to continue to grow this great TOUR.

Q. Would that be a not at all?

JAY MONAHAN: I told you what I'm focused on. So it's, yeah, that's what I'm focused on.

Don’t get chippy! We’ve got a new code of conduct.

Church To Take Over and Renovate World Golf Hall Of Fame's PGA Tour Superstore

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You know the old saying, if you a PGA Tour Superstore can’t make it in the middle of the World Golf Village off 95…

Colleen Michele Jones reports on the Reverb Church’s purchase of the store adjacent to the World Golf Hall of Fame and expanded PGA Tour Entertainment campus, with plans to build a 32,000 square foot “worship and ministry” by year’s end.

The church’s fundraising campaign has reached $ 250,135 of a goal of $ 500,000 and with at least half of that in the bank, according to the Reverb website, it can begin its renovations to the church. resort’s former golf and pro store, including the addition of a 508-seat auditorium. . Additionally, the new facility will include a Reverb-branded café, a children’s worship theater, and a lobby gathering space for the congregation and community.

This isn’t the first time the church has tried to gain more permanent roots in the county, however. In 2018, Reverb took the first steps to secure a new facility in the Nocatee community.

“We do this by resonating the message of Jesus, making disciples and planting churches,” said Lamoureux. “Our new campus in Nocatee responds to Reverb Church’s long-standing vision of providing a place for families in Nocatee and Ponte Vedra to experience the life-changing gospel message, to grow in their faith and to see the families and children adore together in a vibrant and passionate environment.

You can view more images here of the planned renovation.

This news would not appear to be a good sign for the World Golf Hall of Fame’s future at that location. The cafe has already been shuttered and there have been few signs of recent investment in the Hall of Fame.

The 2022 HOF class will be inducted at the foot of Taj Tim, just up the road in Ponte Vedra.

Living Under Par Has Become Reality And Players Aren't Liking What They're Hearing

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After losing a six-hole playoff, Bryson DeChambeau was on his way up the hill and presumably to a cold shower. ESPN.com’s Kevin Van Valkenburg explained what happened next:

A patron waited until DeChambeau had walked by, but was not out of earshot, then sneered from over the rope line, "Great job, Brooksie!" DeChambeau spun around in a rage and began briefly walking in his direction.

"You know what? Get the f--- out!" DeChambeau yelled. He had rage in his eyes.

But then, Van Valkenburg writes, crisis averted.

Thankfully, DeChambeau paused, angrily motioning for a police officer to handle the heckler, then continued his march up the hill. The entire exchange took less than 10 seconds. The PGA Tour declined comment when asked about the incident by ESPN. But we've been building to something like this all summer. And I don't know what the endgame is.

Oh I do!

We knew this day was coming when the PGA Tour went from These Guys Are Good to Live Under Par.

From a golf tour filled with supremely talented and generally good guys to being all about YOU! The fan.

The PGA Tour, ever desperate to lower the average viewer demographic from 65, became a wannabe lifestyle brand where you come, hold up your phones, get drunk and are as much a part of the action as the players.

In case you forgot since your bookmarks to LiveUnderPar.com no longer work, the rollout:

The slogan has been iced due to the pandemic and hopefully never returns. But the philosophy remains the same: do whatever we have to do to get younger, cooler, and less Villages-y and more TikToky.

Throw in once-secret incentive for players to make money for mentions—PIP!—and we get a little rivalry brewing that gives fans a side to take. Now, of course the ad geniuses and Commissioner Jay Monahan cannot be blamed for failing to anticipate fans returning from the pandemic with pent-up energy. But they still should have considered the ramifications of encouraging general obnoxiousness and making fans think they are as much a part of the product as players.

GolfChannel.com’s Brentley Romine talked to players about the DeChambeau heckling before the above incident was reported on by Van Valkenburg. The comments of Harry Higgs from Romine’s story were picked up by several outlets:

“I think it’s wildly inappropriate what goes on,” Higgs told GolfChannel.com on Saturday. “The he and Brooks thing, I don’t really understand it … and neither one of them has acted as they should at times, but you know, no one’s perfect, either. I watched Memphis and it affected Harris, it affected Bryson, and I don’t understand why someone who buys a ticket to an event thinks that they get to have a hand in how it plays out, and there’s starting to be a few too many people who are doing that, and then a lot of those people are following Bryson.

“It’s not in the spirit of the game, it’s not how any of us grew up, it’s not how any of us were ever told to act while at a golf course or competing.”

Except, it was the PGA Tour that told a lot of people to make noise. Live under par. They built an entire image around a campaign inspiring people to act loud and proud. Good luck reeling them in.

New York, New York: What Happens When You Can't Make It Here?

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With Hurricane Henri postponing the final-final round of The Northern Trust’s to Monday, I figured the New York papers would have the lowdown. Or, at least, use Sunday editions to say sayonara to 54 years of PGA Tour events in the area (a streak dating to 1967 ended when last year’s Norther Trust was played in Boston).

Perhaps with the PGA Tour in town they’d look back at the best of the Westchester Classic/American Express Westchester Classic/Manufacturers Hanover Westchester Classic/Buick Classic/Barclays Classic/The Barclays/The Northern Trust?

I know the papers aren’t what they used to be, but in New York they’re still doing better than most. They’re still seen and read. They matter, still.

The Times has not found The Northern Trust fit to print or to even cover online despite sitting just across the Hudson. “The Paper of Record” is not documenting this playoff event so far.

To round out my Saturday night fun, I mapped the journey over to Liberty National (above) in case they’d like to send a writer over for Monday’s “playoff” finale where there are massive Ryder Cup ramifications.

Same with the Daily News. No story online despite a 60 by Cam Smith under relentless PGA Tour Playoff pressure.

Not even an AP story with a mullet-referencing headline? Nope.

The Wall Street Journal is also in the region, has a readership that likes golf, and hasn’t had a golf tournament story posted since The Open last month.

But at least there’s the Post and longtime writer Mark Cannizzaro there to cover the event and Smith’s third round course record.

If you can make it here you can make it anywhere. But what if you can’t make it in New York?

In Dismissing Haney Lawsuit, Judge Offers Cringeworthy Golf Analogies

Few things are more demeaning to the “rule of law” than judges who long to be comedians in otherwise serious matters.

While Hank Haney v. the PGA Tour is hardly the most important matter ever sent before a judge, it’s still embarrassing to read Judge Rodolfo Ruiz use his dismissal to audition some Borscht Belty material. And as any golfer will know, the attempted use of golf cliches and lingo better be good or else you look like a stooge.

From Bob Harig’s ESPN story quoting the decision.

"As the Court remarked at the outset of this matter, the allegations teed up in this case -- like a well-hit drive on the golf course -- [have] avoided pleading hazards . . . remained in bounds, and left Plaintiffs with an opportunity to take their next shot," U.S. District Court Judge Rodolfo Ruiz wrote in his ruling. "However, Plaintiffs' next shot has not fared as well as their opening drive. In an effort to reach the green and get this matter to trial, Plaintiffs' approach has found the water. And the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure do not provide for mulligans. ... Plaintiffs' round has come to an end."

Someone has way too much time on his hands. Or a clerk unable to say, “you know Judge, you kind of sound like a jackass here.”

As Rex Hoggard notes in his GolfChannel.com story, Commissioner Jay Monahan responded aggressively to Haney’s flippant comments about a Korean golfer likely winning the U.S. Women’s Open. In a 2019 email (oh Jay…), he wrote, “This man needs to lose his job. Please let me know what I can do to assist you to ensure this happens.”

When deposed in the Haney case discovery, Monahan and lieutenant Laura Neal displayed a staggering lack of familiarity with anything related to the LPGA Tour.

None of this dissuaded the judge from ruling in Haney’s favor or appearing to take the matter seriously. From Harig’s story:

"Rule 9 of the USGA Rules of Golf states a key principle of the game: 'play the ball as it lies,'" Ruiz wrote in the ruling. "In other words, absent a few exceptions, players cannot improve their position by simply moving the golf ball. Here, under Rule 56, the Court must similarly take the evidence as it lies in the record. And that evidence makes clear that Plaintiffs are unable to establish the necessary elements of their claims."

Oy vey.

On a serious note for fans, SiriusXM PGA Tour Radio was prone to uncomfortable bouts of rear-end smooching, inane conversation and an overall Radio Sawgrass vibe before this. Now…

Jordan On FanDuel Partnership: "It was pretty exciting to look into it."

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You don’t normally hear players mentioning how much fun it was to investigate a possible sponsorship. But the hard sell mode only reinforces what seems like inevitable issues at some point with golf and gambling. At least players like Spieth express some trepidation in endorsing a gambling outfit.

From Steve DiMeglio’s Golfweek story:

“In my rookie year, this wouldn’t have been something that would have been on the radar given where sports gaming was back then,” Spieth said in a phone call with Golfweek. “But look at where it has gone the last couple of years. It was pretty exciting to look into it.

“Golf has a unique space to get into (gaming) to help bring more eyeballs into the sport, bring (other) sports fans into being golf fans, and with FanDuel being the biggest and doing the best job at responsible gambling, it made a lot of sense.”

The story also notes how Commissioner Jay Monahan played a role in convincing Spieth to take FanDuel’s money.

Spieth said Monahan convinced him golf could not refuse to welcome gaming considering its steady growth throughout the sports world. Spieth said the Tour’s movement into gaming “gave us the confidence as individual players to want to search out and look for opportunities in this space.”

Great how these independent contractors work with the Tour on a not-very independent basis.

Russell's Exit Interview: Slow Play, Field Sizes, Sitcoms And Late Evening Golf

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The PGA Tour won’t be quite the same without former Mickey’s theme park employee-turned-golf-pro-turned longtime rules official, Mark Russell.

Hopefully he’ll still get called Slugger in an airport (hopefully) and get in plenty of golf as he turns to sitcom writing and more late evening rounds. He also touches on this idea of 156 player fields, slow play and suggests it’s time to trim things down.

From his “exit interview” with Golfweek’s Adam Schupak.

Q: Don’t you want to give out one last slow play penalty (during the final round of the Wyndham Championship) for old time’s sake?

MR: (Chuckles) Not really. Again, we’ve got 156 players, we should never do that in 2021. This Tour should be 120 players maximum. You know, when they came up with (fields of 156), there was no place to play. Now we’ve got the Korn Ferry Tour. We’ve got PGA Tour Champions, tours in Canada and Latin America, too. You know, if you’re good enough, you’re going to be right back here. But I mean, 156 guys, there’s groups waiting 10, 12 minutes at the turn to play. That all goes away if you did that, like at Bay Hill, 120 players and we give them 12-minute intervals and they can’t catch each other. I mean, the slow players have no place to hide.

Most of the slow players play so much better if they go ahead and play. You know, I said, we oughta make them play like that on the range. You can only hit one ball a minute, and then they’d realize. But for the most part, like I say on Thursday and Friday, we breed slow play. There’s no place to go.

While I’ve had my share of spirited chats with Russ about field size (me fighting for a 144-player “Open” field here in LA), he’s right. I concede. It’s looking like the combination of all reachable par-5’s and drivable 4’s, while a huge issue, matters less when fields are getting huge enough to welcome back winners from the late 90s!

McGinley: “Time to put the hard hats on and prepare for three or four years of disruption.”

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The Daily Mail’s Derek Lawrenson speaks to European Tour board member Paul McGinley about the state of European Tour affairs as it relates to the Saudi Golf takeover bid and dilemma for players.

Warning of 3-4 years of “disruption,” McGinley said the European Tour is prepared to lose Asian Tour-tied events and even other Middle East stops.

'We're resigned to that kind of thing happening and the lawyers being involved,' said McGinley. 'If the Saudi event becomes part of the Asian Tour, will Jay Monahan (CEO of the PGA Tour) give the defending champion Dustin Johnson a release to get his $2million £1.4m) appearance fee, or Keith Pelley (CEO of the European Tour) grant releases for the leading Europeans to play? That's the path we're on, sadly.

'We've spoken to the Saudis on a number of occasions. We would love them to continue to be part of our tour but they see it a different way. They think golf is stale and want to come in as disrupters and change the whole DNA of the game.'

'The Saudi lawyers reckon the PGA Tour can't stop the players from joining and still being members but Jay is adamant that he can,' said McGinley. 'Unfortunately, it's looking like we'll end up with a massive legal case.'

But who will do the suing?

McGinley also defended the health of the European Tour post-infusion of PGA Tour money and the prospects of more domestic Europe events.

'We're not going to be eaten up by the PGA Tour. They came in with a proposal to accelerate the path we wanted to go down and it's left us in an incredibly strong financial position.

'We can help out with prize funds and the Americans are happy because the best young players can then feed into the PGA Tour. Ultimately, we'll get to where everyone wants to be. But we are going to have to suck up some disruption.'

Check out the full story as he touches on other topics of interest to European Tour fans.

Slugger Has Given His Last Ruling And Driven His Last Cart Without A Roof

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Adam Schupak at Golfweek files a wonderful send off to Slugger White, longtime PGA Tour rules official, good player and nice fellow who had more early wake-up calls and listened to more lame player gripes than we’ll ever know.

On how it all started:

With career earnings of $32,279, White determined it was time to find another line of work to make a living. He was a finalist for a handful of club pro jobs in the northeast, but every time he was the bridesmaid.

“I look back and think, you know what, they really did me a favor,” he said.

It just so happened that then-PGA Tour Commissioner Deane Beman, a former player in his own right, was seeking former players to work in tournament operations. Longtime rules official Mike Shea called White to see if he would be interested.

“It kind of fell in my lap,” White said.

Tour Says 85% Of "Constituents" Vaccinated But Bryson's Going To Wait Until It's Really, Really Mainstream

Bob Harig at ESPN.com with a couple of stories worth checking out if you’re not totally exhausted by First World COVID issues.

The Tour gave updated numbers on vaccination and while their testing program has ended a bit too soon given the Delta variant, the numbers are encouraging for conducting safe events.

From the story:

"Given the increase in cases across the country, resumption of some level of serial testing is a possibility," said Andy Levinson, senior vice president, tournament administration for the PGA Tour, in an email. "However, at this time with our high vaccination rates across core constituents, our medical advisors have not recommended testing of asymptomatic individuals regardless of vaccination status."

The PGA Tour reported that 85% of its "constituents' are fully vaccinated. That includes a rate above 70% for players and above 90% for caddies. Others who were included and were routinely tested at tournaments: rules officials, tournament administrators and media relations personnel.

This was overshadowed by Bryson DeChambeau’s return from a mild bout with COVID and his insistence that he not get vaccinated then or now.

DeChambeau seems to believe there are vaccine shortages.

"I'm young enough, I'd rather give it [the vaccine] to people who need it. I don't need it. I'm a healthy, young individual that will continue to work on my health.

"I don't think taking the vaccine away from someone who needs it is a good thing. My dad is a perfect example. He got it [the vaccine] early on because he's a diabetic. People like that need to get it. My mom got it. I don't want to take away that ability."

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said there are no vaccine shortages in the United States.

DeChambeau added: "Now as time goes on, if it [the vaccine] is mainstream, really, really mainstream, then yeah."

On this topic, I wrote in this week’s Quadrilateral about the oddity of having rambunctious team bonding activities indoors at the Ryder Cup.