R&A Chief Concedes "Movements" Seen In '17 Driving Distance

Nice to ask a distance question and not get the usual suggestion that things have leveled off, but maybe R&A Chief Martin Slumbers knew after this year's U.S. Open's driving distances that such a stance would not fly.

From today's R&A press conference at the 146th Open Championship.

Q. Several of the players have noted that they are hitting very few drivers. Some players may not even have driver in their bag. In the context of the statement of principles from 2003 regarding skill, does it concern you that that club is not a factor this week because of the distance the players hit the ball?

MARTIN SLUMBERS: Well, you can look at it two ways, the golf course is set up 17 yards shorter than it was played in '08. The great thing about links golf, as many of you know, if you're as much an aficionado of this game as I am, course management is one of the most important things about links golf. It's pretty firm out there. It's running hard. The rough, if you run out in the wrong direction, can be pretty penal. And certainly the conversations I've had with players is that they are really enjoying the challenge of trying to work at how to get the ball in the right place. And at times that will lead them to hit irons as against drivers or woods. I think Phil was talking yesterday about maybe not putting a driver in the bag, and I think we'll see quite a few irons, especially if the wind stays in the quadrant that it's in in the moment.

The broader question on distance that you raise is we are very -- I spend a lot of my time and the R&A's time looking at distance. We are very focused on setting it up in two ways, one is around transparency, which is what we did two years ago - started to take the PGA data and take the European Tour data, put it together and publish that. Some people don't like that. Others say it's great to have the numbers.

The second thing that I'm looking at and spend probably as much time doing it is this balance between skill and technology, and whether how much the technology and skill, are they in balance, is it good for the recreational game? Is it the same for the elite game? And those two issues are what we are looking at at the moment. And if you look at the data over the last 18 months, we are seeing this year movements, only halfway through the year. We will take a full look at the end of the year, and then come back and make sure we analyse and think about it very carefully.

R&A Turning Fairway Into OB Zone Highlights Distance Issues

Here's the notice to competitors:

I opine for Golfweek.com on the many issues surrounding the bizarre idea of turning the 10th hole fairway grass into out-of-bounds. Yes the safety issue was legitimate. But the concept that anyone would think of playing down another fairway to avoid their own speaks to how narrow the course is.

This also summarizes a number of other issues including the overall lack of appetite to hit driver this week, as best summarized by Phil Mickelson's plans.

Callaway Live: Falcons QB & Links Golf Lover Matt Ryan

Yours truly was promoted as the guest on Callaway Live with Harry Arnett this week, but in a bit of television magic (me shuttling to Carlsbad from The Open), I happily step aside for suprise guest Matt Ryan.

Not only did he lead the Falcons to last year's Super Bowl, but Ryan is a terrific lover of golf. I think you'll enjoy his discussion of his annual trip to enjoy links golf, how the game helps him retain his flexibility and why it's his off season passion.

But only after certified Falcons fanatic Arnett gets in a few Super Bowl questions...

BBC To The Rescue! PGA Wants Eyeballs On Its Championship

That was quick!

The PGA Championship appears headed to the BBC even after Sky Sports just started a dedicated golf channel. However, with few eyeballs and rights situations about to become golf's big battleground, Ewan Murray reports for The Guardian that this year's PGA will be on the open, free airwaves of BBC.

Sky losing the Masters and PGA surely must make the R&A uncomfortable given its long term deal with Sky. You may recall the debate from a few years ago involving the R&A moving to pay television and away from longtime partner BBC.

**In Wednesday's state of the R&A press conference Chief Executive Martin Slumbers took a swipe at the BBC coverage approach:

I think when we moved last year we took what was frankly a fairly tired and outdated broadcast and turned it into absolutely world class and raised the whole level of the way it was shown. And I think that was a combination and a partnership of those organisations with the R&A that I think has truly improved how people are watching golf.

And a testament to that was that we won, or Sky and ETP, won a BAFTA for sport. And they were up against the BBC's coverage of the Olympics and Paralympics, and also the Six Nations. So I think that was a fantastic testament to what we did last year at Royal Troon, and really shows what you can do with TV. We're building on that this year.

The world of media has changed out of all recognition in the last 20 years. I think the world of TV has changed and is going to change even more, and I don't think anyone knows exactly where it's going. But we're very comfortable working with a partner that really understands the technology, they understand golf, and they understand how they can help us showcase this fantastic championship to the world.

**This Tweet sums up the Slumbers take.

Birkdale: Phil Going Driverless, For Now

From what I've seen of the course, I'm not surprised by this move reported on by GolfChannel.com's Rex Hoggard.

Mickelson arrived early on Tuesday to tinker with a modified 3-iron, a Callaway Epic model, that has been bent to 16 degrees, which is closer to a 2-iron loft.

He also had a 3-iron in the bag with standard loft as well as his normal 3-wood during his practice round with Jon Rahm, Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas.

Things may change for many players should the winds get going and tomorrow's forecasted rain slow the course down, but even then it's just hard to imagine with the rough and lack of width that most of today's players need their driver at Royal Birkdale.

He spoke to Golf Channel:

Some Theories On Seven Straight First Time Major Winners And Why We May Get Another This Week

In the July issue of Golfweek I took a crack at why we have had seven straight first-time major winners and suggest that because of money, technology and increased risk of injury, we need to get used to more players not dominating.

As we prepare for the 146th Open at Birkdale after a Wimbledon that featured geezers Roger Federer and Venus Williams in the finals, Derek Lawrenson of the Daily Mail offered thoughts on why golf has gone the opposite direction of tennis, where a small group still dominates.

Jack Nicklaus, Lee Trevino, Seve Ballesteros and Tom Watson also won 11 between 1970 and 1984, but a clean sweep of all 15? How on earth can the two pastimes be so far apart? If truth be told, such domination shouldn't happen in a popular individual sport.

During all his years at the top, it's amazing to think Federer has met only two high-calibre players from America in Andy Roddick and Andre Agassi and two from Australia in Mark Philippoussis and Lleyton Hewitt, and none at all from South Africa. Contrast that to the picture in golf.

Indeed, Tiger Woods's unwitting gift to Federer for his dotage must be the fact he turned so many impressionable sporting teenagers in his own nation and others away from tennis and into golf. Hence the reason why the queue of talented twentysomethings at Birkdale this week stretches down the corridor and out the door while in tennis you could count them on the fingers of one hand.

Jordan Spieth was asked about the matter Tuesday at Birkdale. John Huggan analyzes the answer for GolfDigest.com and wasn't impressed.

Spieth took the field depth angle:

“I think it's a really impressive stat and it speaks to the state of the game. There are a lot of tremendous young players right now. And then you've got guys like Henrik (Stenson) and Dustin (Johnson). They are still young, but they have been around in contention many, many times - and sooner or later it was going to happen for them. And it did. It was just a matter of time for them.”

2017 Open Championship: American Viewing Schedule, Options

For U.S. audiences, The Open viewing options are plentiful: Thursday and Friday you can watch via cable or your Golf Channel and NBC Sports apps (with subscription login).

The weekend will continue that coverage on NBC only, with news and programming surrounding the telecast on Golf Channel.

New this year is even more first day coverage with "Midnight Drive" lead-in coverage that starts at 9 pm Pacific Wednesday (yours truly will be there bright and early so tune in!).There is also exclusive digital coverage of the 1st and 18th holes (details below), Marquee Groups and Featured Holes (12, 13, 14).

Here goes:

Tournament Airtimes on Golf Channel (Eastern):

Thursday         1:30 a.m.-4 p.m. (Live) / 10 p.m.-Midnight (Replay)

Friday              1:30 a.m.-4 p.m. (Live) / 10 p.m.-2:30 a.m. (Replay)      

Saturday          4:30-7 a.m. (Live) / 10 p.m.-2 a.m. (Replay)

Sunday            4-7 a.m. (Live) / Midnight-4 a.m. (Replay)

 

Tournament Airtimes on NBC (Eastern):

Saturday          7 a.m.-3 p.m. (Live)

Sunday:           7 a.m.-2 p.m. (Live)

 

NBC Sports Digital Complementary Feeds to the Broadcast

NBC Sports Group will offer several ancillary digital feeds to complement its linear broadcast, including: Marquee Group, Featured Holes (12, 13, 14) and The Open Spotlight, which will include coverage of the 1st and 18th holes, along with look-ins at players on the driving range, press center interviews and highlights. Digital coverage will include Golf Channel hosts Ryan Burr, Cara Robinson and Damon Hack, along with analysts Justin Leonard, Colin Montgomerie, Curt Byrum, Tom Abbott, Billy Ray Brown, Jerry Foltz, John Cook, Trevor Immelman and Billy Kratzert.

Golf Channel and NBC Sports digital platforms also will provide fans will full round replays, made available within the NBC Sports and Golf Channel Apps immediately following live coverage.


DirecTV to Simulcast Live Broadcast, Ancillary Feeds

DirecTV will simulcast the live tournament broadcast on Golf Channel / NBC throughout the tournament via their Mosaic, which also will include the feed from the Marquee Group, Featured Holes and The Open Spotlight. Other offerings on the Mosaic include an expanded leaderboard function, detailed player scorecards, and an ability to create a “favorites” list top the Mosaic leaderboard. The Mosaic Channel and interactive menu will be available to DirecTV subscribers during broadcast hours all four days, Thursday-Sunday.


News Coverage:

Wednesday, July 19  6-10 a.m.      Golf Central Live From The Open
                                            
10 a.m.-Noon                               Morning Drive

Noon-2 p.m.                                Golf Central Live From The Open


Thursday, July 20 

Midnight-1:30 a.m.                       Midnight Drive

4-5 p.m.                                      Golf Central Live From The Open

Friday, July 21                      

4-5 p.m.                                      Golf Central Live From The Open


Saturday, July 22                  

3-4 p.m.                                      Golf Central Live From The Open


Sunday, July 23                    

2-4 p.m.                                      Golf Central Live From The Open
                                            
7-9 p.m.                                      Champion Golfer of the Year (highlights show)

0.6: U.S. Women's Open Final Round Overnight Lowest Since '96

Whether it was the leaderboard, the low energy (and small) crowds or a Trump effect...or bits of all elements, the U.S. Women's Open appears set to lose its place as the top rated golf telecast of the year.

Not since the 2002 Dinah Shore has the USGA's premier women's event ever lost to another women's major, as noted by Sports Media Watch, but that appears to be likely this year with the KPMG LPGA expected to out-rate the Open.

This year was the fifth of seven in which the U.S. Women’s Open has failed to crack a 1.0 overnight rating. The only exceptions were last year and Michelle Wie‘s win in 2014 (1.7). Wie was forced to withdraw due to injury at this year’s tournament.

Handicapping The 2017 Open Championship!

Oddschecker is sensational for up-to-the-minute (literally) prices.Full disclosure: I've placed each-way bets on Rickie Fowler (18-1), Alexander Levy (250-1) and intend to add Wesley Bryan at 300-1.

My ten players to watch at Golfweek.com. Note: this was filed before Rory posted another missed cut at the Scottish and Stenson, the defending champion, all but declared his chances are slim.

The Golfweek staff makes fantasy picks including for those in various formats.

Wednesday's weather is bleak, so look for a softer course Thursday. The Met Office expects pretty steady winds all day Thursday and the same for Friday's play.

On the upcoming ShackHouse, we will be discussing the course and who it favors, plus working through some prop bets for those attempting to handicap a very wide open Open.

Video: New And Incredible #ArnieWould Ad For The Open

Given that he won here in 1961 and in doing so, re-validated The Open at a time when it was not at peak strength. And still so soon after his passing, this is obviously a sentimental week for Arnold Palmer fans who have two nice tributes to enjoy.

The R&A has a tribute to him at the 18th (and to Roberto de Vicenzo), while the club has commemorated his epic shot at the 16th (then the 15).


And this new Mastercard ad set to run during The Open is especially well done.

 

Summer Of '76 Preview: Q&A With Rich Lerner

Golf Channel Films unveils its next project – Summer of ’76 – Tuesday, July 18 at 9 p.m. ET and, if you've seen the promos, there is no shortage of 70s fun and funk. But that's a mere teaser for what is the most unusual and spunky production Golf Channel has put on the air.
 
While the film centers around the Johnny-Seve duel at the 1976 Open, it's also a film about 70s. Narrated by actor Tim Matheson and co-produced by Israel DeHerrera, Golf Channel host Rich Lerner and James Ponti, it is written by Lerner who answered a few questions in advance of Open week and the film's Tuesday debut.

GS: You’re credited as a writer and co-producer with Israel DeHerrera on this, so tell us how this project came about and what inspired you to add more work to an already full slate as Golf Channel’s lead announcer?

RL: As part of our relationship with the R&A, we’re producing one documentary film each year.  With The Open returning to Royal Birkdale, we began to look closely at 1976 because of the two principal characters, Johnny Miller and Seve Ballesteros, both charismatic and even transcendent figures. But what really excited me was the chance to explore the 1970s, with all those legendary tough guys with homemade swings, the cool style, wood and steel, and so the piece is as much about that period as it is the Open of 1976 and I think people are going to really enjoy it.

In terms of the additional work, it’s always a labor of love.  Plus, I need projects to pass the time with all my travel!  And Izzy DeHerrera, who’s dogged and brilliant, did a lot of the heavy lifting along with James Ponti and Max Miller.  Also, I’d done long form specials years ago, like New York Stories, in which I followed five people, involved in some way in golf, who were impacted by the events of 9-11;  Se Ri Pak, A Champion’s Journey; and an hour on the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.  In terms of storytelling, I wanted to get back to that sort of depth.

GS: How was the process of a film like this different than your day-to-day job covering live golf and did you enjoy it?

RL: It’s similar in some ways to doing a long feature story, though in this case you’re constructing six and trying to keep them connected over the course of one hour.  We lay out a storyboard and get busy, knowing we’re going to do an entire segment on what the golf scene was like in the 1970s, another on Europe’s inferiority complex with Americans having dominated, another on Seve and who he was and where he came from, another on Johnny and just how ridiculously good he was at that time.  The interviews were a blast, talking with Johnny and Peter Jacobsen and Roger Maltbie.  That was their time, and they light up and get totally engaged when you take them back 40 years. 
 
GS: The promos have some great footage and music for fans of the 70s, was part this to highlight the culture once lampooned and now better appreciated from an arts or sports perspective?

RL: Look, we all have the same reaction when we look at our old pictures from the ‘70s.  What was I thinking?  But that’s what it was, big hair and platform shoes and wide collars and Sansabelt slacks.  I mean, even Jack Nicklaus, who came of age in the brush cut 1950s, let his hair down.  People weren’t so buttoned up.  In fact, they were showing chest hair!  We try to capture the vibe in interviews with among others, Peter Frampton and one of my all-time favorites, Walt “Clyde” Frazier.  And yes, it’s easy to poke fun at that decade but what also made it great was that it wasn’t so corporate.  It was looser and boozier, with stiff shots on and off the course.  Think too about how good it was musically with originals like David Bowie, The Allman Brothers, The Ohio Players and golf had plenty as well like Trevino, Floyd, Wadkins, Miller and of course, Seve.  They don’t make ‘em like that anymore, do they?  So yes, I do think people will come away with a renewed appreciation for that time, or at least smiling at the memories.

GS: What in particular are you most pleased with in how the final product came out?

RL: From the start, we approached this with the idea that we were in a Mustang with the top down and an eight track cranking tunes.  Let’s just have some fun.  And I think that’s what I’m most pleased about, that it’s a good time.  Plus, it’s “golfy” in plenty of places.  I love the Seve back story, coming as he did from a farm in Spain.  And when Johnny explains that he actually mimicked several different swings from several other legends, it’s just a fantastic insight into the way high level performers approach their craft.   
 
GS: The Open returns with a bit of chaos at the top of the sport, with seven straight first time major winners and a few who’ve already seem declines in their games immediately after winning. After putting this film together and exploring that generation, do you think we have the potential to enjoy a similar decade with a group of stars or do you sense the amount of money in the game will make careers shorter?

RL: Both Johnny and Tom Watson are adamant that the 10 best from the ‘70s would be tough to beat in a head-to-head against the 10 best from today.  Why?  Because you had to win back then to really earn.  Guys knew how to close.   Now, we all agree there’s far more depth of talent today. 

But when you’re 23 years old with 7,000 square feet and an ocean view you might be inclined to say, “This is good enough.”  That said, I do think today’s great young stars want it as badly as those from previous generations.  And I also think about Arnold Palmer after he won The Open in 1961 at Royal Birkdale.  He arrived back home in Latrobe to a big celebration.  His father, Deke, said, “Congratulations son, now the back nine needs to be mowed.”  Arnie put down the Claret Jug and hopped on the tractor at the club where he grew up.  There comes a time when a man, no matter how rich and how famous, needs to get back to work.

The trailor: