Why Does Attending A Major Need To Be Life Threatening?

The confirmation of Quail Hollow--home to the PGA Tour's seventh major--as 2017 PGA Championship host came today with no mention of the potential for the kind of hot and humid weather that scorched the club's greens this summer and will likely lead to a green resurfacing project.

Next summer the PGA visits Atlanta in August, about the last place any sane individual wants to be and where they are also having issues with new greens. This, just after leaving Whistling Straits where the media opted not to take a harder look at the number of injuries once again caused by the Strait's steep faux dunes.

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Golf Takes The Blame For Everything Files: Brush Fire Edition

I can see it now, Rustic Canyon shut down in any Santa Ana wind for fear of someone's precious 4-iron skimming a rock and ingniting a spark.

Thanks to Brooks for catching Erika Ritchie and Peter Schelden's story on a brush fire breaking out next to Shady Canyon, home course to Tiger Woods and Mark McGwire when they are in the OC.

 

"Throw a dart. Pull a name out of a hat. Figure that one of that bunch will step up and give Pavin a reason he can't ignore. If not, pass the Advil."

Monty's headache was nothing compared to Corey Pavin's pending migraine. With less than a week to go before he sits down at the New York Stock Exchange (!?) to reveal his picks, Doug Ferguson asks, "Can anyone find two players who stand out above the rest? Can anyone find two players who stand out at all?
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"If I had been a really dedicated person, and really worked hard, I think I could have accomplished more."

Jaime Diaz labels it a "startling confession" from Jack Nicklaus, and it's hard to disagree:

Addressing a number of topics during a 90-minute conversation, Nicklaus displays a new candor. He used to say, "My record is my record. I did all I could do." Today, he casts a more analytical and sometimes critical eye on the nuances of his career, starting with a self-effacing haymaker: "If I were to look back on my work, I think I accomplished probably about 70 to 75 percent of what I could have. Maybe 60 percent. Somewhere in that area; two-thirds of what I could have accomplished. If I had been a really dedicated person, and really worked hard, I think I could have accomplished more."

Deutsche Bank NOT Out As Boston Sponsor?

A statement from the bank...

Any report that Deutsche Bank has stepped aside as title sponsor of the Deutsche Bank Championship is false.  As announced during Media Day, Deutsche Bank is in discussions to exercise its two-year extension option for the title sponsorship.  Talks are ongoing, but we are optimistic we will reach an agreement and expect to make an announcement this week.  We deeply appreciate the tremendous support from our Founders Club partners, the players, and most of all the fans of New England for making the Deutsche Bank Championship a New England Labor Day tradition. We look forward to another fantastic event this week, and in the years to come.

"Hereafter, should a player be late for his pro-am starting time, the situation will be handled as a matter of unbecoming conduct."

What an embarrassment for the Commissioner and the PGA Tour Policy Board. After all, they had reviewed the policy, heard from players and media that it was silly to DQ someone for being late to a pro-am, and been told that their effort to protect sponsors ultimately could hurt the sponsor. Yet they could not envision the potential problem until one of the "good guys" couldn't recharge his iphone or use a hotel wake up call service.
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Letter From Saugerties: Amateurism Edition

Following Sunday's U.S. Amateur at Chambers Bay, former USGA Executive Director Frank Hannigan shares these thoughts on the state of amateur golf.

August 31, 2010

The annual USGA pre-professional championship concluded on Sunday. Of the 64 players who made it to match play only 11 were 25 years of age or older.     

One of the 11, Skip Berkmeyer, actually won a match before succumbing in the second round to a student athlete from Stanford.

The last time an adult won the event was in 1993 when John Harris of Minnesota prevailed. Harris had been a pro, was reinstated, then turned pro again to make serious money on the senior tour.
But the ultimate adult golfer of our time was Jay Sigel, who beat all the college children in both 1982 and 1983, a feat so unlikely it warrants his enshrinement in golf's Hall of Fame.

My point is this: what is called the Amateur Championship is not an equitable competition because college golfers have an inordinate advantage in that they play golf nine months a year at someone else's expense and then milk their parents for money to play the other three.

Some pick up the semblance of an education in the process. Many do not. Only a minority of PGA Tour members who enrolled in college obtained degrees.

There is nothing new in this condition. Back in 1979 after only one adult, Dick Siderowf, reached the round of 16, two of the USGA's finest officials--Jim Hand and Sandy Tatum--asked me to concoct a new championship for post college golfers who had not attained seniority.

I came up with what is  called the Mid Amateur Championship which bears a minimum age limit of 25.  It has been a success in the sense that low handicap golfers enter in droves. The concept has been widely emulated by regional and state golf associations and even the R&A. (By the way, just what is a "mid amateur"?)

The USGA once declared in its code of amateurism that golf scholarships were forbidden. Such an attitude was deemed anti American. The USGA caved in during the 1950s.

Assiduous research led me to conclude that the very first golf scholarships were given at LSU during the 1930s with some other label.  Among the recipients was Freddie Haas, who later gained fame by ending Byron Nelson's winning streak of 11 straight victories.

Ah, but who gave out the scholarships?  None other than Huey Long, the Kingfish, governor of Louisiana, who wanted LSU to be first in everything except perhaps learning.

Amateurism was a class Victorian notion designed to keep the well bred apart from working men in sport.  It evolved, however, into something sane and decent. So long as golf enjoyed its tradition of "open"  competitions it was natural to have events limited to those who did not enjoy the advantage of playing golf for a living.

College golf scholarships blew that concept up in that the elite of college golf are better than the best club professionals.

The Rules of Amateur Status are made up of about 2,000 words of rationalizations. Among them is the proclamation that an amateur golfer is one who does not accept remuneration. A college scholarship based on golf skill is obviously a form of remuneration. The entire code, in reality, could be reduced fairly to 13 words:  "An amateur golfer is one who does not attempt to win prize money."

"When they say he didn’t play enough or isn’t committed enough, look at the numbers."

The Irish press appears to be on the only sizable audience excited about Padraig Harrington's selection to the Ryder Cup team, with former U.S. Captain Paul Azinger openly mocking the choice on Twitter, as Lawrence Donegan reports. Even Padraig probably became a little less thrilled when his nemesis Sergio was named as an assistant Captain.
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