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Look for up to the minute opinions on the tours and other golf related stories. Plus, interviews with some of golf’s most will-known and respected personalities.

May 2008 - Posts

  • Mickelson vs. Pampling

    I am 38 years old. I make my living hitting a little white ball. I am not a big guy.  I am not what some would consider a "power player".  I am very serious about my craft. I play the game with precision and an on-going thought process that some might think is overly tactical. I stay in the moment, and don’t react to good or bad shots. I find that with my game, I must stay on an even keel.  I am very good at my job.

    I can walk into any restaurant in the Flower Mound area, where I reside, and no one will recognize me as one of the best golfers in the world.  I fly under the radar. Good idea?  I have no idea, it is my personality.  My name is Rod Pampling.

    I am a professional golfer, the 2nd best in the world. While I take my job very serious, I come across as a laid-back kind of guy. I love to interact with the fans. I love to create; to see the impossible shot and pull it off.

    I am a fan-friendly player. To be more specific, my popularity with the fans might be higher than anyone. It drives me. The smiles; the high 5's; the interaction from green to tee and beyond. That is as much fun to me as winning. My name is Phil Mickelson

    I am a golf analyst.  I make my living hosting a golf show on ESPN radio and writing about golf.  I love my interaction with golf fans that say hi or recognize me.  My name is Steven Gribin.

    Last weekend, the Crown Plaza Invitational at Colonial was very tough for me.  Maybe harder for me than Rod just because I get emotional about anything.  I really like Rod Pampling. He is a very good golfer, but more important, he is a very good guy.  Unlike more of the media guys, I actually spend more time on the course than in the media room; this past Sunday I spent it walking with Phil and Rod.  For 15 holes, Pampling had Phil by the throat. He played his normal tactically strong game:  Phil hit his drives all over the golf course while he hit mostly 2-iron hybrids.  For those 15 holes, Rod did exactly what he wanted... he got a lead and maintained it.

    The issue for me was the crowd.  Here’s a guy that lives in our community, plays Colonial a bunch, and is a Dallas guy, yet he was getting little to no fan support.  As the round went on and the crowds got larger, it got worse.  It was hard to watch.

    Eventually, whether the crowd or the nerves, Pampling hit two wayward shots on 16 and 17. He got away with 16 getting up and down with a fantastic bunker shot. He did not fare as well on 17 after hitting his hybrid 30 yards right of the fairway.

    The crowd was 10 to 1 in favor of Mickelson, and they showed that support.

    While I understand what was happening, it was sad for me to watch.

    So what should happen with the Rod Pampling kind of player?  Is it his responsibility to become more popular?  That is a question for the ages.

    For the Crowne Plaza Invitational, they got everything they wanted and so much more. For me, I saw great golf played by two different kinds of players, attacking the same golf course in two completely different ways with a crowd that showed minimal support for its local player.

    Speaking of the way Phil attacked the course, should it raise the theory:  "Colonial is not conducive to a player like Tiger."

    Phil showed the golfing world that doglegs can be attacked. That power golf works at Colonial.

    So, come on back TW.  I know the Fort Worth fan will support you.

     




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  • Women at Colonial?

    I truly hope this week has been as good for you as it has for me.  On Saturday, after playing 18 and practicing (what a weird feeling to actually practice), one of my favorite tour players, who is also my best friend, and I went out to play a few holes.  I birdied one… hit the ball in the water on two, par’d 3… birdied 4… par’d 8 and birdied 9… with an Open Champion watching.  Pretty cool.

    Sunday, I watched my 13 year old, William, play his last baseball game of the season.  Will attends The Highlands School in Irving.  For most of his teammates, this was their first year playing organized ball.  It was a tough year, but a number of the kids put tons of effort and heart into learning their skills, and it showed.  From the start of the season to the end, it was night and day.  For Will, he worked so hard on his game, especially his pitching.  It wasn’t easy for him to pitch from 60 feet, not being close to 5 feet tall but he worked at it almost every day and in the last inning of the season he looked like an all-star… striking out 2 and most importantly, walking none.

    Wednesday, in coat and tie, I watched my older son, Douglas, graduate high school at the International Junior Golf Academy in Hilton Head.  After getting past the feeling of being 100 years old, it was really cool to see one of my kids in cap and gown.  Because the graduating class was only 30, each student had the opportunity to watch a slide show capitalizing their life.  As usual, my wife Sandie did an absolutely tremendous job of choosing just the right pictures.  For Doug, it was the culmination of a wonderful, educational and very difficult year.  See, it was Doug that decided to attend the IJGA, an amazing golf academy run by Hank Haney.  The kids live, eat and breathe golf and have for most of their lives.  Until last summer, Doug had never really taken the game serious… so putting himself in the “lion’s den” of golfers was not easy.  But, he has grown into a committed young man that is willing to pay the price to do what he loves.  It was great to see the first part of the race come to a conclusion.

    I landed this morning back in Dallas and headed straight to Colonial.  The Nelson is the 200 lb gorilla that has worked hard to rebuild itself; Colonial is the “golf tournament” that is trying to make itself into something more.  They are doing a very good job of it.  In 2007, with the help of a new Tournament Director and a new title sponsor, The Crowne Plaza invitational at Colonial generated over $4.26 million for Tarrant Country Charities, top 5 on the Tour.  The tournament was recognized as the most improved Charity on the Tour. 

    This year they’ve added more love entertainment; live tournament and replay action in the downtown Sundance Square; 2500 tickets given to men and women in uniform and their families; plus, one of the coolest things, the Colonial Golf Girl.  Want to know the inside scoop at the tournament?  Go to http://www.colonialgolfgirl.com/ and blog away.  Kelly Webster of 103.3FM ESPN is answering (or trying to answer) all your questions and giving you up-to-the-minute, inside information on the tournament.  Check it out.  If nothing else, Kelly is always funny, just ask Galloway.

    Question of the week – I have an interesting idea for Colonial… let me know what you think.  Colonial was the first tour event to bring a woman into the field for something more than a publicity stunt.  Annika deserved a chance and she felt this was the right course.  So, how about Lorena?  She has not been public about playing with the men, which in my mind makes it more interesting.  How about Colonial being the tournament that invites the most deserving woman player?  It might be every year or every other; it might be once a decade, but it would be for the right reasons and give some wonderful women players the opportunity to try on a different playing level.  What do you think?

    A 277 yard par 4… you heard it right.  First we had a 300 yd par 3, now a 277 yard Par 4.  That’s right, on Sunday at the US Open, the 14th hole, which is normally 435 yards, will be shortened to become a driveable Par 4.  Can’t wait to hear what is said about this one.

    Finally… which is better: a morning 63 or a blown-in-the-wind afternoon 66?  We’ll see on Sunday.  One thing is for sure, the last time the winner led on Thursday was 1988… Lanny Watkins.  It doesn’t bode well for the man with two last names, Johnson Wagner.




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  • Annika, Goydos, Sergio, Number 17 and The Nationwide

    Hope you all had a great week.  I did.  Watching Sergio be Sergio and then heading south on 95 to Orlando to watch my son play his last high school golf tournament made it special.

    Annika - Let me start by saying that no one is going to agree with what I am about to write.  Hell, I think I must be crazy for writing it, but here goes.  I think Annika Sorenstam is being unfair.

    I know she is getting married… I know she wants to make babies… I know she is designing 5 golf courses… I know she has a new golf academy… I know she has her own clothing line, “Annika.”  I know she has lost the desire to play to the level that made her golf’s first lady.  I know all of that…

    I also know that as a woman that wants to have children, it is much harder for her to continue at her level than a man.  Anyone remember Pat Hurst running around the course at 7 months pregnant?

    I know I am being selfish, but imagine Cal Ripken retiring one game short of the record or Hank Aaron calling it quits at the end of the 1973 season, one home run short of tying Babe Ruth.  How about Tiger Woods calling it quits at 17.  What would that have done for their respective sports?

    Again, I know I am being selfish; but for the good of her sport, isn’t Annika?  She says breaking Mickey Wright’s record of 88 isn’t important.  It is… Patty Berg’s record of 15 majors isn’t important.  It is…  It’s important to the history of the sport.  It’s especially important to the growth of her game.

    One last point.  The next three years could have been the greatest in golf since Palmer and Nicklaus.  Since we can’t seem to get a Woods versus someone, we had Sorenstam versus Ochoa… I just want more of it.  Will Annika return?  We will have to wait and see…  If not, it’s bye-bye and I wish you would stay a little longer.

    Goydos – I’ve know Paul Goydos for 20 years.  He was a terrific player in Southern California.  He has been the perfect tour player for 16 years.  The kind of guy I love.  He plays and plays and plays.  He is not without talent, but compared to the top players, he lags far behind.  But he continues to make cuts; he continues to make the top 125; he continues to stay on the tour.  There are so many that come and go; there are so many that never come, you have to raise a glass to a guy like Paul.  A guy that loves his life as a single dad; a guy that loves making his living playing golf.

    Sergio – See, he can putt.  Maybe not for four days, but on a course like The Players, I guess you don’t have too.  All in all it is great to see him win.  Sergio is good for golf.  Sergio has game and personality, a combination we just don’t see around the 21st century Tour.  Will this lead to better things?  We’ll have to wait and see.  One thing is certain, we could sure use it.

    Some Media – All we ask for from our athletes is honesty and a little excitement.  Sergio gives it to us.  What is the problem with Sergio saying, “I want to first thank Tiger for not showing up.”  It was truthful; it was honest; it was incredibly funny.  When we get what we ask for, why does some of the media have to jump on a player?  Get a sense of humor, please!

    Number 17 – I get that 17 is what every viewer loves about The Players; I get that the players hate the 17th hole.  So who’s right?  Henry Hughes, the tour's chief of operations and soon-to-be CEO of The Players, said officials decided about five years ago to start the playoff at No. 17, and there were no regrets Sunday.

    "We discussed what would be the most exciting, most compelling, most attractive way to end the tournament should it end in a tie," Hughes said. "The entire team concluded that arguably the most exciting hole in golf would be the place to contest a playoff. We think it was exciting. We think the decision was right."

    The question is how much the playoff was decided by skill and how much was decided by luck.

    How about both…  How about the Tour make this into a big time event rather than a circus shot on one hole finishing such a great event…  I propose the following…

    A 3-hole playoff for the title.  16-17-18… A real playoff for a real tournament.

    Nationwide and the metroplex – How about this past weekend on the Nationwide?  Four of the top 11 finishers have ties to the metroplex.  Very cool.  Colt Knost working very hard on his game with the great Randy Smith quieted many voices that said he made a mistake turning pro so quickly by winning the Fort Smith, Arkansas event.  Kris Cox and Jason Shultz, both Dallas residents, are working on getting their tour cards back.  But the most fun and perhaps the most rewarding of the week was Matt Weibring, son of DA.  After leading through 54 holes, Matt finished inside the Top 10 for the first time in a year.  Weibring has been fighting an injury but is on the way back.  Congrats to all.

     




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  • Watching a Tour Player for 18 Holes

    Thought this might be fun. Getting you inside the ropes here at the Championship. Tommy Armour III, Bernhard Langer and Brian Davis walk to the tenth tee at 7:23 a.m. There is a great putting green right next to the backside teeing area — something I wish more Tour courses would do.

    They announce 48-year-old Amour and he stripes one down the middle on one of the hardest driving holes on the course.

    There is a quiet confidence this year. A guy that still loves to practice and work to get better. Not always found in guys his age. His brother Sandy, one of the better golf instructors, is back on the bag. I think they both like this a lot.

    Armour misses 12-footer for birdie and we head to the par-5 11th. 

    For a 20-year vet, Tommy still hits it pretty far and is the longest driver in the group. A 3-footer for birdie and he moves to 1-under.

    The 12th is a short par-4. A wonderful hole where you better hit the ball in the right section of the green. Three-wood down the pipe, but his wedge flies right over the flag to the fringe in the back. The dreaded three-putt and he moves back to even.

    You’d better have the speed down pat here, at the TPC, and your iron play. TPC Sawgrass is not a big driving "problem" course… i.e. Fred Funk. It’s about irons and short game.

    Speaking of irons, we move to the par-3 13th — a hole I consider one of the toughest on the course. For some reason it is hard to get the wind right. You think it’s cross and it’s actually dead into you. The pin is in a tough spot: middle left at the bottom of a slope and over a bunker and water.

    Tommy pulls a five iron to the 185 hole, hits it good but misjudges the wind. Boom. Into the front bunker and plugged. Four strokes later he is tapping in for a smooth six and moves to 3-over.

    That’s the TPC. Play the par-3s at even par and you can score.

    14, 15, and 16 he plays really well, leaving himself birdie putts on each hole. He misses them all. He seems to be over-reading the lines.

    You never see change of expressions from TA. He just chomps on the gum and every once in a while sticks a cigarette in his mouth.

    On to the 17th. Some call it great. Some call it silly. But everyone calls it exciting. The island green, one of the most recognizable holes in all of golf. Designed by the great Pete Dye, or should I say Hall of Fame, Pete Dye. Does anyone like to play a Dye course? I think you have to be totally masochistic to see it in the positive. Of them all, it is Dye and his designs that always give me the most trouble.

    Armour tees it up. Straight down wind today, to a green that is getting harder and harder. The pin is in the second easiest spot - back center. But no pin is easy on this hole. Last year, 93 balls in the water, 50 on Thursday. Yesterday, the caddies got to take a shot for charity. The tour players were asked to each donate whatever they felt appropriate.  Just about 50 percent of the guys put it in the brink. The winner, Brian Bateman’s caddy, at a smooth 1-foot-5-inch best ever.

    Armour hits a wedge to inside three feet. Will probably be the best shot of the day. Back to 2-over. A great birdie.

    A perfect drive on 18 on one of the hardest finishing holes on tour, and he is in position for another birdie. But 18, when the pin is back right, "just ‘aint a birdie hole." As much as the greens are bouncing, you have to play to the front. Armour leaves about a 40-foot putt.

    Before I forget, Bernhard Langer made a terrific eagle on 16, a hole you must birdie each of the four days to have a chance at winning this event.

    Tommy leaves his putt about eight feet short. At least it’s uphill; and he makes it.

    Take the six away and he is right there. Unfortunately, no mulligans on the tour. That is one of my ideas for the PGA Tour’s Fall Series. If we are going to play after the cup, let’s remake the Silly Season.

    Bring back the international and what do you think of this: A player-caddy Ryder Cup event. The caddies get handicaps and the players have to carry their own bags. And none of this little carry bag stuff. I WANT DALY CARRYING HIS TOUR BAG!

    The other event: The Mulligan. Every player gets one mulligan a side, but they put up their own money for the purse.

    Ok, back to reality.

    As Tommy tees off his back, the No. 1 hole, it is getting really warm. The breeze has died and it is going to get really uncomfortable for the afternoon times.

    Armour’s drive is right, into a really horrible lie. These are lies that say, "Did you work out last night?"  He blasts it out, taking about three pounds of sod to just short of the green.

    Every green at the TPC is elevated with four six-foot slopes. Most are cut very tight, so you have to putt or chip into a slope. Armour putts this one to about four feet.

    Armour is one of those guys that you have no idea what he is thinking between shots. His demeanor never changes. For a guy with a "party man’s" rap, Tommy is one of the hardest working and best ball strikers out here. He rams it in for par.

    No. 2 is a 532-yard par-5. Again, down the middle.

    Getting off to a bad start is tough out here. Not a lot of birdies sitting around, but the good part is there are plenty of holes left. You’d rather not have a six on Sunday.

    He makes the 48-year-old play: an iron to the number he wants. A lost art in this power era called golf. Punches it to seven feet.

    Quick note on Langer: He is playing much faster. Always one of the slower guys on tour, I guess the old guys on the Champions Tour taught him to speed up and he has. Plus he is still hitting his three wood like a 20-year-old making this 532 into the wind in two and making a birdie. Now, Armour for his third birdie of the day. Again, an over-read and he makes par.

    No. 3 plays about 175 with a pretty strong right-to-left cross wind. As with the other par-3s on this course, there is a major slope right through the center.

    Tommy hits a six, taking a chance with the back of the green. It leaks a little right and leaves him a very long birdie, or shall I say lag putt, that must carry for a long time on the slope. This was perhaps the hardest putt on the green. In order to carry the slope and not end up on the front, Armour had to power the putt.  He left it 11 feet past the hole. His third 3-putt of the day. Those are the ones that kill you out there.

    Speaking of 3-putts, I just checked the leaderboard. Sergio is 4-under par. How cool if he could win. Scott, Kim and Garcia are all stepping up.

    No. 4 is only 384 but one of the best holes at the TPC. Water and bunkers right, deep rough left.

    Most of the pins today have been relatively accessible. At last week’s players-only meeting, inside information said that the players are getting pretty fed up with the layouts. This is the first diabolical one. Four paces from the front, five paces over the water. WOW! Tommy hits a perfect drive and a better second that spins just past the hole and settles about five feet below the cup.

    He makes for birdie. Back to 2-over. No. 5, 471 par-4 continues the water and bunker down the right theme. And again, right down the middle. It amazes me how well TA drives it.

    In the ongoing saga of slow play on Tour, a rules official lets Tommy’s group know that the threesome in front is on the clock. A group that Armour’s threesome has waited on a number of times during this round.

    Tommy’s approach is good. Nine feet below the hole. It does not matter what the temperature is, Armour believes in the black and white only rule.

    His routine over a putt is always the same. Behind the ball. Around to the hole with a little plumbob action. Back behind the ball and another plumb. Two practice strokes and a go. This time it goes in for another birdie. A big one putting him at 1-over for the round.

    No. 6 is 393. This time the bunkers are left and the wind is straight into us. Trying to keep it down, Armour pulls it just a touch and, unfortunately, lands up in the bunker.

    Speaking of driving, a player must be able to draw the ball off the tee. None out of the 14 driving holes set up for a right-to-left-shot. With about 130 left from the bunker, TA hits a great shot to four feet and a chance at three in a row and even par. He jars it.

    What a great lesson for any player that gives it up after a triple bogey and plenty to do. All the stuff about playing one shot and one hole. It’s real. It’s also really hard. I know, just ask my son, Doug, and about a third of the Tour players.

    No. 7 is 442, par-4. TA catches what the Tour players call "a runner". In this new world of hit it high with no roll, it’s fun to see an old style shot. He ends up about 30 yards past his playing partners. His glove hand always goes to the mouth; he steps over the ball and swings. Not one of his better irons. Don’t think that he is used to being that close on this hole. Leaves himself about 23 feet above the flag to a pin right in the front.

    Can he make four in a row? The wind is coming up. It’s expected to blow between 15 and 25 mph today, a good thing for those that played this morning.

    It is amazing how much a player’s draw has to do with making the cut. If you catch the rougher afternoon, you can play good golf and still be out on the weekend.

    Armour two-putts for par leaving him at even through 16 holes and facing what I consider the most daunting hole on the course. The 237-yard par-3 eighth. A cross wind – down wind hole to a small green with edges sloping away from the center.

    Tommy hits a good iron 35 feet past the hole, leaving a speedy downhill birdie putt.

    Interesting question here — almost like an NBA team that gets down by 20 at half. They claw their way back to even, but many teams fall back again. They either run out of energy or can’t keep up the hard work. I wonder what happens to most Tour players who start slow, make a few early mistakes and claw their way back to even par? How many can keep going lower?

    Garcia and Angel Cabrera are both 5-under. Tommy makes his two-putt and remains even in 26th place. No. 9 is a 583-yard, uphill par-5. His drive is down the middle. His layup is also in the middle, about 65 yards to the flag that is in a switch-back right.

    Tommy and his brother Sandy flow like one. It’s way more than a caddy-player relationship. They know each other’s every move.

    Tommy’s approach ends up less than two feet from the hole. He finishes the day at 1-under par.

    If there were ever a round that should be thrown to every junior wannabe player, it is 48-year-old Tommy Armour III, first round at the 2008 Players Championship. A round that could have very easily been 77-78 became 71 because he refused to throw in the towel.

    Thanks for the round, Tommy. I will never forget it. Sure, I could have watched Sergio or one of the other leaders, but I never would have gotten the lesson.




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  • Woods & Wachovia

    Hope you are having a terrific week. 
     
    Most of you that receive my newsletter love the game.  You probably don’t get to play as much as you would like, but you do make sure you get to play.  I make the assumption that you also like golf enough to watch it on television if you’re around a set. (I’m also pretty sure that you are not as crazy as me... listening to XM on a headset as I walk a course or watch my son play his baseball game.)
     
    These next four days the PGA Tour is in Charlotte for the Wachovia Tournament.  In very few years, thanks to the tour’s help, this event has become “one of the best”.  It is a great course; it is a great field; it is a set-up to The Players Championship.  Everyone is there this week; everyone but a guy named Woods.
     
    So here is my question of the day: does having Tiger in a tournament make a difference in whether or not you watch?  Maybe not a scientific study, but it will show the Tiger Effect.
     
    The Tiger effect?  How about the Top 9 effect?  This past weekend, EDS, the Four Seasons and the Red Pants did everything they could to create a festival for the patrons of the Nelson.  They did a tremendous job.  The problem?  Other than the patrons, no one watched.  Ratings were down.  It is bad enough when Tiger does not play.  The average TV rating drops about 45%. 
     
    The Salesmanship Club and EDS are putting any pressure they can on the Tour to change the date of the event.  The date... That is the most important factor in the Top players choosing events.  It used to be about the purse; now the purses are so big that money has little affect on a player’s decision to play.  Next, it was about the course; this still has some affect, maybe 15%.  But the number one reason behind a player's schedule is the date.  There are 4 majors; the Players, Arnie’s, the Tour Championship and Jack’s; there’s the WGC’s; now there’s the playoffs.  Guess what?  That makes 14, leaving the Top players about 4 other tournaments to choose from.  What chance does PODS or Buick have?
     
    So, for a minute, let’s forget about Tiger and figure a way just to get the Top players into more events.  Remembering that these guys are independent contractors, there is not a lot that can be done. 
     
    Is it time for the best players to break off and form their own tour?  They’ve pretty much already done some of that by choosing their events.  So how I see it is that the tour has only two choices:

    1. Impose the LPGA format.  Each player must play in every event once every three years.  That would get the job done.
    2. Move the tournament dates around every couple of years.  While this might be more difficult on the tournaments, I think they’d be happy to work it out to get Phil or Tiger or Ernie at their event.  Remember, there is always a dead tournament the week or two after a major.

    Is there a downside to these options?  Sure there is. Arnie might get shorted, but just like the Nelson, when Mr. Palmer passes or if the greens are not improved quickly, no one will show there either.  The Top players might decide to move on... but someone has to help the weaker dates and they better do it quickly or about 6 - 8 events will be removed from the schedule.
     
    A reporter friend of mine came up with the following, “How about making the week after each major a dead week.”  No event.  Well, from the standpoint of the top players, it basically already is dead.  The problem is that the tour cannot forget about the other 150 players that need events.
     
    So, for now, most events beg for fields (or hire private jets to take the players to The Open Championship).  What we do know is that something must be done.




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