Watch Kevin Na Play Really, Really Fast

For all of my complaints about Kevin Na's pace of play and the PGA Tour's total fear of anything remotely controversial, Thursday at the Valero Open proved to be a breakthrough day.

As you'll see in the video posted by, yes, PGATour.com, you can watch Na take very little time racking up what was thought to be a 15. Until a necessary post-round look at the tape, reports Jim Moriarty.

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Phil Mickelson's 63 couldn't have come at a better time and while it'll be fun to see what he does Sunday, he's vaulted himself back onto the Masters favorites list after a mediocre start to the year. But it's the LPGA's first major of the year that has the potential for a fantastic finish with World No. 1 Yani Tseng taking the lead over Stacy Lewis, with Morgan Pressel and Michelle Wie lurking just enough that things could get interesting if someone goes low.

Now This Should Be A PGA Tour Commercial!**

Thanks to reader Ari for passing along this video from a buddy connected to Bubba Watson's pro-am pairing last week at Bay Hill. Got to love his devotion to getting the best angle for the guy's blast out of the pond. What other sport has athletes so devoted to their paid guests? Hopefully he checked for alligators first.

"But real stars are validated only when those tools consistently hold up in the heat. Anything decreed before that happens is hot air."

Jaime Diaz is suggesting in a Golf World Monday item that the hype machine surrounding young Americans has not been justified. Blasphemy!

More telling was the play of those still around at crunch time. Steve Marino (pictured) had the most conspicuous collapse, giving the tournament away with a bogey on 15, a soft par on 16, and a stabbed five-footer (and a double bogey) on 17. Justin Rose was brilliant on the back nine until he faced a must-have seven-footer for par on the 71st, and Marc Leishman missed a 15-footer on the last as both fell to T-3. Eventual winner Martin Laird was as shaky as anyone, playing the first 11 holes five over par. The Scot rallied late to be the last man standing, but his 75 shouldn't have been enough.

There's no doubt the members of the would-be new order have flashy tools. But real stars are validated only when those tools consistently hold up in the heat. Anything decreed before that happens is hot air.

"BAY HILL'S BRUTISH BUNKERS"

The SI/golf.com gang was joined by Davis Love and they talk about whether the buried lies at Bay Hill are intentional. Remember, the PGA Tour rules staff has a reduced role in how two tournaments a year are prepared: Bay Hill and the Memorial.

Herre: I was surprised to see so many balls plugging in the bunkers. I suppose that was by design. Anyone know if that was new, softer sand in the bunkers? It was an almost automatic bogey every time someone flew a ball either high or into the upslope.

Bamberger: Or the downslope! Arnold wants his course hard. He feels bunkers have been emasculated. He masculated them.

Love: Soft sand has to be a strategy there, that's the only knock on the course the last few years.

"I'm just not going to hit 3-woods off the tee and play that course strategically the week before Augusta."

Dave Shedloski files an interesting item about Phil Mickelson and Houston next week that should be noted for you Masters pool players who look at the previous weeks play.

"Houston is not going to set up well for me," Mickelson said Saturday after a 3-under-par 69 at Bay Hill Club. "The way the course is set up, you can't hit it more than 285-290 off a lot of the tees. It's not going to be a course where I'm going to play the most strategic and expect to really score well."

The Tournament Course at Redstone is a big ballpark, 7,457 yards, par 72. It would seem a good venue for Mickelson's high-ball power game - if the wind doesn't blow. But many fairways aren't as open as he'd like at the 300-yard mark. Mickelson finished T-35 there a year ago.

"The problem for me there is there is so much water that pinches off the tee, and I'm just not going to hit 3-woods off the tee and play that course strategically the week before Augusta," Mickelson said. "And then when it gets windy and I'm trying to hit high balls for Augusta and it requires a low knock-down shot, it's not going to work.

Having not seen the course, I'm not sure this is more of a statement about the set-up or the design. Knowing Phil's love of Rees Jones' oeuvre, I'm guessing the latter.

"Last week I saw an article that said I was one of the best putters on tour. I laughed when I read that."

John Huggan files and aptly timed Sunday column profiling Martin Laird, who holds a two-stroke lead going into the final day at Bay Hill. Laird also recently scouted Augusta in advance of his first Masters and found it familiar from television, with one caveat.
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"It's when his cleats touch the greens that Na pulls the parachute on his pace of play."

Gene Wojciechowski investigates this slow play business by following the second group out at Bay Hill consisting of Kevin Na, Chad Campbell and Paul Goydos. Even with only one group in front of them they took nearly 5 hours to play and fell a hole behind the group in front of them.
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