"JACK NICKLAUS: He should be here. (Laughter.)"

Jack Nicklaus's Q&A at Muirfield Village included a "What would Woody think" question about Jim Tressel and Jack serving as his own rally killer later on. But in this sequence he proved that he is absolutely not reading the Muirfield Village club newsetter.

Q. Jason Day has had to withdraw from the tournament needing to take a break before the U.S. Open. I know you've just recently granted him membership to Muirfield Village. What do you see in young Jason?

JACK NICKLAUS: We did?

Q. Just recently.

JACK NICKLAUS: Did what?

Q. He has playing privileges at Muirfield Village.

JACK NICKLAUS: He does, and he's not here? (Laughter.) We'll take that away. (Laughter.) I did not know that.

Does Jason live around here?

Q. Yes, he's married a girl from Ohio.

JACK NICKLAUS: Oh, he did?

Q. I just wanted to get your opinion on his play these days because he's a young star in the making for Australia.

JACK NICKLAUS: He's a good player, and if he's got a gal from -- has he married a gal from Ohio?

Q. Yeah.

JACK NICKLAUS: He should be here. (Laughter.)

Muirfield Village's New 16th To Debut

According to the GCSAA's preview, the hole is opening this week so I don't know if that means it actually has not seen any play yet, adding to the intrigue. In the photos I've seen it looks like a knock off of Augusta's 16th hole, but with more than one decent hole location.

Here's a YouTube video showing the destruction of the old hole, no great loss for golf architecture.



In this second video is it me or does it look like they added a back left bunker at the last minute?



Tiger: "I’m a lot better off."

Not really.

The press conference to launch this year's AT&T National at Aronimink offered yet another less-than-pretty look into the world of Tiger Woods' post accident media management. Instead of simply appearing, answering questions and doing his part to promote an event that his name clings to by a thread, Woods used an probably planned-for $1 million foundation donation as a backdoor way of showing the deep rage he holds toward a golf media that once kissed his feet and now which poses straightforward questions about his game and physical well being.

 

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Match Play Sunday, Colonial Open Thread

Poulter and Donald are in the finale in Spain, they've a nice final foursome at the Sybase and Colonial has gotten more interesting. And I'm sure the only thing anyone will want to talk about is Ian Poulter falling and losing his diamond encrusted ball marker.

Me, I'm just forwarding through the telecast to see...if we can figure out what happened to the marker. Ian declared himself "alright," but only after checking to see if his pants had been stained. We wouldn't have him any other way.

It's O'Hair Who Is The Drain On His Pairings!

Continuing my catch up from missed reading last week, Jeff Patterson's look at the scoring average of playing partners for bickering tour players Rory Sabbatini and Sean O'Hair--who engaged in a spat after O'Hair claimed Rory was a burden to his fellow golfers--shows that it's slow-poke O'Hair who is dragging his mates down.
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Random PLAYERS Championship Observations, Vol. 1

I was energized walking around The Players Championship and learning that the video scoreboard at the TPC are just as schizophrenic as they are at other tour events. It appeared on Sunday they tried to program an elimination of FedExCup standings and other clutter, but getting the front page of the leaderboard for more than 10 seconds remained nearly impossible. However, on No. 17 I did learn every players' par-3 scoring average. Spine-tingling stuff.
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Quick 2011 Players Roundup

Cameron Morfit suggests that K.J. Choi is a horse for tough courses.

"He plays good, focused golf on tough courses," said Andy Prodger, Choi's caddie for a dozen worldwide victories. "I put it in his head that he was going to win this week because he's been playing very well."

Coming into the Players Championship, where his best result was a tie for 16th place in 2006, Choi had tied for third in New Orleans, tied for eighth at the Masters and tied for sixth at Bay Hill. Said Steve Bann, his Australian swing coach for the last six years, "A win was coming."

Bob Harig focuses on David Toms' decision to go for No. 16 in two. Ironic since Toms famously laid up on a par-4 in his most famous win, the 2002 PGA.

Toms had 233 yards to the front of the par-5 16th green, the one that has a pond to the right of the putting surface. It is a birdie hole, and at worst Toms should have made par.

"When he got up to me, he said, 'Do you like 2-hybrid?'" Gneiser recalled. "I said, 'I like it.' With a 1-shot lead, I'm thinking just get it left of the green, chip it down. And if K.J. doesn't make birdie we've got a 2-shot lead."

But Toms did not catch it solid, the ball drifting to the right and into the water. Instead of a possible birdie, it led to a bogey. Instead of a 1- or 2-shot lead, Toms and Choi were tied.

"And now I'm second-guessing myself," Gneiser said.

Toms put it on himself.

I was standing behind 16 green and just assumed he would lay up because of the hanging lie, which never really shows up very well on television. And when he took a full swing, well...it was a shocker.

Jason Sobel on "Chois Boys," the gang that has been following KJ around for six years and who made their presence felt all week with their shirts and cheers.

When they returned this year, the group came outfitted in black t-shirts with its lyrical name printed on front. They wore ‘em every day, following their new favorite player all over the course, ignoring all social mores about cheering loudly for a non-superstar and keeping hygiene issues to a minimum.

“We’re probably a little rank,” Page admitted after four days in his shirt. “We’ve been wearing these since Thursday.”

Gene Wojciechowski wasn't too inspired by the "Champions Tour Lite" Players.

This is the supposed "fifth major," but the guy who won it hasn't cashed a tour victory check since the 2008 Sony Open. The guy he beat, David Toms, hasn't won on tour since the 2006 Sony. And the guy who finished third, Paul Goydos, hasn't won since the 2007 Sony.

PlayStations for everybody!

Choi turns 41 this Thursday. Toms is 44. Goydos is 46. It was like the Champions Tour Lite.

In fact, Toms actually mentioned that a win here Sunday would have given him a five-year exemption on the big boy tour -- almost long enough, he said half-kiddingly, to get him to age 50 and the Champions Tour.

David Whitley, on the other hand, kind of liked it

It’s understandable that golf wants to push fresh, young faces. But being a geezer myself, it was heartening to see guys born during the Johnson Administration show they still have it.
Toms hadn’t won a tournament since the 2006 Sony Open. Oddly enough, Choi’s last win was the 2008 Sony Open. Goydos’ last win was the 2007 Sony Open.

By far the biggest win among them was Toms’ 2001 PGA Championship. His interest in golf waned until his son started playing. Carter Toms thinks like a 13-year-old golfer.

“He’s watching Rickie Fowler and all those young guys,” his dad said. “And dressing like them.”
It’s okay to dress like them, but Carter should still watch how his dad operates. Especially on an exacting course like Sawgrass, where guile and experience count as much as talent as swagger.

"I was on the range with him for a half an hour on Tuesday."

A few of you noticed something we scribes missed during Tim Finchem's press conference to discuss various topics, including Tiger Woods. Steve Elling writes:

Making his first comments to the print media in two months, Finchem strongly reaffirmed statements he made on television earlier in the week after a Golf Channel analyst asserted on the air that Woods only played this week because he had been pressured by the tour to appear at its flagship event. Woods withdrew after nine holes after claiming that he had re-injured his ailing knee.

The tour called the Golf Channel and strenuously complained about the report and Finchem still seem riled about it on Sunday.

"Well, it's not about him, it's any player," he said. "I don't twist players' arms, and as far as Tiger being hurt, guys, that's a decision he has to make, and I had no information that he wasn't ready to play golf.

"I don't think anybody did. I don't think he did. I was on the range with him for a half an hour on Tuesday.  He was hitting it really well. He went and played nine holes, and he didn't have a problem. He played the next day, he didn't have a problem. He stayed on the range that day, he didn't have a problem."

Finchem was with Tiger for a half hour while he hit balls? No wonder Tiger got out of town. He needs to practice in peace!

First 2010 Players Question: How Did The Course Look?

I had to file a story for Golf World so I haven't had a chance to read the accounts of the final round nor share many thoughts about the week, but I am curious if the immaculate condition of the course and greens was apparent watching on television?

After last year I heard a lot of comments about how the greens looked "dead." That certainly didn't happen this year (nor last year). But in the HD era it is amazing how reaction to a course varies and how the slightest blemishes are noticed.

I can tell you from walking around, the conditions were incredible. How'd they look on your end? (And save your flower bed gripes for another day...that question is coming!)