Take That, Chief Leatherlips: A Guide To Viewing The (Early Starting) Memorial Final Round

The Chief's memorial in Dublin.

The Chief's memorial in Dublin.

The storylines are flowing! The stars are aligned--Tiger, Justin! A nice crop of young players are seeking a signature win! And naturally rain-inducing Chief Leatherlips will apparently have none of it. 

So the PGA Tour has moved up tee times in anticipation due to possible inclement weather Sunday at The Memorial. 

After years of resisting live-streaming, CBS has acquiesced and will stream its coverage as well as allow Golf Channel to air live golf starting at 8:30 am ET. 

As Bill Speros notes here in a handy guide, PGA Tour Live will get the first our exclusively before Golf Channel is on and CBS still airs the telecast in the normal window.

If storms come, then all bets are off and CBS may be showing live golf in its normal window.

The point is, fans finally are the focus here. Thanks to all who whined to help us get long overdue live golf.

Back's Tighten In Executive Suites Around The Country After Tiger Mentions Tight Back In Memorial Opening 72

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I'm not sure anyone is shocked to hear Tiger actually woke up a little tight before his 72 at Muirfield Village. Given his age and surgeries, some less-than-perfect days are to be expected. Still, gulp...we have majors to play! Ones he can win!  

Brentley Romine with the details on Woods' nice recovery after getting to four-over on his opening round at the Memorial.

Bob Harig's ESPN.com reports some quotes Woods saying it's a "days like this" situation and not the first time in his fused back era he's had tightness.

"No, I just have days like that,'' Woods said. "It's aging, and it's surgeries. It is what it is. Just got to make the adjustments. I'm able to make them now. Beginning of the year, I wasn't able to make them, because I didn't really know what to do yet.''

#liveunderpar Files: Jordan Spieth Begs Fans To "Actually Watch" And Not Shoot Video

Brentley Romine of Golfweek reports that the PGA Tour's advocacy of fans documenting every moment may be wearing on some players, with Jordan Spieth openly pleading with fans off the 8th green to just watch.

“If everybody could do me a huge favor and not video this shot,” Spieth said. “Thank you. Sometimes it’s cool to actually watch. Please, no phones. Can’t have any going off in this shot.”

But how are they to live under par, young Jedi? It's not just a way to play, it's a way to be annoying. Or it's thinking hard and playing young. Or...oh some slogan that cost too much and which needs to quickly end up on the trash heap of ad campaigns. 

The moment from round one of the 2018 Memorial:

Though I can't imagine what might be causing this fear of young Jordan to have cameras going off when trying to play a shot...

Through Colonial: PGA Tour's Driving Distance Average At 294.8 And Where That Number Ranks Historically

We all can see where players are hitting the ball and why--bicep curls!--so it's always fun to see where today's linebackers rank with the engineers of the past. If nothing else, the stunning increase this year theoretically means the governing bodies will have to act based on past commitments.  Theoretically.

Note the PGA Tour driving distance average through the Colonial this year versus past years if you are looking for perspective on the influence of pilates, core work and lean protein diets.

Year       Tour Average At Colonial Time

2018       294.8

2017       289.2

2016       288.1

2008      283.2

1998       269.0

So we're up five yards from where we were last year at this time, a year the USGA and R&A said showed the first spike in some time. Maybe all of the mowers on the PGA Tour have been sharpened? Lowered? Infused with special oils to make the ball run more?

Oh, and traditionally the average goes up as the weather gets warmer. 

Country Singer Owen Posts 86 In Web.com Tour Event, Gets Into Twitter Spat Mid-Round

I'm usually a defender of sponsor's invites and the silly scores that have come with them. But I'm not sure if country singer Jake Owen (Nashville Open first round 86) taking to Twitter mid-round is the look a tournament or the PGA Tour was hoping for since Owen was pushing back at a player unhappy at seeing a spot wasted. How Owen saw the mention among his 2.28 million followers is unclear, or when he found the time to bang out a Tweet as he was racking up a huge score is also not clear.

Either way, he fired off a less-than-gentlemanly reply to Doug Walker:

Walker challenged Owen to some charity fundraising via birdies--of which Owen made zero in round one--and it appears all are on board with others pledging money to Brandt Snedeker's foundation, the beneficiary of the event, reports Golf World's Christopher Powers. 

One of Walker's many follow-ups:

Minimalist Maintenance Is Not More Expensive, Contrary To Popular Opinion

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I've always been particularly fascinated at the idea of minimalist course designs costing more to maintain.

The concept is generally perpetrated by the tin siding-salesman masquerading as golf architects who sometimes plaid jackets and would just as soon be selling you a policy as they would be in designing interesting, affordable golf holes. They also don't really like the minimalist movement for a variety of reasons, from general point missing to just wanting to sell projects on goods and services they don't need.

Born out of this have been derogatory whisper campaigns about the perils of going minimalist, including the contradictory notion that bunkers maintained as rough hazards take more time and money to present than those edged weekly and raked daily. 

So as accustomed to this completely bizarre take as we subscribers to the movement have become, it was a bit disheartening to read Gary Van Sickle's MorningRead.com take suggesting AT&T Byron Nelson Classic host site Trinity Forest was an example of the kind of "high-maintenance, slow-play golf course" the game needs less of.

Had Van Sickle been there to hear Jordan Spieth mention whizzing around the course in two-hours--golf board aided--or seen the turf, I wonder if this take might have been different:

Golf needs low-maintenance, fast-play golf courses. Trinity Forest is a high-maintenance, slow-play golf course. Did you see some of those massive bunkers? An amateur could spend five minutes raking his or her way out of the trap.

Greens are the most expensive parts of a golf course to maintain, and Trinity Forest has gigantic greens. One double green is 35,000 square feet. Pebble Beach’s front-nine greens would almost fit in that corral.

It’s ironic that Trinity Forest seemed like a breath of fresh air with its different look and myriad challenges, but it is not an economically viable model for golf in most areas.

Actually, it is. 

Despite the deep pockets of the members, the maintenance approach is pretty restrained.

Reviewing my notes from an interview with superintendent Kasey Kauff, he noted Trinity's full staff for the course is a very normal 24, including assistants and technicians.

Fairways are cut twice a week while bunkers are raked at the same rate (with touch ups). The greens are mown just five days a week in peak season, once or twice a week in the winter. 

Thanks to the slow-growing zoysia and lean watering program, bunkers are rarely edged. Fertilization is at half the rate of a Bermuda grass golf course. Half. 

As for slow play, maintenance and design are not to blame for threesomes in a full field PGA Tour event not getting around in a timely manner. When today's players can reach all par-5s in two and at least one par-4 in one, that's a distance discussion and sometimes a green speed discussion. Trinity Forest's greens were at a modest 10.5 on the Stimpmeter.

Yes, Trinity Forest is a wealthy membership with a token First Tee facility and it took millions to convert a landfill into a course only a select few rich guys can join. Quibble with that stuff all day long if you must. But suggesting the design is an example of high-cost maintenance and slow play maintenance would not be accurate. 

Wise: 21 Year Old Has Highest GIR Percentage Since 1997

Our eyes did not deceive us during Aaron Wise's debut win at Trinity Forest: he put on a ball-striking display for the ages.

Wise dominated in strokes gained off the tee and approaching the green:

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The size of Trinity Forest's greens and high field average (84%) does not diminish his Green-In-Regulation number given where the performance landed historically (which seems to have played a WGC in Mexico in 2006!*):

Runner-up Marc Leishman hit 77.78% of his greens. 

*Doral

 

 

Aaron Wise Makes Winning Look Easy In First AT&T Byron Nelson At Trinity Forest

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If you kept waiting for Aaron Wise to show signs of nerves you had a long day in the rain-delayed 2018 AT&T Byron Nelson Classic.

The former NCAA Individual and Team champion from Oregon posted a final round 65 to break the tournament record and build on a second place finish at the Wells Fargo Championship. 

Turns out the biggest obstacle to the day was listening to his mom reel off the perks of a win and what other finishes might mean. From Will Gray's GolfChannel.com story:

“She was talking to me in the hotel about what a win could mean, what a second could mean, kind of taking me through all that,” Wise said. “I was like, I’ve got to calm down. I can’t just sit here. I said, ‘You’ve got to go.’ I kind of made her leave the room.”

Wise is only 21, something PGATour.com's Mike McAllister focused on in an excellent story from Saturday night heading into the finale.

Golfweek's David Dusek with what was in the winner's bag.

More ShotLink breakdowns are to come, but the big news for fans of minimalism will take heart in Wise dismantling the course with ball-striking prowess.

Marc Leishman hit some groovy shots around the greens and several players posted incredible scores, but the highlights are ultimately all about Wise and that swing!

From PGA Tour Entertainment:

Winner's Roundup Instagram Style: Wise, Jutanagarn, Otaegui, Arnaud And Jimenez Hoist A Lovely Assortment Of Golf Trophies

Aaron Wise takes home the new crystal trophy for winning the AT&T Byron Nelson Classic debuting on the tournament's 50th anniversary. Even better the trophy creates fun facial distortions for those standing inconveniently behind the glass.

A moment he’ll never forget. #LiveUnderPar

A post shared by PGA TOUR (@pgatour) on

Ariya Jutanagarn returns to the winner's circle a month after her sister's victory, taking the LPGA's Kingsmill Championship and a fantastic salad-making bowl.

Adrian Otaegui earned a converted periscope for winning the European Tour's Belgian Knockout.

Michael Arnaud was the last player into the Web.com Tour's BMW Charity Pro-Am, reeled off two incredible stretches of golf and hoists...a steering wheel!

Miguel Angel Jimenez earned himself a Claret Jug knockoff found at an antique shop and given to the winner of the Regions Tradition.

Crenshaw Pleased With Trinity Forest Debut

A record winning score posted by a player posting some amazing ball-striking stats never hurts, but Ben Crenshaw declared his pleasure at Trinity Forest's AT&T Byron Nelson Classic debut.

From Will Gray's report for GolfChannel.com:

“We’re pleased. It’s off to a nice, quiet start, let’s say,” Crenshaw said. “The week started off very quiet with the wind. This course, we envision that you play it with a breeze. It sort of lends itself to a links style, playing firm and fast, and as you saw yesterday, when the wind got up the scores went up commensurately.”

The Crenshaw's with former President George W. Bush, who appeared in the broadcast booth during the final round. He hosts an event for wounded warriors Monday at Trinity Forest. 

Trinity Forest's First Final Round Set Up For Wise V. Leishman Duel

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The wind and some dryness helped get the ball running, Ben Crenshaw joined the booth, crowds turned out and CBS unveiled 21st century production values for their AT&T Byron Nelson third round broadcast. Voila, Trinity Forest finally came to life Saturday. 

Which reminds me folks, there's Sunday drinking challenge: every time Titleista Peter Kostis mentions the fairway roll--because we know it's the agronomy that makes ordinary slim guys carry the ball 310 yards with ease.

Anyway, those stellar airplane aerials and tracer technology helped show off a course set up for a match play scenario Sunday, with Marc Leishman and Aaron Wise four clear of the field. As Will Gray writes for GolfChannel.com, they are downplaying the match play vibe.

The field is hitting plenty of greens at Trinity Forest. And they're also three-putting their fair share according to ShotLink:

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Third round highlights from PGA Tour Entertainment:

SUBSCRIBE to PGA TOUR now: http://pgat.us/vBxcZSh In the third round of the 2018 AT&T Byron Nelson, Marc Leishman and rookie Aaron Wise went toe-to-toe in the final pairing to finish tied for the leading heading into Sunday at 17-under par. AT&T Byron Nelson is contested at Trinity Forest Golf Club in Dallas, TX.

Time For Trinity Forest: One Last Preview Of Minimalism's Big Moment

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Minimalism's big moment arrives with the AT&T Byron Nelson Classic's bold move to Trinity Forest.  The Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw design features some of their boldest and best design work to date. I'm very jealous of the select few who get to play here on a daily basis, like LPGA star So Yeon Ryu!

I explain in this Golfweek piece my first impressions and why this is a high risk week for the minimalist movement and why you're going to see some fascinating golf played. 

The course's speed dial has been turned down a touch by the PGA Tour wanting to ease into this one, and I explain in this Golfweek piece--with supporting quotes from the firm of Mahan, Scott and Ogilvy that his isn't the worst idea ever.

Here is my Morning Drive chat with Kasey Kauff, the first employee hired by the founders

We discussed what hole has most grown on Jordan Spieth today on Morning Drive:

Adam Scott On Golfers Forced Out Of Their Comfort Zones

On the eve of the 2018 AT&T Byron Nelson Classic, Adam Scott was asked about the PGA Tour locker room talk surrounding Trinity Forest and the uncomfortable demands the course will make.

Look, just most majorities just don't like different, do they? This is just different than what we normally roll out and play.

You know, people are going to get put out of their comfort zones and not many people like that, you know.

The greatest players have all managed to succeed out of their comfort zones and learn to love links or learn to love a parkland golf to succeed, and I think the greatest champions over time have all done that and whoever is going to be here this week will be someone who really embraces the different challenges of this golf.

You're not going to be able to fight it out there this week. You're going to have to go with it and hit a nice shot from 200 out one time and catch the wrong side of the hill and you'll have some putt that you would never feel like you deserve but that's a different style of golf than target golf that we're used to playing.

You're just going to have to do your best to two-putt it or however many putts you need to make to get down and move on and get the right rub of the green on the next one. That's probably the links side of golf. There's a bit more rub of the green, a little less predictability.

I think if I think about Tiger who has grown up playing golf in America but just had this instant desire to love links golf and win the Opens and he showed so much creativity in his game that was apparently just suited to win on the U.S. Tour, he embraced the challenges of all parts of the game and he did it all.

So, it's kind of how I see it. The guy that does that this week will do well.

Video: Ogilvy Taking Us Through The Best Of Trinity Forest

Great set of content videos here from the folks at Trinity Forest, host to this week's AT&T Byron Nelson Classic. 

Ogilvy on the double green at the third and eleventh holes. 

Uploaded by Communication Links on 2018-02-05.

Ogilvy on the short par-4 5th:

Uploaded by Communication Links on 2018-02-05.

On the short par-3 8th and it's green complex:

This video is about Trinity Forest #8

On the well-placed bunker at the 14th:

Uploaded by Communication Links on 2018-02-05.

And finally the zany 17th green:

Uploaded by Communication Links on 2018-02-05.

First Preview: PGA Tour Heads To Coore And Crenshaw's Trinity Forest

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Big week for minimalism!

The AT&T Byron Nelson Classic moves from the many-times remodeled TPC Las Colinas Four Seasons to the year-old Trinity Forest Not A Four Seasons Golf Club

The recently opened Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw course is built on a landfill next to the Trinity Forest and is decidedly linksy in appearance.  I'm getting a firsthand look and will be filing a review for Golfweek and Morning Drive coverage for Golf Channel, but in the meantime here is some preview coverage to whet your appetite...

Graylyn Loomis filed this preview for Links and featured this quote from Bill Coore on the design philosophy:

“We couldn’t make the course look like a prototypical Dallas layout with streams, trees, and lakes,” says Coore. “You can’t plant a tree because the roots break the cap. We knew early on there couldn’t be a stream or water, either. The focus had to be the rumpled ground created as the landfill settled over the decades and we tried to highlight those features.”

The intrigue will be in watching player comments to see how the design style is embrace given the lack of major visual eye candy and the general propensity of today's pros to find the ground game offensive. 

Jordan Spieth, who makes Trinity Forest his primary practice facilities, was asked about the course at The Players:

Q. You got your home game next week; what's the scouting report on Trinity?
JORDAN SPIETH: It looks as good as I've seen it since -- and I've been going out there since before the greens were even sprigged. It looks really good. It's grown on me a lot over the past six months, and in the springtime, I think it's at its best. It's in his best condition that it can be now or the next month or two. I think the weather looks like it's going to really cooperate to give it a good first showing.

A lot of big grandstands. It's like an American links. You've kind of got to play it from the air, not really a bounce the ball up kind of links, but it is still a links-looking golf course. So it's weird, it's unique. It's actually -- Birkdale was kind of the closest comparison I've found to a links course that you kind of have to attack from the air. You get maybe four or five, six holes where you can bounce the ball up, but the way to get balls close is to come in with a higher shot. That's not necessarily true links. I don't want to say that about Birkdale because of the history and everything, but it's just the way I've found to play it well is that route.

Here is a sampler from the AT&T Byron Nelson:

Andy Johnson broke down the 6th hole in this flyover. Check out that green!

The turf looks ready!