Malnati: "When people say, oh, this golf course is all about angles, that's not true."

After a Sony Open first round 62, was asked about a recurring Waialae Country Club theme: is this one of the last courses where a more strategic, accurate player can win?

The full exchange, though the last question answered is the best part addressing the idea that there are any preferred “angles” of attack left in modern golf:

Q. Talking to a few guys about this week, as the game goes to distance, are there places you can't win?

PETER MALNATI: Where I can't win? I hit it far now. I'm longer than average I think.

Q. Are you longer than Cam Champ?

PETER MALNATI: No. But he's pretty long. There's not places I can't win. There's probably conditions in which I can't win. But like golf courses, I've never been to Augusta. Augusta probably ain't going to suit me great but I putt it really well and I hear you have to do that there.

Q. You do. You have to do it everywhere. What conditions are you talking about, do you think?

PETER MALNATI: When it's super wet and we're doing everything through the air -- one of my favorite things to criticize, a weird way to say something, I absolutely hate it when I'm watching golf on TV, which is rare, and I hear the commentators say, oh, this course is all about angles.

Golf, on TV -- that's rarely ever true. Have you ever watched golf on TV? Like, look at the way Jason Day hits it. Angles don't mean anything when you fly it to the hole. Like just fly it to the hole and land it next to the hole. Angles aren't important. So when people say, oh, this golf course is all about angles, that's not true. Like that doesn't matter.

And so there's places that are the big, wide open course when is they get really soft like it's going to be tough to hit three clubs longer into a green and compete. But when the ball is bouncing and going crazy places, like here, I hit several drives ShotLink will say they went 320 plus. Like when the ball is bouncing like that, I can play anywhere.

Also note that Malnatti makes clear he doesn’t watch much golf on TV. Why do pro golfers always like to let us know that?

The bigger point here though: angles as we knew them hardly matter in the launch angle era. Unless a new angle can be created with a 12 degree launch angle and 320 yards of carry. Just ask Waialae’s 18th hole.

Angel Cabrera Arrested In Rio After Landing On Interpol's Red Code List

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What a couple of weeks it’s been for famous golfers.

We had Annika Sorenstam and Gary Player accepting the medal of freedom others turned down following the Capitol carnage, Justin Thomas’ homophobic slur picked up on Golf Channel sound, Donald Trump was impeached (again) for inciting an insurrection, and now an arrest in Brazil.

Two-time major winner Ángel Cabrera was arrested by Brazil’s federal police and faces extradition to his home country of Argentina on domestic assault related charges.

AP’s Mauricio Savarese reports fromn Sao Paulo:

Two federal police officers based in Rio separately confirmed to The Associated Press that Cabrera was the man arrested. Both agreed to give the information only if granted anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the topic publicly.

The police statement said the arrest was authorized by Brazil’s top court and the man would be held until his extradition to Argentina. Officials in Argentina have charged the suspect with assault, theft, illegal intimidation and repeated disrespect to authorities, the statement said.

Argentine media reported earlier in January that Cabrera’s former wife, Silva Rivadero, had filed two charges against the golfer. The reports also said that Cecilia Torres, another former partner, claimed Cabrera had punched her, threatened her and attempted to run her over with his car in 2016.

Cabrera did not play the November Masters after having wrist surgery in the U.S.

A Sun report suggested he may have still been here but turned up, naturally, in Brazil.

Player, Sorenstam Accept Presidential Medals Of Freedom Day After Capitol Carnage

As America reeled from the aftermath of Donald Trump inciting a Capitol-storming mob, a stealth Presidential Medal of Freedom ceremony was held on White House grounds honoring golf greats Babe Zaharias, Annika Sorenstam and Gary Player. This, on the same day a Capitol police officer became the fifth person to succumb to injuries incurred as a result of the riot.

GolfDigest.com’s John Feinstein called out the “tone-deafness” of holding the ceremony given death and destruction inspired by the President’s comments (which he could face charges over for inciting a riot).

USA Today’s Christine Brennan writes that the reputations of Player and Sorenstam “are sullied, forever.”

They had nothing to do with the insurrection of the Trump mob on Wednesday, of course, but they happily became Trump’s Thursday accessories. They celebrated with him as our nation mourns what he has wrought.

When she retweeted Nicklaus’ endorsement of Trump, I texted her a question:

“How do you reconcile Trump’s awful record on women – bragging and joking about sexually assaulting women ("Access Hollywood" tape), calling the Democratic VP nominee a 'monster,' being accused of sexual assault or sexual harassment by at least 26 women, etc. – while being a woman who has forged an amazing career around the issues of inclusion for women and treating women equally and fairly and with respect?”

She never replied. On Thursday afternoon, I texted again, this time to say I’d like to talk to her about accepting the Medal of Freedom a day after the awful rampage of Trump supporters at the Capitol. She did not reply.

Player’s estranged son Marc also called out the timing of the ceremony:

I reached out to the International Golf Federation, where Sorenstam recently replaced Peter Dawson and hope to receive a statement from Executive Director Antony Scanlon on the medal acceptance. The IGF represents the game to the world via its role with the Olympic Games.

*Updated with IGF statement:

The International Golf Federation is extremely proud that Annika Sorenstam has received the Presidential Medal of Freedom along with Gary Player and the late Babe Zaharias, each of whom not only excelled at golf but transcended our sport as role models, mentors and philanthropists.  

As noted when she was named as the IGF’s new President in December, Annika is universally respected as a generational talent in women’s golf who, since retiring from competition, has dedicated herself to promoting women’s golf at all levels through her foundation. We are extremely proud of Annika and all that she has accomplished.  

Sorenstam’s longtime sponsor at Callaway has not replied to a request for a statement.

PXG, which includes Player as part of its Tour staff, offered this statement from CEO Bob Parsons:

“Mr. Player has led an exceptional life on and off the golf course - leveraging his celebrity and his resources to drive positive change and inspire generations. We are absolutely thrilled to see his legacy underscored with an honor as significant as the Presidential Medal of Freedom. While the timing of the event is unfortunate, nothing should detract from the merits of this accomplishment. Congratulations Gary!”

Both players opted not to release images of the ceremony or medal reception on their social media accounts.

The White House has not posted any images or transcripts of speeches from the event.

The only indication Player came to Washington arrived via his grandson’s public Instagram account:

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World No. 2 Rahm Moves To Callaway...

The new year occasionally brings a top player coming off a huge year making a lucrative move from one manufacturer to another.

David Dusek on world No. 2 Jon Rahm going from Taylor Made to Callaway and assorted brands under their umbrella for an undisclosed, but likely lucrative sum given how a few top players recently prioritizing play with what they like most, even at a cost to their pocketbook:

According to Callaway, Rahm plans to use prototype woods and irons, Callaway JAWS Forged wedges and a Callaway Chrome Soft X golf ball. While he is not expected to start 2021 using an Odyssey putter, he has been testing different models and is expected to add one to his bag in the coming weeks.  

“The equipment is already performing well for me,” said Rahm, who added that when he played his first round with his new gear at Silverleaf Golf Club in Scottsdale, he scored a course-record 59.

Rahm is in this week’s field for the Sentry Tournament Of Champions and Point Earners.

"Win Equity" Stat A Fascinating Study And One We Probably Won't See Adapted By Tours

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When I saw the euphemistic-sounding “Win Equity” stat cooked up by John Ezekowitz , a No Laying Up fan fed up with debates over Tony Finau’s one win status, I feared an excuse-maker for players who seem to have immense talent, contend a lot, but just don’t seem to win much.

But just based on my C+ math skills, this seemed like a pretty neat bit of research that looks how players perform on the weekend and how often they are genuinely unlucky to lose. We’ve had our share over the years and more recently, Rickie Fowler and Tony Finau have gotten the most attention.

Anyway, check out his Medium post here. This is Strokes Gained level stat-re-imagination but I wouldn’t count on adoption by the PGA Tour since it could put a player in a negative light (even though the stat also validates who have been recently clutch performers, something fans and the, eh-em, investors would like to know).

This can be illustrated through a stat I call Win Equity, which is defined as Expected Wins given Actual Play minus Expected Wins entering Round 4. Generating positive Win Equity means that a player outperformed his expectations, ignoring what others shot. This stat best removes luck from the equation of final round play.

Finau’s performance in Win Equity especially noteworthy: in the 36 final rounds where Finau has entered in the top 10, he has added win equity through his play in only 3 of them (2017 Valero Texas Open, 2019 HSBC Champions and 2018 Safeway Open). That is by far the lowest rate amongst these players.

Norman Speaks To Today Show About Surviving The Coronavirus He Would Not Wish On Anyone

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Good for Greg Norman in highlighting how, in spite of his remarkable fitness at age 65, he experienced the brutality of COVID-19.

Speaking to the Today Show’s Gabe Gutierrez, Norman reiterates the need to take this seriously and avoid getting the coronavirus at all costs. As silly as it sounds ten months into the pandemic, his message remains important for skeptics to hear (and maybe will quiet his criticism of leaders enacting rules to help stem the spread?.

Norman also says he started feeling symptoms Sunday of the PNC Championship just two days after attending this party and photo shoot with most of the field. The piece ends with Gutierrez saying the Today Show reached out to the “PGA” for comment and “have not heard back”.

The full feature and interview:

Yahoo Feature On Elite Golf’s Entry Barriers; Youth On Course Fundraising Issues

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As part of Yahoo’s Privilege of Play series, Jay Busbee tackles the always complicated matter of entry into golf with a focus on aspirational professionals.

One element of the extensive feature saddened me, another put a smile on my face.

This was disappointing:

The issue of race remains phenomenally touchy in the world of golf, so much so that many in the sport would rather simply avoid the question rather than address it. Multiple PGA Tour players either declined to speak or didn’t respond to a Yahoo Sports inquiry on diversity in the ranks of golf. The First Tee program also declined to speak, aside from providing statistics on the program’s reach. 

Greg McLaughlin is the CEO of the First Tee, former confidante of Tiger Woods and is paid well presumably (Form 990’s related to his new World Golf Foundation gig are not available). I believe pathetic is the word that most comes to mind.

This also comes as some of the other programs designed to help introduce this expensive game to those of less privilege are struggling to raise necessary funds, including the incredible Youth On Course.

Paul Sullivan filed this New York Times story (thanks reader JB):

But the pandemic has also increased fund-raising challenges for nonprofit groups that are trying to open up a sport traditionally associated with wealth to young men and women in need — even as their numbers have surged this year. Through the largess of these groups, young people who could not afford to pay the course fees or buy the equipment learn the values of the sport and gain life skills.

One of the nonprofit groups, Youth on Course, subsidizes rounds of golf so young men and women can play for just $5. It has already reported a 100 percent increase in rounds this year, to over 400,000 from 205,000 in 2019. Memberships in the program rose to 100,000 young men and women from 70,000 last year.

On a lighter note, Busbee did highlight some exceptions of players who have overcome having nothing to make it.

Cue…much needed reminder of the artist that is Chi Chi Rodriguez.

A child of a broken home, his father never made more than $18 a day as a dishwasher and farm worker. Rodriguez fell in love with golf by watching players at a nearby public course, and taught himself well enough that he was winning club championships in his teens. Always a prankster, he’s cast his hardscrabble life in mythic, comical terms.

He’s the most visible example of a player working his way up from virtually nothing, and 50 years later, he remains a rarity.

And a beautiful coincidence, the PGA Tour Champions posted this collection of masterful Chi Chi moments today out of the blue. Imagine doing this with the flatbellies today. The horror!

"Bryson DeChambeau’s outsized impact in 2020 extended far beyond just his own game"

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While he’ll probably lose out in the writers’ season-ending Player of the Year voting, 2020 in golf will forever be remembered as the year Bryson DeChambeau played a very different game en route to winning the U.S. Open.

Alan Shipnuck offered this in his year-end review of DeChambeau transformation and launch angle golf approach.

It’s hard to overstate the impressiveness of DeChambeau’s transformation; it was as if Tom Brady gained 40 pounds, made himself a fullback and then rushed for seven touchdowns to lead his team to victory. But could DeChambeau’s bruising new style prevail at any of golf’s Super Bowls, with their more penal setups? A strong run at the PGA Championship offered a clue, and then at the U.S. Open, in September, he overwhelmed one of the game’s brawniest courses, Winged Foot. The revolution was complete.

“It’s honestly hard to process what Bryson accomplished,” says Andy North, who won two U.S. Opens the old-fashioned way. “In so many ways it’s like he’s playing an entirely different game.”

Check out the rest of the piece here.

DeChambeau’s ultimate legacy may be the corner he put governing bodies in with 2020’s transformation. Any equipment rule changes potentially formulated pre-pandemic could look like they were targeting him if they attempt to impact launch conditions.

This is an optimistic take clearly since we’re more than 18 years since the Joint Statement of Principles and nothing has been done to protect the concerns spelled out back then during Bomb and Gouge, the prequel.

Greg Norman: "My Christmas Day. On behalf of millions, f•#k CoVid."

Wishing all the best for a swift recovery to Greg Norman, who shared the news of his COVID symptoms on Christmas Eve and again on Christmas day, the latter post from a hospital bed (above). His son Greg Jr. and daughter-in-law also posted news of positive tests and symptoms.

The Norman’s played in last week’s PNC Championship and attended the event’s Friday night party, seven days prior to his hospitalization.

A group photo was posted to Twitter:

Norman’s Christmas Eve message:

Norman also hosted the previous week’s QBE Shootout where he was on hand for the trophy ceremony eleven days ago. In October he criticized politicians in Australia for lockdowns designed to squelch the spread of COVID-19.

**Norman returned to the hospital after a positive test and posted an emotionally-charged thank you to doctors, nurses and scientists while issuing a warning.

So please take care. And for those doubters out there, do not judge or cast unwarranted comments and opinions I would not anyone, even you, to experience this hideous virus. So I ask, do what is right, not just for you, but your family friends co-workers and other people around. I am luckier than most and for that I am thankful and blessed. Also the world is blessed science has acted and performed like never before in getting a vaccine/s for all to eventually receive. Thank you to those people.

The full post:

Olson Suffers Unimaginable Loss On Eve Of Rain-Delayed U.S. Women's Open Finale

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With a U.S. Women’s Open Monday finish at Champions, Amy Olson sits just one shot back of Hinako Shibuno. But the former North Dakota State star will be playing with unimaginable sadness after learning of her father-in-law’s unexpected passing on Saturday.

Beth Ann Nichols deftly handles this heartbreaking story for the Olson family.

The updated TV times for Monday’s finish where Shibuno aims to win her second major of 2020:

Peter Alliss: Broadcasters Speak About "The Great Man"

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Peter Alliss’s life as a player, writer, architect and overall presence in the game is never to be dismissed, but for a generation on both sides of the Atlantic he will most affectionately remembered for his singular broadcasting presence. And maybe with a little luck, the outpouring of appreciation for “The Great Man” might remind network executives and tours of the many ways to call a golf shot. Not that anyone before or after will ever do it quite like Peter Alliss.

With so many of the legendary ABC voices now gone, Judy Rankin is one of the last members of their core team and she fought back tears to speak so beautifully of Alliss in this Golf Central segment with Todd Lewis.

My favorite line: he had “a way of expressing himself that was sometimes beautiful that was sometimes a guteral noise that none of us could get away with.”

Mike Tirico offered this on Twitter:

I hope this full tribute from another ESPN colleague Terry Gannon, could be posted. But in the meantime thanks to Jeremy Schilling for posting this:

Jim Nantz learned the news as he was entering storied Lambeau Field for today’s Packers game on CBS. For a few years the two were paired at times on BBC Open Championship broadcasts, prompting this fantastic remembrance in 2011 by Martin Kelner of Nantz interviewing Alliss on air during his 50th Open behind the mic and getting to call the conclusion of Darren Clarke’s win, calling that a “career achievement.”

“We’ve lost an icon,” Nantz told me in a phone interview this morning. “He was so brilliant in so many ways. His treatment of the game, the way he saw it from so many angles as a player, as a commentator and as an architect. He could keep it light and breezy, he could be critical when it was needed because he had such a depth of knowledge about the history of the game and every situation.”

Nantz has been listening to The Open Championship podcast while quarantining for two days in hotels prior to every NFL game he calls, including a recent stretch of three games in eight days.

“I heard Peter’s voice all day yesterday,” Nantz said of listening to the 1981 edition won by Bill Rogers with clips of Alliss’s original commentary featured prominently. “That perfect prose…it was poetry.”

Nantz says that as loved as Alliss was in the United States when hosting the Open Championship solo for stretch each day on ABC (but paired with someone during the ESPN years), The Great Man never “got the full appreciation over here that he merited.”

In particular Nantz was struck by Alliss’s ability to go from one broadcast to another—two distinct approaches with ABC and BBC—in a matter of minutes. “One minute there is an audience your speaking and then another you’re presenting yourself to another continent with a totally different format. I admired him deeply.”

From Nick Faldo and Frank Nobilo:

I loved this from Open Champion and future broadcaster Padraig Harrington appearing on BBC 5 with Stephen Crossman:

A sampling of his great calls starting with 1999’s uber-prescient, “What to do, what to do.”

Tiger’s chip-in at the Masters:

And the call that introduced him to a younger audience and became a “thing” whenever Miguel Angel Jimenez hit the range.

Roundup: R.I.P. Peter Alliss 1931-2020

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Peter Alliss got away with things no one other broadcaster could. He’d grunt, gargle, mock, violate the “norms” of broadcasting and when Alliss turned serious, you knew the tournament was about to be decided. For this American viewer, he joined a cast of legends that marked the Golden Age of golf television and every year at The Open, Alliss’ solo stints were always a highlight of the championship. And it was his general gravitas and light touch that made an otherwise slow sport worth watching.

“The Great Man” was far more than a broadcaster, however, with a Royal Air Force stint, over thirty professional wins, two European Tour Vardon trophies, books (illustrated, fiction and non) and his proudest accomplishment, a long Ryder Cup run including playing on the same team as his father Percy.

He would undoubtedly have loved seeing the start of Reuters’ obituary:

Former Ryder Cup player Peter Alliss, who won 31 tournaments in his career before a successful stint as a commentator in which he was referred to as the "voice of golf," has died at the age of 89, the European Tour said on Sunday.

From Ewan Murray’s excellent Guardian obituary:

Alliss, a former professional player who first undertook broadcasting duties in 1961, became the lead man for the corporation’s golf coverage 17 years later. He was widely depicted as the voice of golf.

In a statement released on Sunday, Alliss’s family explained the father of six’s death was “unexpected but peaceful”. Alliss had delivered television commentary for the BBC during the Masters just last month, from his home in Surrey. He had been expected to retire after next year’s Ryder Cup, thereby completing what would have been a remarkable six decades in the commentary booth.

Alliss was synonymous with the BBC where he worked as recently as November’s Masters, as noted in this unbylined remembrance.

“Peter was the voice of golf. He was an absolute master of his craft with a unique ability to capture a moment with a magical turn of phrase that no one else could match,” said Barbara Slater, director of BBC Sport.

As a player, Alliss won 31 tournaments and he and his father Percy were the first father-son duo to compete in the Ryder Cup, when it was a contest between Great Britain and the United States.

In 2012, he was inducted into the World Golf Hall of Fame in the Lifetime Achievement category.

After retiring from playing golf – in a professional sense, at least – Alliss moved into the commentary booth, where his descriptive and dead-pan style became the soundtrack to the BBC’s coverage of major golf events.

“His inimitable tone, humour and command of the microphone will be sorely missed. His often legendary commentaries will be long remembered,” said the BBC.

From BBC’s Iain Carter touching remembrance:

Weighing 14 pounds 11 ounces, he was believed to have been Europe's heaviest baby at the time. He left school aged 14 and devoted himself to the game of golf, playing for the England boys team in 1946.

A year later his went to his first Open after travelling with his father to Royal Liverpool.

"I was obviously excited," he told me earlier this year. "The journey up on the train, going to Bournemouth from Ferndown.

"We went on the bus with golf clubs and suitcases and everyone looked at us as if were mad. 'What the hell have you got in that bag?' Then the train up to London and up to Chester and then we had a bus along to Hoylake."

The youngster was somewhat overwhelmed and failed to qualify, but went on to post five top 10s in 24 appearances between 1951 and 1974.

From the Associated Press’ tribute:

With his deep and soothing voice, warm humor and passion for golf, Alliss may have been more renowned as a commentator than a player. Golf Digest once called Alliss ''the greatest golf commentator ever.''

Alliss made his broadcasting debut in 1961 as part of the BBC team covering The Open Championship at Royal Birkdale and became the British channel's main commentator in 1978. He also called big tournaments in the United States, Canada and Australia.

Among his many witty one-liners was this classic from 2002 when Tiger Woods shot 81 in The Open: ''It's like turning up to hear Pavarotti sing and finding out he has laryngitis.''

From Phil Davison’s Washington Post obit:

Mr. Alliss’s popularity as a commentator for nearly 60 years was largely due to his reassuring, dulcet voice, his knowledge of the game and its history, and his wry, deadpan humor, which sometimes generated controversy.

To some viewers, he sounded like a genial grandpa smoking a pipe and wearing slippers by the fireside. “When it comes to painting a picture with words,” a correspondent for the Daily Telegraph once wrote, “he’s nothing short of Rembrandt.”

Mary Hannigan with this nice roundup of that one liner and many more.

From John Huggan’s GolfDigest.com look at the life and times of Alliss:

What often gets overlooked as he became more and more famous for his work with a microphone in hand was how good a player Peter Alliss was. Renowned for the smoothness and elegance of his full swing—and, later, terrible putting (the number plate on his car read ‘PUT3’) marked by a dreadful bout of the yips that, he claimed, began on the 11th green at Augusta National during a Masters—he twice played Arnold Palmer in Ryder Cup singles and finished unbeaten.

“I have a very good Ryder Cup record, mostly because of my fear of losing,” said Alliss, who went 10-15-5 on teams that went just 1-6-1. “I always had the attitude that ‘you weren’t going to beat me.’ I believe you play the man, not the course. I played Arnold three times when he was at his peak and the only one I lost was a foursome. I beat him once and halved with him in singles. I also beat Billy Casper, Gay Brewer and Ken Venturi at various times, and halved with Tony Lema.”

From Michael Bamberger’s tribute at Golf.com:

Alliss knew his way around all parts of your better dinner menus and wine lists. He was a large man who lived large. The license plate on his Rolls Royce read PUT 3. Late in the day, he was afflicted with the yips, and he had more than his share of three-putt greens. What saved him was his sense of humor, and his talking ease. Hit it, Alice, a common and mildly sexist phrase for putts that do not reach the hole, began, Peter Alliss would sometimes suggest, with him talking to himself: “Hit it, Alliss.”

Alliss turned pro at 15 and went to work for his father at Ferndown Golf Club. Adam Schupak has a spectacular story from his early days here at Golfweek.com.

Rick Broadbent with The Times obituary (behind paywall).

Golf Channel’s feature on the life and times of Alliss:

His World Golf Hall of Fame speech just seven years ago, a special night indeed…

A Must Listen: Peter Alliss On Desert Island Discs With Michael Parkinson

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While we all take in the passing of the magnificent Peter Aliss and I compile my thoughts along with those of his many friends in golf, this 1987 interview with Michael Parkinson should satisfy your curiosity while providing a tremendous Sunday evening listen.

He touches on a wide range of topics related to his life and times, with a good portion of the interview discussing his life in golf including talk of his father Percy, his Ryder Cup play, money, broadcasting and where his battle with the yips started.

In between are his desert island music selections which, naturally, were majestic. For a masterful soloist, he loved his duets!

Here is the link. Enjoy.

Early 2021 PGA Tour Events To Be (Largely) Played Without Galleries

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While one more fall event is to be played this week in Mexico the West Coast Swing is not far away. And outside of a smattering fans in Maui and (gulp) a downscaled but still-amtitious Waste Management Open, fans will not be in attendance in early 2021. (The viability of the events remains in question as California has traveler quarantine rules in some counties and other lockdowns coming).

The Sony Open will not have fans.

And the first of three California tournaments announced Monday their plan to play the Farmers Insurance Open without fans. From Tod Leonard’s GolfDigest.com story:

The blow of no fans will be lessened, Gorsich said, because the County of San Diego did give its approval last week for pro-ams to take place on Monday and Wednesday of Farmers week. “To not have pro-ams would have been another big hit,” he said. “Getting pro-ams was a big win for us.”

The Tournament of Champions, Sony Open and American Express also will have pro-ams, and it figures that Riviera and Pebble will, too, if their local governments approve.

At the Farmers, pro-am participants pay about $8,000 to play on Wednesday and $4,000 on Monday. Of course, the experience will be very different this year, with only the golfers, the professional and his caddie allowed on the grounds, though Gorisch maintains that it can be a more enjoyable and “intimate” experience. There are no in-person draws parties, and at Torrey Pines the amateurs will warm up in indoor simulators at a nearby hotel.

What could go wrong with a bunch of nervous, huffing and loud pro-am participants gathering in an indoor simulator?

Also, in what should be a pressing matter for the Tour and upcoming non-CBS events: Golf Channel is not COVID testing its crews and is stonewalling. It’s surprising, even at this point, that the Tour’s testing apparatus is not incorporating these hard-working folks into their fold.