Open Championship Returns To Royal Troon in 2016

For Immediate Release, timing just a wee bit inexplicable:

ROYAL TROON TO HOST THE OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP 2016

20 June 2012, Troon, Scotland: The Open will return to the Ayrshire coast in 2016 when the 145th Championship is played at Royal Troon.

It will be the ninth time that the Championship has been held over the famous links, most recently in 2004 when veteran American Todd Hamilton held off three-time major champion Ernie Els in a play-off.

Announcing the 2016 Open venue as the world’s best amateur golfers face the challenge of Royal Troon in the final stages of The Amateur Championship, Jim McArthur, Chairman of The R&A Championship Committee, said: “We are delighted to announce that The Open will be returning to Royal Troon in 2016.

“Royal Troon is an excellent venue which has consistently challenged the best golfers in the world. I am sure that Ayrshire, with its historic connection to The Open, will once again provide a superb setting for the game’s oldest major championship.”

Welcoming the news, South Ayrshire Council Leader Councillor Bill McIntosh, said: “This is great news – not just for Troon, but for the whole of Ayrshire. As well as giving us a chance to showcase the fantastic golf in this area, our stunning scenery, culture and heritage, The Open will also bring a terrific economic boost with a £100 million benefit to its host economy.

“This is vital investment for our area that will help create a lasting and positive legacy for generations to come.

“We look forward to working with The R&A and Royal Troon to provide a memorable welcome in 2016 for an estimated 180,000 visitors to the county where The Open Championship began.”

Hamilton’s victory eight years ago saw him join past winners including Justin Leonard (1997), Mark Calcavecchia (1989), Tom Watson (1982), Tom Weiskopf (1973), Arnold Palmer (1962), Bobby Locke (1950) and Arthur Havers (1923).

Memorable moments at Troon include the first four-hole play-off in Open history when Calcavecchia defeated Australians Wayne Grady and Greg Norman.

An independent study commissioned by The R&A, found that The Open Championship at St Andrews in 2010 delivered a total economic benefit of £100 million to the town and surrounding area.

R&A's Dawson: Distance Explosion Caused By Geezers Going Away, Flatbellies Taking Their Place

I finally worked my way through the R&A media day transcripts and there are the usual insights and occasional comments that Peter Dawson will probably regret. There are some fun comments about Peter Alliss and slow play. But mostly, there's the indefensible discussion of remodeling courses to accommodate regulatory ineptitude, starting with this suggestion as to why the added distance at Lytham is not a big deal.

So the course is two and a half percent longer.  As I always say every year, instead of hitting it 100 yards, you'll have to hit it 102?.  So it's not revolutionary on length, but it does bring the course up closer to many of the others in overall distance.

So if you are only adding 2 yards to an approach shot, and it's not revolutionary, then why set such a bad example or commit to the expense in the first place?

Q.  Is Lytham pushed to the limit in terms of yardage?  I know it's a tight site.

PETER DAWSON:  There's always room to do something, but we're very close to the maximum to be honest.  There are one or two holes you could perhaps get another 20 yards out of, but that would probably spoil the holes, so we're happy at this length.  As you know, we've said that if hitting distances start to increase, we'll have to do something about it to that end.  But this golf course, as many others on The Open‑‑ that we use for The Open are at the distance they're going to be.  We don't envisage lengthening courses going forward.

Ohhh....there's a statement he'll regret!

Here was the inevitable next phase of the spin cycle...

Q.  (Inaudible.)

PETER DAWSON:  Well, what we've seen in the last year is an uptick of four yards I think it is on the PGA Tour but not on the European Tour or elsewhere in the world.  When you analyse that uptick, it's largely caused by new young players coming into the field and replacing older players who are moving on to the Senior Tour rather than individual players hitting the ball further.  That isn't happening.

And while there certainly is truth to a Corey Pavin being replaced by a Keegan Bradley, does he really think such activity is moving the PGA Tour number four yards? More importantly: "that isn't happening." Distance increases.

But we have our eye closely on it, and I think it's still true to say that we have not seen a significant uptick since the joint statement of principles in 2002.  But we've got our eye very closely on it.

Very closely!

And now for the rally killer of the day...

Q.  This will be the third time in four years they've played a par‑70.  Is that a concern?

And our worst question of 2012 goes to the man in the back from the Lytham Light And Shopper.

On Peter Aliss, who ESPN now slips into the Open telecast for about 15 minutes while someone takes a bathroom break.

Q.  I appreciate the BBC's trump card is the fact that the coverage is available to everyone.  How much of a trump card does Peter Alliss remain to you?

PETER DAWSON:  Well, you've still got the odd gem in there.  I know Peter causes quite a lot of polarisation of opinions, and many people I talk to still enjoy him very, very much and a number don't.  I think on balance he's an asset, but he's getting‑‑ not getting any younger.  I don't think so how long he'll carry on for.  But he's been the voice of golf for a long, long time over here.  And very interesting, if you go to America and talk about Peter Alliss, they think he is the God of the profession.

And this on long putters...

The subject is being looked at more from a rules of golf and method of stroke angle than it is from a length of club angle, and the reason for that is that if you thought you were going to do something about long putters by saying the putter may be no more than 40 inches long, that would still allow short people perhaps to belly putt but not tall people. 

That'd have to be someone pretty short!

Jim McArthur of the championship department made an interesting comment in response to the slow play question.

JIM McARTHUR:  Interestingly enough, I think when Bobby Locke won his Open Championship here at Royal Lytham he was reprimanded for slow play, and he took three and a half hours.

PETER DAWSON:  If you go back long enough when people were playing two rounds in a day at the Open, it's an indicator how pace of play has moved.

JIM McARTHUR:  We are very concerned about it, but we're doing everything we possibly can.  It is something where we need cooperation from other organisations, as well, to do anything.

Translation: Until the PGA Tour sets the precedent, the USGA and R&A are handcuffed. And we know the PGA Tour does not believe slow play is a problem. Well, Tim Finchem does not.

And finally, back to messing with golf courses...Dawson says his work is done!

Q.  (Inaudible.)

PETER DAWSON:  Well, usually we, first of all, discuss the need for modifications with the venue, with the club, and if the club is happy to embark on a programme of modifications, it's a process between the club, the R&A and the architect.  Sometimes the club will have architects that are experienced in its course, and other times we have used architects that we have been accustomed to, if you like, and used at Open venues.  That has resulted in a slightly closed process, which has troubled me once or twice, but the work that Martin Hawtrey (SP.) and Martin Ebert have done for us has been of a very high quality, and we're very happy with it.

I think we're coming to the end now of the course adjustment programme that we started ten years ago.  Of the upcoming venues, they have all now had the treatment, as it were, so we've pretty much finished the programme.  But we've been very happy with the work that's been done, and I think all the clubs and venues have, too.

The treatment work, as it were, is done. We shall see!

Brandel Likely To Get A Visit From Camp Ponte Vedra Police

There were new set pieces (more cactus!) and a little more spunk in this year's State of the Pro Game discussion from Tucson. The first by-product of last year's marriage between NBC and Golf Channel managed to address the everyday game in a rushed final segment last year and though they didn't get that far this year, once they got past the tedious Tiger talk the discussion must have had the monitors in Ponte Vedra picking up the red phone.
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Can't The USGA And R&A Just Get Along?

I guess not. But with one simple utterance to a reporter, Peter Dawson pretty much cast a pall over any hope that the USGA and R&A would agree, in our lifetimes, to do something meaningful for the good of the game.

Just in case you missed it, here's Nick Rodger's chat with R&A Executive Secretary Peter Dawson where he was asked about the USGA recently touting the "fresh look" they were taking at anchoring putters against the torso.

Over to you, Mr Dawson. "I wasn't quite sure where that came from, to be honest," confessed the chief executive of the game's ruling body.

Hey, at least he's being honest!

I chuckled after re-reading Jim Achenbach's story quoting a USGA source saying it was the R&A that was at the heart of this desire to take a "fresh look." 

“The R&A do not like the fact that golfers can steady themselves by using a putter as a crutch in windy, rainy or cold weather,” the source said. “In essence, they are steadying themselves with the putter. This was never intended under the Rules of Golf. They are using the putter for something other than a traditional stroke.”

And to be honest, it now seems the R&A is fine with that!

“Nobody (within the ruling bodies) wants children to know nothing else but sticking putters in their bellys,” the source said. “It now seems possible that an entire new generation of golfers could learn to putt this way and never use the traditional method that has been the bedrock of putting for hundreds of years.”

And to be honest, it now seems the R&A is fine with that too!

R&A's Dawson: Belly Putter "Fresh Look" News To Me!

Nick Rodger of the Scottish Herald talks to R&A Executive Secretary Peter Dawson about an array of subjects and it seems we have a miscommunication?

At the United States Golf Association's recent agm, Mike Davis, Dawson's counterpart across the Atlantic, injected the whole affair with renewed vigour when he suggested that there was "a new ban-the-belly movement within the R&A".

Over to you, Mr Dawson. "I wasn't quite sure where that came from, to be honest," confessed the chief executive of the game's ruling body.

So good to see the governing bodies are on the same page!

He also talked about bifurcation. And bifurcators. Which is just a little too close to defecator, no?

"I haven't met a bifurcator yet who could tell me where it ended going forward, they are guessing what will happen," he said. "Golf is golf and that's a major strength of the game. If you want to go and invent another game, that's fine. But golf is golf. You could imagine down the road if there's one rule for the amateurs and one for the pros, then TV companies may say 'well this 18 holes business is taking up too much time let's just have 15 hole rounds'. You could get all sorts of things. It's good for golf to have one set of rules. Let's all be playing golf."

And on slow play he sounds a bit more eager to act...

"It is a huge worry," stated Dawson. "At club level, fourball golf is killing the pace of play. In the pro game, some of the players are so slow something has to be done. We are going to give this a lot more attention at our amateur events this year and our championship committee has determined itself to do something about it and apply the policy more strictly. We will put people on the clock and give penalty shots.

Don't tell the Don of the Ponte Vedra Tattaglias that, he doesn't like penalty shots. They are brand damaging!

"The coaches have to think about this. They do tend to teach these young players to have pre-shot routines where they don't start until the other player has played his shot and so on. It can be terrible. The tour golf needs to be speeded up too. It's difficult to know what to do about it unless field sizes are considerably reduced and I don't think that's going to happen. I'm not going to say less pros in tour events. What I've said is simple mathematics and that's the tricky bit. The whole field goes as slowly as the slowest player. I don't pretend I have the answer. The administrators aren't the ones playing."