The Card – Volume XLVIII

18 observations, thoughts and predictions for the week in golf…

 

  1. Olympic golf could be great, and they are going in the right direction.  I was in support of it returning to the Olympic program.  The game is global, the inclusion will fuel interest in nations like China and India and I would argue the history of golf over so many other disciplines that are part of the Olympics only validates its existence.  The weightiness of the accomplishment of winning a gold medal is likely to increase in time and the advancement of multiple competitions with team elements is a necessity.  Many sports designated as individual pursuits have team components in Olympic competition.  Swimming, track and field, gymnastics all have team elements and golf must do the same.  
  1. Off his first win on LIV, Jon Rahm appears in the right frame of mind and body to contend for the gold medal this week.  LIV players have won multiple major championships, Koepka’s PGA and Bryson’s US Open, and the addition of a gold medal would be a feather for the LIV Tour.  What would the level of accomplishment be for Rahm if he would win the gold medal?  It would be the same as Xander Schauffele’s gold medal.  A unique accomplishment with gravitas and time is on the side of the gold medal.  
  1. Having the top 25 players in the Olympic field is very good.  The absolute best, with the exception of Bryson Dechambeau, are competing and the diversity of nations makes the competition feel grand.  Players like Thomas Detry, Victor Perez, Guido Migliozzi, and Corey Connors are a reflection of the quality and that level of player only augments the biggest stars and the second level star like Tommy Fleetwood, Shane Lowry, Sepp Straka and Alex Noren.  The competition has come a long way since Rio.
  1. The global texture of the LPGA makes the women’s golf competition a very familiar experience for fans of women’s professional golf.  The construct of teams from Korea, China, Japan, Thailand, France, Sweden are LPGA fixtures and the pursuit from World #1 Nelly Korda to repeat her gold medal performance gives the women’s side some real juice and they still have a major and the Solheim Cup to come after the Olympics.
  1. Keegan Bradley made his first decision as Ryder Cup captain adding Webb Simpson to his vice captaincy staff.  Simpson was an assistant captain for the 2022 Presidents Cup, and he exemplifies the new system of leadership that this decision by the PGA was the big pivot.  Depending on the performance of several young Ryder Cup veterans like Rickie Fowler, Justin Thomas and Jordan Spieth I’m sensing their inclusion at Bethpage one way or the other.  The difference must be that the secret handshake society will not be handing out invites to members of the boy’s club.  Bradley needs to construct his team, his way.
  1. KJ Choi is the consummate professional and in the grand scheme his career is underrated.  Choi winning the senior Open Championship at Carnoustie is a wonderful story for a delightful person. Choi has represented himself and his nation with dignity and grace for decades and his respect amongst his peers is unmatched.  
  1. I was in northern Michigan this past week and was able to get a quick tour of the re-birth of High Pointe, Tom Doak’s original design in Williamsburg, Michigan.  The story of its revival is rich with nostalgia and vision and the land is top notch.  It’s a tilted sandbox with very cool green complexes and the intent of the club is to build a communal culture where everyone on the property feels like they are sharing the experience.  It’s the Ohoopee model, a very good model.
  1. The drive from South Bend to the shores of Lake Michigan and Sleeping Bear Dunes was a surprisingly cathartic four hours.  Passing into the state of Michigan not far from the Notre Dame campus might surprise some people but the real pleasant surprise was the sheer beauty of the drive once you pass through Kalamazoo headed toward Traverse City.  There were stretches that felt and looked like the eastern end of Long Island and stretches that reminded me of the Pacific Northwest.  It is a magnificent part of the country where mile after mile showcases land begging for golf holes to build on them.  Climate, charm, beauty and scale make northern Michigan one of my top three places to be in the summer along with New England and the mountains of North Carolina.
  1. The pleasure of returning to Crystal Downs a year after playing it for the first time last summer was immeasurable.  It’s Norman Rockwell meets Perry Maxwell.  It’s a gem in every way.  The intended nature of the club being a summer retreat is felt from the moment you arrive.  The first seven holes are the finest example of acreage usage and maximizing the contour presented to an architect you ever see.  The contrast between the lower 7 and the middle of the back nine is sublime.  The genius of the greens and the big scale as you looked toward Lake Michigan from the 14th green.  It’s where time and excellence stand together and still.
  1. Bryson DeChambeau’s latest video with former President Trump got a ton a of views, which is of no surprise.  The larger point is what DeChambeau is doing to differentiate himself from his peer group.  Golf YouTubers range in skill from very good, like the Bryan brothers to garden variety chops.  Bryson is the first big time star to enter the space in the middle of his ascendency as a player and as a popular figure to capitalize on the platform to a mass level.  Phil Mickelson is way past his prime and the others are not all in like Bryson.  His place in the game is unique, now in even more ways than before.
  1. Jhonattan Vegas loves late July.  Three of his four wins have come on July 24, 28th and 30th.  He also has shown the ability to extend his winning career by an additional seven years.  There are some very good players Vegas has left behind with three career wins.  Chris DiMarco, who lost two majors in playoffs and finished 2nd in a third major.  Johnson Wagner who is now America’s TV analyst, and I’m here for all of it for a 5 Clubs teammate and Andy North, who also won three times but two of those wins were U.S. Open’s.  Not all equal numbers are equal.
  1. The U.S. junior boys title won by Trevor Gutschewski at Oakland Hills is a great story.  Gutschewski is the son of PGA Tour player Scott Gutschewski who was playing the 3M Open in nearby Minnesota.  Trevor is a rising senior at Omaha Westside High School and winning a 36-hole final over Tyler Watts at Oakland Hills is a fantastic achievement and a rare feather.  
  1. Does Tiger Woods carve out time to be at the Presidents Cup as a past captain and friend of the current captain Jim Furyk?  Moreover, the Presidents Cup is a PGA Tour property that could use the boast in football season to have Tiger on the property in Montreal.  I don’t think any member of the PGA Tour board would argue against him adding value to the week by being present.
  1. The curious case of Matt Kuchar.  Kuchar had a chance to win the 3M and he received ample support on the ground in Blaine, Minnesota but his position amongst writers and content creators is interesting.  Matt was once the smiling and mischievous darling amongst fans and media but the Mexico caddy-stiffing incident and a couple on course episodes have cast him into purgatory.  He is a Vardon trophy winner, 9-time winner, Players Champion and would appear a viable member of the Ryder Cup staff except he’s not.  
  1. Rickie Fowler sits at 102 in the FedEx Cup standings with one event left before the playoffs.  Rickie will play in all events he wants to next year because of his popularity and appeal to top sponsors but the next year could portend what the rest of his career looks like.  He is financially secure beyond his kids’ lives, and he was never one to overpower golf courses so is the willingness to dig deep like he did last year still there?  It’s the human condition time will tell.
  1. The further we get from the major season the more I believe Scottie Scheffler’s peers will regard him with player of the year, especially if Xander doesn’t win another event.  No player would trade two majors for one, but they all know the immense challenge to win and Scheffler won three times the number of events which included the Masters, The Players and four signature series events.  Members of the PGA Tour will likely honor that haul over the 2 for 1 argument.
  1. The medal winners for the women’s Olympic golf competition will be… Gold-Jin Young Ko, Silver-Lilia Vu and Bronze-Celine Boutier.  The medal winners for the men’s Olympic golf competition will be… Gold-Scottie Scheffler, Silver Xander Schauffele and Bronze-Collin Morikawa.
  1. The passing of Mark Carnevale a week ago is still very hard to process.  Working with a group of people to produce live telecasts bonds you to each other for life.  You must trust each other implicitly to do what’s best for everyone when the mics are hot.  It’s also critical that you like one another because it shows when you don’t.  Mark was a such a team guy, and he loved the game immensely.  It’s so sad and our hearts remain extended to his family during what remains a very challenging time.

The Card – Volume XLVII

18 observations, thoughts and predictions for the week in golf…

 

  1. Xander Schauffele’s second major championship victory in a span of two months is eye opening on several levels.  First, his conscious and meticulous pursuit of additional speed with the partnership with Chris Como is affirmation that it can be done and proven under the most stressful circumstances.  Xander was topping 185 ball speed coming down the stretch when the event was still in doubt.  Trust is powerful.  Secondly, nobody in the 90-year history of the four major championships has won two majors in a year shooting 65 in the final round of both wins.  Not Jack, not Tiger, not Hogan, not anyone.  Wow.  Finally, Valhalla and Royal Troon are like comparing apples and kumquats.  We already know he can contend and adapt to all set ups and conditions but winning screams loud and clear, “Anywhere, anytime, anyplace!”.  He’s here.
  1. Justin Rose has a very capable hall of fame resume.  Global player, major winner, gold medalist, that will get weightier with time, and Ryder Cup stalwart.  I’m not certain he needs a second major to eventually get in but the idea that we are even discussing him contending in majors is somewhat surprising.  Major winners in their 40’s have and will continue to be rare.  What’s most impressive is the pursuit.  He’s made big money, and the human condition asks all of us at various times if it’s all still worth it.  He’s dug in with Mark Blackburn on his golf swing and he’s found peace and comfort being reunited with Mark Fulcher on his bag.  He is having some last chapters I didn’t anticipate two years ago.  He will be at Bethpage either as a vice captain or as a member of another team.  Impressive.
  1. Billy Horschel has had a very nice career but there are two areas that have been off.  One, his major record is slim to almost none.  He had never started a final round inside the top 40 of the Open Championship, and his two top 10’s in majors for his career doesn’t stand up for an 8-time winner and former FedEx Cup champion.  He was the 54-hole leader and stood tall on Sunday, he was simply beat by a better performance.  Secondly, Billy has been perceived as hyper and inclined to step in areas with his mouth that have not helped his persona.  I’ve always seen him differently because of some heartfelt conversations about alcoholism and recovery as it touched his family like it has me.  The last year has seen Billy sharing views with the content leaders in golf and his popularity has risen.  His performance and comportment this week were top class.
  1. Thriston Lawrence surprised quite a few people on Sunday but no one who has played with him on the DP World Tour was surprised.  He’s 27 years old, has four wins on the DP World Tour and he will be making his way to America more often and his place on a Presidents Cup team may have to wait until 2026 but it’s going to happen.
  1. Dan Brown was a found story, not just for Thursday but for four days.  Pumping heaters while taking selfies on the 18th hole on Saturday summed up his week and his embracing of the moment.  His buddies likely drank their way through the weekend as they started to arrive to support their mate and his story is why the Open Championship is the world Open.
  1. Scottie Scheffler put on a masterful ball striking display in the most demanding conditions players have faced in 2024 and when he birdied 7 and 8 on Sunday and was a shot back it appeared it was on.  Just as quickly he double bogeyed the 9th and three-putted from 5 feet and was out of it.  His putter was atrocious all weekend and on top the bad putting at the U.S. Open his major year closes with a phenomenal Masters performance followed by the strangest circumstance at the PGA we have ever seen and then the flat week at Pinehurst.  He’s been historically great all year on the PGA Tour, but Xander’s double has created a topic of conversation around the POY that we never anticipated. 
  1. Shane Lowry had a very good week at Troon, but he had a very challenging Saturday shooting 77 and then questioning the set-up of the golf course.  He was chippy, in a foul mood and said some silly things.  He was also verbal on the golf course which I have zero problem with, he’s working and got worked up.  Lowry is a pugnacious battler and his comments about tee locations is something I believe he will come to want to scrub.
  1. Jon Rahm finished T7 and had a moment Sunday where you thought a super low one may be in the offing.  That didn’t happen but he got something out of the week that may be a preview of 2025.  Accept the perception that people may have of you or don’t give a shit about what people think about your decision to join LIV.  He took a lost major season and likely planted a seed within himself that next year will be here soon enough.  He also enters 2025 now tied with two majors with Scottie and Xander.  This year changed a lot and don’t think they don’t all know the big scoreboard.  
  1. Justin Thomas shot 68-78-67-77.  That’s a psychotic week of scorecards.  He had a nice homecoming at Valhalla, but he should be on the outside looking in on the Presidents Cup and unless he finds some consistency and better putting, he becomes a real question mark in 2025 for the Ryder Cup.  Every great player has had an ebb, two year ebbs are far less frequent for the truly great players.
  1. Speaking of question marks, Jordan Spieth wraps up another flat major year and the lingering questions about his health will persist until he decides to have surgery on his wrist or simply declares that he’s as good as he will be and moves forward.  He possessed magic and magic can appear as an illusion, that’s why its magic but he also had empirical data that showed he was more than just making long putts.  That data has dried up as have the insane putting rounds.  He was an artist that owned his idiosyncrasies, now it seems like he’s trying to avoid them.  Hopefully he can get healthy and also simply be Jordan sooner than later.
  1. Collin Morikawa finished tied for 16th at the Open and completed a really impressive major season, but he must feel totally unfulfilled.  He has been agitated about being overlooked among the top players and I love it.  I appreciate his determination to prove he’s absolutely in that small group, which he is but not winning this season would be hard to believe, he’s simply been so solid.
  1. Adam Scott finished tied for 10th at the Open after being gutted by Robert MacIntyre at the Scottish the week before.  His results are one thing but his admission that his golf swing has been off for a long time and saying he’s found it again means one thing, he’s going to win again.
  1. Brooks Koepka in the majors this year, T45-T26-T26-T43.  He’s building his legacy on one thing, the four weeks from April to July and everything else is adaptive.  He’s got plenty of tread on his tires, but years click by and the truth is its just more fun when he’s bro-strutting around a major venue deep into the weekend in the deep end of the pool.
  1. Bryson DeChambeau was likely due an off week and his willingness to do every solitary media hit on course in the lead into the Open seemed like overload.  He was blown off course immediately and never recovered and was a cut casualty.  It changes nothing about his year.  He’s a massive winner in 2024 and he goes to Augusta having improved his results there and seeming to be solving the Augusta National rubik’s cube.  ‘25 can’t get here soon enough for a lot of people’s champion.
  1. Tiger Woods’ season is over, and it goes without even one hour of drama or encouraging play.  He can play majors as long as he wants, and it changes nothing and those saying it’s sad are being melodramatic.  Time is a thug and a cold one.  My favorite line from J.R. Moehringer and its as true as the day is long.  Let’s hope he has a week next year where he has a sit forward, even for an hour.
  1. I picked Rory to win the championship.  Nice pick.  He was a non-factor and admitted he checked out 22 holes into the championship.  Rory’s Rubicon gets wider as we head to 2025.  Its extraordinary.
  1. The first American sweep of the majors since 1982 is kinda hard to believe since Tiger gave the other Americans head starts with multiple major winning seasons on four occasions, but the sweep is following a strong run of major winners from the United States.  The American dominance is not likely to change in the years to come.  The talent in America is absurd.
  1. Royal Troon is sneaky great.  It doesn’t have Muirfield’s majesty or the aura of the Old Course, but it is so proper in its strategy and presentation as a links gem.  It has a fantastic, diverse and varied list of champions.  Those adjectives are how you describe a great links golf course.  Thanks Royal Troon for being you.