To clarify my comments
There's not a pro in the field that would try to squeeze their approach between the pin and pond.
The intelligent play is to hit to the center-center/back of the green.
In addition, the bank was not shaved as it had been in previous years, and, it did rain at night.
**I agree , the pros didn't try to squeeze their approach between the pond and the pin, because they didn't have to. They sit at the top of the hill, with anything from a 2-iron to a 5-iron and just try to hit it to the center back of the green. What I was disappointed in was that we had four days of back pins on the green. I would suppose that one day you have an easy pin, two mediums and one tough pin. With the front right pin, you were pretty much guaranteed that you would have to hit or putt back toward the pond with your 3rd or 4th shot. With the four pins that were there, it was pretty much a long par 4.
If you were above the short right hole, there was many a difficult putt to get it close.
Any putt from above the hole is difficult on that green.
Just ask Phil.
**Ask Phil. He said was confident in his read until he saw Tiger's ball drift right. He said he should of hit his original read.
Also watching many a person spin the ball back into the water.
Not this year.
The bank was not shaved.
**The balls didn't spin back into the water because everyone played long to take the pond out of play.
I just didn't see any drama of the ball going into the water, except for maybe Perry's ball today, but that had no chance of going into the water.
You didn't see any drama ?
Everytime someone went for the green there was drama.
Now you're going to complain because PGA Tour Pros, the best golfers in the world executed their approach shots as planned ?
**I'm not complaining. The pros only executed what they presented with. I only said that I would of liked to see the front right pin that they used in past tournaments instead of using four back pins.