Matt:
Can you please clarify your comments re. the US Open becoming a "second-tier" event, inducing "mindless, robot-like play" produced by "old school set-ups"?
A few facts:
-- Davis took over setting up the US Open in 2006. That year's Open (WFoot), and the one that followed (Oakmont) produced the two highest winning scores relative to par (+5) since...(wait for it)...your much-derided '74 Massacre-at-WFoot Open (+7).
-- Between 1975 (the first post-Massacre-at-WF Open) and 2005, the winning score at the US Open was under par 25 times, even par 4 times, and over par twice. Under Davis, the winning score has been over par (by a lot -- +5 in each case) twice, and under par twice.
-- The average under-par winning score at the US Open between '75 and '05 was -4.3 (I threw out Tiger's -12 at Pebble in '00). The average over-par winning score at the Open during the same time period was +2 (two samples) compared to +5 in the Davis era (two samples).
Question: How, exactly, has the US Open become more exciting in the Davis era? More exciting than the Stewart-Mickelson duel down the stretch at Pinehurst in '99? More exciting than Pavin running down Norman on the back nine in '95, with one of the great Open shots of all time on the 18th hole? More exciting than the Goosen-Mickelson duel on the back nine in '04 at Shinnecock? More exciting than the Els-Monty-Lehman back nine at Congressional in '97?
I guess you enjoy Lucas Glover teeing off with a 6-iron at #18 to insure his lead at Bethpage Black. Now that's rousing stuff...