When you completely loose the weaker strain of grass on a green to 100% dehydration you are going to have the ball rolling across shriveled leaves for a stretch and now on to turgid leaves, now shriveled leaves, and so on. That's why we saw so many balls zig zagging at the end of the roll.
As a greenkeeper it made me sick to see something like that because you don't have to do that to achieve the objective. That's not good tournament management - its vandalism. Or at least it was reckless.
Many really skilled putters gauge the speed of their ball to die at the hole. Those guys who putt like that were punished at the U.S. Open. Why? So that the smallest greens in tournament golf would be hard to hold?
Why do you need to trick up targets that are that small?
I understand that because these guys can hit the ball so far, we now have to set up these situations where they can't get on the green without hitting lofted clubs farther than they are designed to launch a ball. I understand that that's why they dry greens out for these events. But I would wager that they didn't plan to do that much damage to the weaker strains of grass. I think someone left his soil probe in New Jersey is what actually happened.
But anyways, now you have a situation where the golf course is not rewarding one of the most important dimensions of the game of golf - putting.
I am happy for the champion, but when you see a good kid loose a 7 stroke lead, and now he has to live with the shame of the worst choke on US Open Sunday, you gotta ask why?