It is rare for me to watch the average weekly PGA Tour event, so I apologize if I missed this when it happened, but I don't remember hearing anything about it until reading a small note in "Crittenden's Golf Business & Real Estate" newsletter, as follows:
"Quail Hollow Club president Johnny Harris seems to be taking Phil Mickelson's sharp criticism about a couple of his club's greens serious [sic] and is considering undergoing some renovation work before next year's PGA Tour Quail Hollow Championship. Harris and Mickelson spoke informally at last month's U.S. Open in Pebble Beach and Harris reportedly told Mickelson he is thinking about redoing the unpopular three-tiered, par-4 eighth green and modifying the 12th green for the second time since the Tour event started in 2003. Harris is even considering tweaking the 18th finishing hole, which has a couple of knobby spots that created a situation at this year's tournament where Mickelson actually putted away from the hole ... resulting in Mickleson to say the Quail Hollow's final green is the worst one on tour -- yet it's not even the worst green at the course. That distinction, Mickelson said, goes to No. 12."
So, my questions are:
a) Was this controversy noted at the time, or glossed over because of Rory McIlroy's final-round 62?
b) Having never seen the course, are the greens in question more severe than run-of-the-mill Oakmont greens? Are they way out of character with the other 15 greens on the course?
c) Why would anyone want to design a golf course for a Tour event, if there is going to be this level of post-tournament micro-management to appease star players?
d) Why don't they just make all the greens 1% so everyone will be happy?