Good posts! The obscene distances being reached by the equipment/ball combinations are rendering it more difficult for all but a handful of our classic, Major layouts to be presented in anything less than "vodoo" set-ups. Merion has the goods to offer a stern test if the rain stays away. Seldom does wind present sufficient strength during that time of year to be a factor there unless fronts are moving through.
Penal rough, narrow, firm fairways and toasty greens, with those generally, smaller, more contoured surfaces of Merion adding to the difficulty, would seem to be the direction the course presentation would trend.
It was interesting to hear the President of the Olympic Club comment towards the end of the telecast today that because they get little rain in June, they'll have no problem with softness....BULLSTINKY!!! Pebble got NO RAIN in 2000 and that fog rolled in on a course that was over-watered heading into the event, due to some warm days on the eve of the tournament, and the course didn't recover it's firmness til Saturday.
I remember watching the replay after our round that day in 2000, Johnny commenting on Thursday that year that the greens were rolling 10-11 on the Stimp...NFW! I was in the last group out that day, 3:00pm, off one...it was one of the last years that everyone still went off #one. I NEVER saw #1 look worse or play slower... on a day with no rain. It wasn't rolling over a 7 max! Hole #Two, which was a re-done green at that time, was newer and was equally slow, just not as bumpy.
Mike Davis mentioned that if he had anything he could do over at Congressional this week it would have been "having the greens drier going into the week."
He and the USGA team have a tough task and they get alot right...but in my opinion this tendency... to err on more moisture than less... costs them the ability to manage firmness if rain or fog arrives. Once turf is soft, only Sun and Wind can dry it out.
The Sub-Air factor I'm not sure about, but to redo greens, especially great ones at those course that have them, just to install that system doesn't seem like the best trade-off. Congressional has it, I believe, so why wasn't it used? If it was, it clearly had little positive impact.
Any firsthand thoughts on Sub-Air's ability to keep surfaces firm while also keeping stressed, newer turf healthy for prolonged periods of time like the week of a Major?
Cheers,
Kris