Some of the best PGA Tour news I've heard in a good while is that Stableford scoring is coming back, this time at the Reno-Tahoe Open:
http://www.rgj.com/article/20111023/SPORTS02/110230352/RTO-change-scoring-system?odyssey=tab|topnews|text|SportsThe PGA Tour had a Stableford event a Castle Pines from 1986 until 2006, and it was always a lot of fun to watch. And in 2002, it produced the most exciting finish to a non-major event I've ever seen, when Steve Lowery holed out with a wedge for eagle on 15 and with a 6 iron for double eagle (!) on 17 and then missed a 10-footer for birdie on the 18th that gave Rich Beem the hold-on victory.
I can't help but think that Stableford solves a couple key problems. The first is that Stableford seems inherently more exciting because it encourages risk-taking moreso than standard stroke play. If (under the Stableford system the Tour has used) the worst a player can do on a hole is lose three points for making double-bogey or worse, then I think the field will feel better about hitting riskier shots at times. And second of all, Stableford scoring significantly obscures public perception of how easy or difficult a golf course is for the pros. Sure, if winning point scores are higher one place than the next, that golf course will seem easier. But it's much harder to quantify, which might quell the critics who complain about pros shooting -20 or better and ruining the integrity of the game, blah blah blah.
Furthermore, in a Stableford event, the Tour can be a bit more daring with the setup and selection of the golf course, I think. Just think back to the on-the-edge setup of Shinnecock in the 2004 U.S. Open. If something like that were to happen in a Stableford event, I think it would be easier to swallow if players just picked up after missing their bogey putts.
Boy, it sure would be interesting to see how the Masters played out under Stableford scoring. Charge me with blasphemy.
What GCA characteristics might Stableford scoring highlight? What courses--current PGA Tour rotation and otherwise--would lend themselves to such a system?