How digging into that became an attack on them and why when both are in the room so many felt the need to run to their defense is what is amazing.
Don, the reason people came to Mike and Geoff's defense is because of the absurdity of some of the shots being fired at them. Here is the first line Kavanaugh posted:
"Well some of your hero thought leaders now want every green soft so we can watch darts. Must be true." And it got worse from there. He followed that up with nonsensical allusions to some vague Golf Digest conspiracy and a bunch of other crap, all without ever having listened to the podcast.
There have been some more sane responses and some interesting comments and perspectives, but Kavanaugh set the tone, and unfortunately others seem to have bought into his suggestion that Mike Clayton's thoughts on RM and Geoff Shackelford's thoughts on Riviera are aimed at making every green too soft. That just isn't the case.
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Jason, I don't think it accurate to say that "the criticism was based on player reactions." Listening to the podcast and reading the comments here, it seems that the criticism is based on Mike's and Geoff's observations about how the courses were setup and how they played. Each has extensive experience with the respective courses, and while both mentioned the criticism from the players, each seemed to me to be commenting on what they saw. In fact, in the podcast they were each quite dismissive of the players who were whining about the setup.
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I think the disconnect here may be that those here are just so thrilled to see balls bouncing and rolling after they hit that they aren't really in a mindset to listen closely to what these guys are actually saying. Had RM been setup as Mike suggested (hard greens running at 11) then the players would still have been
"required to judge rollout on their shots and place the ball in strategic locations or risk embarrassment."