I was the Observer for the finals yesterday and did see what happened to Brian yesterday. He had hit his tee shot on the 9th hole to the right and it came to rest in the rough just above the first fairway bunker. His stance was a little awkward and I did seem him asking the Referee if his ball was embedded or not which it wasn't. He had to stand with his right foot in the bunker and his left on the grass. When he swung, he fell backwards into the sand immediately. The ball went about 120 yards into the fairway. He was down for some time and a paramedic was called. He tore the left calf muscle. After some time he was able to stand and decided to try to continue. Nathan then hit his second shot. Bryan limped down to his ball which was about 80 yards from the green. His third shot came up short and ran back down the hill. He chipped it from there, but the pain was too severe and he was unable to continue.
After the match was conceded I saw him rolling up his pant leg so they could put ice on it. There was a large swollen mass on the outside of the leg that stood up at least 2 inches above the bone. It didn't look pretty at all. The doctor said he would out of action for 2 to 3 months.
Nathan was 4 up at the time and was playing excellent golf up to that point. You never know how match play might turn out, but it definitely looked like he would win easily. Brian had hooked numerous shots and then blocked others.
Nathan probably felt as bad as anyone about what happened and was very gracious in victory. He is a classy guy.
I refereed Nathan's match against Jerry Courville and even though Jerry was out driving him consistently, Nathan was always in control of the match. In the semis I was the observer and he was even more dominant. He definitely appeared to be playing better than anyone else in match play and is a deserving champion.
As for the reinstatement of professionals, here are two quotes that I'm sure my LLTB would disagree with:
Joseph Dey, "I don't believe in the death penalty."
Tony Zirpoli, "Reinstatement should be purgatory, not hell."
That is the USGA attitude and I don't have a big problem with it. Sixty of the 264 players this week were reinstated and in the end none of them won. Nathan was asked if he had a problem with playing a reinstated pro and his answer was something like, "In 20 years I might be him and I'd like to play."