So you may have seen that Fred Funk made the cut at this week's PGA Tour stop in Barbados, sitting at -1. That's cool enough, becoming only the 4th player aged 64 to make the cut at a Tour event since 1970 -- the others being Sam Snead, Jack Nicklaus and Tom Watson. Fred always seemed like a terrific guy -- so that's a fantastic result.
But the fascinating part is *how* he made the cut at a PGA Tour event, at 64. Here are his stats for the first two days (when he shot a 2 under 69 and a 1 over 72 today, in very trying conditions). Check out the stats below, and marvel at what a truly great game golf is, and how many ways there are of 'getting it done':
Driving Distance: 226 yards (today), 234.8 yards (average for the two days).
Driving Accuracy-Fairways Hit: 28.57% (today), 53.57% (average for the two days)
Greens in Regulation: 33.33% (today), 38.89 (two day average)
Putting: (they don't list it in terms of strokes gained, just putts per green): 1.667 for the two days.
I keep looking at these stats in disbelief, and marveling at them (and at the nature of golf itself): At 64, on a PGA Tour course that's (granted, not long by modern standards, but played in windy conditions) 6850 yards, Fred Funk could shoot a 1 over par 72 by driving it 226 (!) yards, hitting less than a third of his fairways and only a third of his greens.
Yes, golf is a physical/athletics game -- but man it is also something else.