Not having spent any time on GCA reading what has been written by others about this PGA Championship at Medinah, this is my report from Medinah.
I attended yesterday's Saturday round. My first reaction is that Medinah and the PGA deserve kudos for running an absolutely first-class event. From the time I pulled into the lot in a forest preserve, a classy Greyhound bus took us, without delay, to the Welcome Center - the paved over fairway of a hole on course #1.
Upon arrival, security was evident, and cell phones/pagers/ipods etc had to be checked. We even got ours back without any hassle on the way out. And we had no delay on our way out either. Just first-class treatment all the way.
The merchandise tent was massive and impressive in its products for sale.
On the course, there were plenty of restrooms and food/beverage areas. While $19 is a bit steep for two hot dogs, chips, and two pops, the food was good and the pop was cold.
Over the years, I have played Medinah some dozen times, the last time being about 3 weeks ago. I hold the course in higher regard than many of those who post here, apparently, but what always made Medinah memorable was just the sheer difficulty of this monster. It is right up there with Winged Foot West, Oakmont, and Carnoustie as some of the biggest and hardest courses I have ever played. It's a long, hard course, with many greens perched up on ridges and plays, for me, very tough. To me, 'par' for a scratch-player is probably 78 or so. Under tournament conditions, I would expect a scratch amateur to shoot an 85.
That being said, I am absolutely blown away by what I am seeing at the PGA. These guys are destroying a very hard golf course.
I've heard plenty of theories about why - length doesn't scare them, the greens are too flat, no trouble around the greens, the PGA missed on the weather and overwatered, the PGA wanted green and lush and went overboard, etc etc.
Regardless of the why, it is hard for me to still fathom these scores!
When one looks only at how many under the pro's are, keep in mind this is par 72. At Winged Foot, they made two par 5's into 4's, lessening the 'under-par' effect. Medinah's #5 is a four par, for all intents and purposes. There were more birdies and eagles than pars there on Friday, I believe is the stat I saw. Either way, that is a four par and probably #10 is as well. Move both of these tees up to a forward tee 30 yards ahead, it's still probably the longest-ever Major Championship course, and now it's a par 70. That makes Tiger and Luke 8-under instead of 14.
Medinah members have to be pulling their hair out to think they spent all this money on renovation with the 'Open Doctor' and these guys are destroying the place! I really think they thought they'd get a 7 or 8-under winner.
When we played, I stepped off the fairway landing area on #10 and 15. 10 was 22 yards wide, beyond the bunkers (not many players were getting there yesterday as a strong breeze was in their faces when I was there - but they had been hitting it in this area on Thursday and Friday) and #15 was about 24 yards wide. Even the first fairway was only about 25 yards wide. There's not a lot of margin for error here, folks.
But the flip side to how 'easy' it has played is that Medinah has brought us an AMAZING leaderboard. Everyone whos anyone is still in the hunt. Tiger going for 12 and Luke going for his first (hopefully, of many!).
We walked all 18 yesterday and saw every player hit at least one shot except for the first two groups out. It was exciting and electric to see that the leaders hadn't even teed off and yet the entire leaderboard on the course was filled with ties at 8-under! Phil just tied! Micheel did too! etc etc. The crowds were really into the great play by all of these guys. It was exciting stuff.
The rough is long and lush. It's just that these guys aren't hitting into it! And when they do, they are soooooo good, it doesn't seem to matter much. Ernie Els hit one on #9 into the left trees. He had about 90 yards, to a pin tucked left behind a bunker by only a few yards, so no green to work with left. He couldn't run it up as there was a decent-sized oak between him and the green. My play would have been a sideways pitch back to the fairway and then hit the green with my next shot. Ernie just powered his lob wedge up and over the tree to a couple feet! We stood there in awe. He had to hit it practically straight up in the air from a nasty lie and knocked it to gimme-range.
In summary, these guys are good. The PGA and Medinaha put on a helluva show. The leaderboard is top-notch. And after I go out and play one of Chicago's finest early this morning, I'm going to plop myself in front of the boob tube and watch the conclusion to this exciting tournament with a few cold ones.
And root like heck for my fellow Northwestern grad to bring home the Wannamaker!!! How about a double-Wildcat victory weekend? Jess Daley is leading the Nationwide event too!
Go Luke!!!