Our culture, decorum and civility are eroding by the day, so what happens at #16 is nothing remarkable (sorry for the cynicism, but I was cut off in a parking lot this weekend by a woman in an huge SUV who waved at me to stop so she could pull out in front of me while she talked on her cell phone, then flipped me the bird when I mouthed my vulgarity-free displeasure at her selfishness; then Janet Jackson entertains million of unsuspecting Super Bowl viewers by concocting a simulated sexual assault at halftime.)
The fact is, class and respect are eroding more slowly at golf tournaments than just about anywhere else I can think of. Where else in our society can 10,000 drunken, raucous people suddently silence themselves long enough to let a millionaire swing a golf club in undisturbed peace?
Were I one of the pros, I think I'd ask the fans at 16 to start roaring as soon as I put my peg in the ground, and keep it up until I'd finished hitting my shot. I think it would be energizing to hit a ball with 10,000 people cheering for you, and it would probably create less tension than wondering in the back of your mind if one of the yahoos was going to yell "You da man" or "Noonan!" or "It's in the hole" on my downswing.
But that's just me. I think pros who prefer silence are entitled to it, and under these circumstances, we should be amazed that they get it -- routinely.