I must admit I am part of Team Shivas on this. I enjoyed the third round telecast a lot and saw more shots and strategy than I saw in Phil's 31 (or whatever it was) on the back 9 in 2004. For example:
-- Tiger's pitch on 13: what greater indicator of his skill differential over the rest of the field? The only one of the leaders I saw, ahem, get it up, and make birdie
-- Zach Johnson's and Justin Rose's birdies on 15 after laying up down the right and hitting those neat wedges, compared to the difficulties faced by those taking the left side (and Tiger's decision to go for it in two and having a harder putt than the wedge shot he would have had if he layed up)
-- Appleby's triple: so well deserved (and I am an Aussie and an Appleby fan!). Crap tee shot, mishit second, daring but poorly executed third, average bunker shot, bad putt, worse putt, tap in -- seven. Not the course's fault
-- Hard flag on 16. See Appleby and Tiger decide to err on the left side and take the 40 footer (Appleby in particular did not look too disappointed with his tee shot); while Vijay and others take the flag on and miss. Looking for two they bring four squarely into the picture.
-- Zach Johnson on 17 and 18 with nice run ups; Vijay, Jerry Kelly and others carrying it too far on 18, going over and taking the consequences.
Would I like to see more birdies? Sure, I like seeing birdies, we all do. But the golf is interesting, to say the least; and it is not a US Open -- nobody has had the wedge out of thick rough back onto the fairway, or the hit and hope hack from thick greenside rough. And I don't think we are seeing the Masters of the future -- "normal" programming will be resumed as the weather changes (and, who knows, set ups are somewhat adjusted) in coming years.
All in all, I'm looking forward to watching the golf tomorrow -- although I fear that when I wake up (around 4am Beijing time/4pm in Augusta) Tiger will be striding to a 71 and victory. But, anyway, Go Stuey!!