Mark,
"Muhammud R Lee!!!" What a crack-up!
62 is an unbelievable score. That will vindicate all those who either support Nicklaus or are too narrow-minded to see past him. He's on the right track with the ball, but his angle on the sandbelt courses is quite peculiar. An article in The Age this morning, the follow-up to the Nicklaus article on Tuesday, gives us all something to worry about. Bill Richardson said exactly the right thing. Even if the winning score is -40 on Sunday, this course is ten times the courses we take for granted every other week :-(
Nicklaus' high-tech warning takes shape
Charles Happell
The Age
After just one day of the Heineken Classic, Jack Nicklaus' predictions of gloom for Royal Melbourne, and the rest of the sandbelt, seem closer to materialising than few could have imagined.
Nicklaus, on a flying promotional visit to Melbourne earlier this week, warned that advances in golf technology, especially with the ball, would soon make grand old courses such as Royal Melbourne redundant for tournament play.
Yesterday, his words began to carry a certain ring of authenticity. Even with gusting winds sweeping across the fabled Black Rock layout, more than 50 players broke par in the first round of the Heineken Classic; last week, at the Johnnie Walker Classic at Lake Karrinyup in Perth, just seven players finished the tournament under par.
Both tournament leader Ernie Els, who had a 64, and Michael Campbell, with 67, who are unabashed admirers of Royal Melbourne, said it was sad to see such a fine course being dwarfed by space-age equipment. "The way (Alister) MacKenzie designed it back in the 1920s, and the way it is playing now, are two totally different courses," Els said.
"The ball goes so far now ... definitely this morning it was not playing very long.
"I think surely they should put a handbrake on technology - I mean, I'm hitting the ball 20 or 30 yards longer than I did last year - so I'm for that totally. Either that, or they've got to lengthen golf courses like they did Augusta, and I'm not sure that's the right thing."
Campbell's caddie, Mike "Sponge" Waite, has kept a yardage book from the last tournament held at Royal Melbourne, the 1996 Greg Norman Classic, and been able to compare the clubs Campbell was using then, and now. "Today I hit a driver and wedge into the (405-metre) 18th, driver and wedge!" Campbell said. "Six years ago, when I last played here, I was hitting driver and six-iron or seven-iron.
"I can tell you the course is playing pretty short, really. I am playing one or two clubs less for each shot now.
"Technology has changed so much that it has made this course at least two or three shots easier, to be honest. I can see what Jack Nicklaus was on about the other day."
Royal Melbourne general manager/secretary Bill Richardson said he was unconcerned by the doomsayers, claiming the course would hold its own when the winds picked up and the greens became slicker.
"We haven't had four days of play yet so it's too early to come to any conclusions about the course," Richardson said.
"But, having said that, you can't say a course has been beaten to death after the playing of just one tournament. The winning score in the Australian Masters at Huntingdale one year was 23 under, but significantly higher the next year.
"We have always said this course needs the weather to play a part in helping present a greater challenge. It's not, in our view, something that is achieved totally by extra length."