I really don't care what they shoot - 58 or 78 - I care how they shoot it. If someone pulls off a 60 by showing all the shots, I'd tip my hat to him.
Maybe I'm different in my view, but I really felt last weekend was much closer to a return to the roots of golf. Pros were forced to consider not simply lobbing the ball up close to the hole. I thought the same thing about the Open Championship and the US Amateur last year.
I think Pat is really onto something with his criticism of the decision making of the pros, but unfortunately I don't think we can really know for sure what would happen if they had tried a different approach.
Regarding #10, maybe you just have to accept that it's a par 4.5 or even a par 5 - play for bogey.
I really don't know what the answer is, but I know that I found this weekend's golf far more interesting than any other tournament this year, and the most interesting since The Open and the US Amateur last year. Masters included. The Masters was high drama of the first order, but the golf was still mostly an aerial assault of the blah-th order.
Maybe I'm just tired of watching that kind of golf. But I find it more interesting when a guy is standing in the fairway trying to figure out how the heck he's going to walk away with a par. Or standing in the rough trying to figure out how he's going to walk away with bogey. The most intelligent will likely play for par, try to minimize damaging holes and hope to occasionally drain an improbable putt for birdie - or maybe even eagle, if F&F allows him to drive it near a par 4 or reach a par 5 in 2.
That's why I'm so surprised that many are condemning this setup. I now find regular Tour golf to be rather boring. This was entertaining.
To those who complain that luck played too big a role, here or at Sandwich, I say, look at the leaderboard. Phil and Retief are clearly two of the top 10 golfers in the world. Ernie was in it till he lost interest after struggling early. Even Funk & Maggert are prototypical US Open golfers. Similarly, last year at Sandwich, sure, Curtis won, but Love, Singh, Woods & Bjorn were all there till the very end. That does not happen if luck is the deciding factor, unless all those guys in the top 10 are simply the consistently luckiest guys on the face of the earth.
If you want to luck at an event where luck prevailed (to a degree - all these guys are deserving, IMO), look at Carnoustie - Lawrie, Van de Velde and Leonard in the playoff (at a time when Leonard was not at the top of his game), Lawrie prevails. Or look at the Tour, or even the Euro Tour, most any week - the hot putter, which could be defined as lucky, wins week in and week out.
The source of the problem is in the mindset of most golfers and most commentators. The USGA might have been just a bit over the top this past weekend, but I truly believe it was really just a tiny bit, and I'll take that each and every weekend of the year.
BTW, this is somewhat of a change for yours truly. I formerly thought the USGA's obsession with protecting par at the US Open was silly, but now I kind of think it leads to more interesting golf.
Time to cue Tom P's saying....