Jim:
Appreciate the thoughtful reply but you sidestepped my main points.
The Wie team know full well that if she had played in the Women's Amateur she is EXPECTED to win. That's a whole different story when you play in a professional event and know full well that even if you fall flat on your face you still have the "I'm only 15" excuse ready to fire at anyone who inquires on what happened.
I'd like to see Wie play in an event in which she is the overwhelming favorite and then does what such favorites do -- win and win comfortably.
Look, she knows what happened the last time she played in the Girl's Junior. She got beat and you could see the pressure on her for every match PRECISELY for the reasons I indicated at the outset -- being the favorite is entirely different than just being a face in a pro event.
Jim -- I love the refrain "wasting one's time." Hate to bust the bubble but Wie has not exactly conquered the amateur world just yet. And that's my point -- the Wie team know full well that if she were to lose a few amateur events the whole notion that Wie is the "next whatever" would take a few hits and there would be some bumping down in the marketing $$ she would command when she turns pro. Frankly, I can see the reasons why they duck such events from a straight marketing position.
The "spin" argument that Wie is beyond amateur level play is a canard. She advanced a few rounds at the Public Links but let's hold all the roses being thrown her way. How bout a spot on the Walker Cup team if she really is thaaaaaat good?
The folks in her camp know that staying predominantly at the pro level provides adequate "cover" whether she does well or even poorly. It's a very slick to position herself but I want to see the wins first. If the amateurs were such easy prey then why not demonstrate that and shut people like me up for good?
Last thing Jim -- ask Pressel or Park if they think Wie is ducking them for the event being held in the Atlanta area? I'd love to hear their answer if they were truly candid.
Matt, wasnīt sidestepping your main points. Was suggesting they donīt apply, or at least are secondary. Here are the first two sentences you wrote:
"Before all the hounds begin to yelp and bark I have to hand it to the folks marketing Michelle Wie. They have simply bypassed any of the events that might impede the future marketing $$$ of Michelle."
My point is they are not side-stepping events, or basing decisions mostly on marketing. They are picking events that best build her golf game. The U.S. Amateur is a good example. She had to choose between the Open and the amateur. Which tests her better? The Open, without question IMO.
Itīs the difference between major league baseball and the minors. A kid hits .350 in the big leagues, but hasnīt quite won the batting title. Should he spend time in Triple A? The analogy seems apt to me, as Wie is one of the top few women players in the world. That is why I believe she wastes her time playing the amateur events. Win, lose or draw she gains nothing from them.
The world no longer expects Wie to fall on her face in pro events. Exactly the opposite. Many say she should WIN on the LPGA now. If she doesnīt, sheīs a failure, her whole life, family and approach put under the microscope. Isnīt that kind of your "inspiration" behind this thread?
No one expects her to win on the menīs tour yet, but the world watches her every move. If she shot a pair of 80īs in the PGA events, people would be no more interested in her than they are in Suzy Whaley. We are having this discussion because a 15 year old girl has twice beaten nearly half the PGA field in tour events -- thrown up a barrage of birdies in the process -- and made it to the final eight of a major USGA menīs event.
Whatever Pressel or Park might think about Wie ducking them, you could say itīs the other way around. Presssel and Park donīt put their games on the line against the top women and men players in the world like Wie does. They donīt try to qualify for the APL, they donīt play PGA tournaments, they donīt go up against the top LPGA players more than a few times if that. No other woman does, amateur or pro. Wie has chosen the most ambitious, difficult path of any woman in history. Where it ends up, who knows, but the journey should be fascinating.