You guys have got to be kidding.
What a bunch of apologists for horrendous decisions regarding changes to the course at ANGC.
Sheesh...
You talk about the weather as if it was 35mph gusts and driving, sideways rain off the Firth of Forth. You talk about firm and fast as if it were Shinnecock's 7th green revisited.
Isn't this the 3rd or 4th year in a row when Augusta suddenly had strange weather that affected the outcome?? It's early April people...I have news! The Masters has always had unpredictable weather!
This
WAS THe Masters, where individual hole scores would range from eagle to triple bogey in the blink of an eye. Where swings of 3-4 shots would routinely happen throughout the tournament. Where Saturday was "Moving Day", meaning that a number of hot players firing with controlled agressiveness would shoot 65-67 to put themselves in position to contend down the stretch.
In the words of Led Zeppelin, "Does anyone remember laughter?"
Instead, we have this dour, funereal march through fairways narrowed so far by pines that the late afternoon sun doesn't permeate them. We have train wrecks awaiting on virtually every hole where suddenly a 440 yard par four is a reasonable letup, and a hole without a chance at birdie, much less eagle, is the norm.
Have the 1st, 4th, 7th, 9th, 11th, 14th, 15th, 17th, or 18th holes EVER played as they do today???
Does anyone remember an Eagle? Does anyone recall a roar?
Perhaps I'm being a bit too nostalgic, but as I peruse a leaderboard with scores that look like the First Flight of the local club championship, I'm left to wonder what happened to what was once the most exciting tournament on the planet?
If the problem is technology, which I truly believe, then the solution as proposed by the 2007 Masters is even worse.
It's similar to extending the Tennis Court at Wimbledon, so that each player is 40 yards from the net.
In some terribly misguided attempt to have today's golfers use the same clubs that their forefather's used, what's been created is some farcical, bizarro world where 320 yard drives to 20 yard wide fairways, followed by 220 yard five irons are deemed to be somehow presenting historically accurate challenges on the same courses.
Yes, it's all because of the weather.
Some year, we'll get it all right.