They obviously got lucky with some pretty good weather after an atrocious winter and a late-arriving spring in the South. They had the golf course fast and firm, with the greens rolling well despite the visible presence of healed aeration marks. By Sunday, it seemed like the greens were rolling at 13-14, which is really really fast with all of the internal contours on those fabled surfaces. Setup wise, I think they really hit the sweet spot. Thursday, with the threat of weather and a full golf course, they gave the players a short course with easy hole locations on most greens. The result was viewing magic. Friday and Saturday featured tougher hole locations and more length, but the players were equal to the task, especially on one of the greatest Saturdays in recent Masters memory. And on Sunday, they went for the old-fashioned "gimme birdies, gimme eagles, gimme a couple holes-in-one, yessssssssssssssir" setup. I'd say they did a perfect job overall with the very difficult job of setting up a golf course for a major. They had two advantages (great weather and institutional knowledge), but they deserve a lot of praise. Fred Ridley, it seems, is very much a disciple of Mike Davis, the well-regarded US Open setup man. Great job!