Bill, my point is that no one manages their way around a course better than the pros. Your post is contrary to this. In fact you openly argue the opposite. Not condescending to me by any means, but to suggest they fire at every pin without thinking is simply not the case imo. It gives a lofty impression of the pros as somehow being uncouth idiots compared to the strategists who understand architecture. Most of us can't hit the right side of the course, let alone the correct half of a fairway.
I'm not comparing Rye with Doral. I'm highlighting that decent players tend to decently plot their way around a course and know when to defend and attack regardless of the complexity and variety of the challenge. When they are presented with questions to which there is no answer, as with Friday at Doral, they tend to whinge.
Pros for some reason are regularly referred to with disdain on this DG and I'm not sure why, particularly when the criticism is often applied regarding the area they do best: strategy and course management.
The point I tried to make, inelegantly unfortunately, is that today's pros seem to feel they have to fire at pins because otherwise they won't compete with a hot putting opponent. With the hard new greens, brisk winds and shaved banks, 113 balls ended up in water hazards. Do you seriously think this resulted from decent course management.
We weren't discussing day in and day out course management, we were discussing the disaster at Doral.
I completely agree with what Bill said above. I've played the course just 10 days ago and would 1000% agree that the pros made serious misjudgments in light of the wind and course conditions. What Ryan fails to understand is that the
pros are the "highest and most consistent executors of the widest spectrum of available shots," little else. They can, better than any other level golfer, produce consistent swing repetitions and more frequently put the ball on the sweet spot of the club. I really don't believe they are the best at course management...and its not entirely or always their fault.
Pros rely on caddies, daily evaluation of their game (i.e injuries, daily swing flaws, etc), course conditions, mental confidence and previous experience on the courses of the PGA Tour. The caddies map out the course with yardage and features, the swing coaches help iron out the moves, the thumb gets wetted and stuck in the air, and whatever part of any past-playing history on the hole in front of them all combine to dictate the strategy and hole management. In the case of this year's Doral, they had to toss out their previous playing experience, adjust for the wind and green firmness and reset their expectations for scoring......MOST OF THEM FAILED on that FRIDAY!! Additionally, the day's difficulty (like a US or British Open) deflated their collective mental confidence.
The Tour is also partly to blame for not understanding the conditions and the probability and severity of the well-forecasted winds.
The winds present that day relentlessly stiffened that course that day and shots (and the spin associated with the higher irons) had to be adjusted accordingly. Fact is they weren't and the course wasn't to blame, for those who did make all the right adjustments didn't find the water, or bogey and double-triple bogey trains that were otherwise so prevalent. What was required was creativity and adaptability....not high, IMO on a large majority of player's strength lists.
I'd argue that other than tax deductions and private air charter deals, the pros aren't very adept at adjusting to new environments and variable condition changes. They function best when they can hunt flags, show off their talent for making shots, and play aggressively attacking the course's par. Other than 2.5 weeks a year (the PGA Championship the .5) they got to where they are by doing just that. At Doral a few weeks back on a windy Friday, they were forced out of their comfort zone.
Ryan,
I welcome your attempt to refute the above.