At the moment there is one guy playing unbelievably to get to 10 under. There is a player (Na) at -3 halfway through his round, and a total of 16 players under par. 11 of those players are still on the course though, I don't expect 16 players to be under par by the end of the day.
For comparison's sake, here is the 36-hole leader's score relative to par and the number of players under par over the last 10 years:
2013: -1, 2
2012: -3, 3
2011: -11, 14
2010: -2, 9
2009: -8, 15
2008: -3, 8
2007: E, 0
2006: -1, 1
2005: -2, 5
2004: -6, 11
If you believe that the USGA is obsessed with keeping the winning score around par, and if you personally care about the score relative to par, then I suppose we'd want to go back to other years where the scores were low relatively speaking: 2011 at Congressional, 2009 at Bethpage, 2004 at Shinnecock.
Did the USGA panic and somehow adjust the course to bring down the scores over the weekend? Or did we see a much tougher setup relative to par for the next year?
During our round, we played the white tees and on the par 3s, where the pins were tucked, I hit 4,6,5,5 irons. The pros are hitting 8s and 9s on two of them today. Why is the USGA leaving some 300 yards unused? Maybe protecting par is no longer an objective, which is fine by me. It would be a shame, however, if all of a sudden they decide that under par is unacceptable and they tuck the pins and push the tees to tips for the last two days.
Lou, isn't the posted measurement of the course the maximum distance, and how often does the course play to that distance? Especially during the first two rounds when there is a lot of chaff to cut, and the rounds are already too long?