AG,
To simplify, are you suggesting they would rather not have the tournament than to compete against football for TV viewers?
My question is purely about the viewing competition, not the likelihood of an event at all due to the circumstances.
Jim,
My feeling, which is of course, only that, is that ANGC will opt not to hold the tournament if they can't do it exactly the way they want it to be, and I see a lot more reasons that they won't than that they will. And my sense of it is that football is a big part of that.
I think it's hard for those of us that inhabit the treehouse to remember what a small niche golf, even the last two rounds of The Masters, occupies in the greater scheme of things, and that's when The Masters is competing only against regular season baseball, which has become pretty much just a subscription viewing thing now. Football is another deal entirely; the NFL is the 500 lb gorilla of sports programming.
Think about this; in any city, there are multiple bars on Sundays that have EVERY NFL game on, and there are other bars that market themselves as specific to a particular team. Same thing, to a lesser extent, with college football on Saturdays, at least in the South. Have you ever heard of a golf bar?
It's important also to remember that Augusta is in Georgia, and the role of football in Georgia is hard to understand if you haven't lived there; to a great extent, the same thing is true all over the South. On Fridays, everything stops for high school football. On Saturdays, if the Dawgs are playing, same thing. This is true all over the South, and I just don't see anybody but absolute hard core golfers opting to watch golf instead of football on a weekend in the fall. The ratings numbers aren't big anyway in the greater scheme of things. Billy Payne played football for UGA; I'm not sure he would be in Augusta instead of Athens if it came down to that!
I just don't see the powers-that-be at ANGC risking tarnishing the mystique of The Masters by putting on a fall tournament and having nobody watch, vs letting the suspense and anticipation build until April of 2021.
I think we agree that The Masters this fall is a long shot (many things are a long shot as based on my Social media feed most of my childhood friends news seem to have only TODAY-maybe the date has something to do with that? woken up to the fact this is not the flu or media hype)
The next problem is states like Florida and Georgia, the next hot spots, haven't really locked down, and won't until it's too late like NY etc., so this will contine spreading.
That said, if it's not played, you're not going to hear ANGC announce they didn't play because of competition from football, so we'll never know.
The only way we will reach any kind've conclusion is IF they play it,AND ratings are low--and I'd be perfectly fine with that.
The Masters is not insecure-they have nothing to prove.They used to give tickets away to soldiers in the early 60's in Fort Gordon to fill the grounds(Arnie's Army), so they've seen both sides of the coin.They were built in the depression and struggled to even stay afloat.
IF we're there(a big IF), this would be their chance to say all was well with the world again.
I find it pretty hard to believe that a ticket that's one of the hardest to get in sports, that regularly sells for 5 digits, that there wouldn't be incredible pent up demand/relief for The Masters.And that those who didn't or couldn't make it live, wouldn't watch because the NY Jets were on.College gametimes are moved around all the time to accomodate networks. Friday night is available, Saturday night-they even play Thursdays now-be nice to see someone besides Louisville on Thursdays. Heck Georgia's playing on Labor Day Monday next year.
To you point about travel, crowds, etc. So walking around a 225 acre grounds, with the most forward thinking and patron friendly management in the sports world, you actually think attending The Masters would be more crowd dangerous than attending an SEC football game?
Even with the all clear--I can envision ANGC having social distancing entrance lines and even entrance times, even social distanced grandstands-making the experience even better.(not because they would be required to, but to make people more comfortable)
In other words, if they are playing college football in September, surely people would feel OK to attend a much more spread out large acreage venue in late October/November-I'm rarely if ever in a crowd at Augusta-I hate crowds-many great vantage points all across that ground.
And finally, I watched the ANWA last year, on a weekend, and it acheived the highest rating of an amateur golf event(men or women) in 16 years.
Women amateurs-sure it was 1/16 of their viewership of pro football but WOMEN amateurs NO ONE had ever heard of before that day.
And Dave, that's just dead wrong.
Fall golf in Augusta is epic.Click on sound-link small but works
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