I know, it's been a while, but I was thinking of you the whole time....
It's been quite the weird ski season, and the sense is that it won't get better anytime soon. The ten-day forecast for the home mountain includes a massive 2" of the white stuff, and the comparable forecast for British Columbia isn't any more robust.
As for golf, Employee No. 2 and I did watch a bit of Tuesday night's festivities after arriving home that day from Utah.
Can You Feel The Game Growing? - Fortunately, this Golf Digest summary is far more even-handed than its header would seem:
TGL Week 2 Superlatives: Tiger's debut, Kisner's hosel rocket and an itchin' for friction
Excuse me, which superlatives are those? Wait, I stand corrected, "worst" is, in fact, a superlative, so do carry on....
All your humble blogger can say is, thank God for Kiz....
Thanks to the magic of Kevin Kisner, this week we’re rolling our best and worst performance categories into one. NBC’s new lead golf analyst showed what happens when you spend too much time in the booth and not enough time on the range, splashing two in the drink, hitting three in the sand and failing to make a single putt, which is ordinarily the strength of his game.On the penultimate hole of the evening, however, Kisner’s performance went from bad to so bad it’s good when he nearly recorded TGL’s first fatality, striking the flagstick with a skulled bunker shot that was headed straight for his teammates’ foreheads. As Tiger Woods wiped away tears of laughter (and probably fear), Kiz almost jarred his 15-yard chip for what would have been one of the most ridiculous pars in golf history, putting a big rubber stamp on his star/heel of the evening honors.
Almost jarred? I was asleep by then, but if the hardest shot in golf is the one right after a shank....
Highlight of the night 😅 pic.twitter.com/o4tkLenf7w
— Jupiter Links Golf Club (@JupiterLinksGC) January 15, 2025
It's hard to convey how bad Kiz was, bad even by the standards of an NBC analyst....
For sure this wasn't the plan:
Most Troubling Trend: BlowoutsThe first two matches of TGL have been done and dusted before the singles portion of the evening even began, leaving both squads with nothing to play for but season-long tiebreaker points. To this point, that seems more like a fluke than anything, but if Week 3 is equally uncompetitive, we’ll have to start wondering if there’s more to this trend than coincidence.
My Spidey Sense tells me that Week 3 is problematic for other reasons, which we'll get to below.
When your highlight reel is limited to, checking notes, your walk-on:
Best Big Cat Moment: Eye of the TigerTiger's TGL entrance is electric ⚡️🐅
📺: ESPN pic.twitter.com/orQ9xwAzt9
As for the show, Tiger had some thoughts:
Giggly and red-eyed from laughter, Woods took a self-deprecating tone to his team's 12-1 lashing at the hands of Collin Morikawa and Los Angeles Golf Club.“We were entertaining. We hit a lot of shots," Woods laughed. "I think the people here got to see how bad pros can be. It was a boat race. ... I can only imagine what our teammate, Tom Kim, is thinking."
Ummm, Tiger, would you mind if I get a second opinion on the entertainment value? I'm thinking a tampon might have helped....
And this spot-on coda:
“As evident from today, I don’t have any golf skills,” Woods laughed. “The walking is not really an issue. It’s that my game is not very good.”
But at least Tiger's game was one Kiz could kill for....
But there was this bit as well:
Woods and his Jupiter Links playing teammates, Kevin Kisner and Max Homa, took refuge in the learning curve of hitting into a 60-foot screen and the playing surface's uncertainty at SoFi Center.“We hit every single wedge shot long,” Woods said.“Significantly long,” Kisner said.
This provides one of those effortless segues to this Golf.com piece:
2 things TGL must fix for Tiger Woods’ new golf league to flourish
If the line is set at two, I'm certainly taking the over.... But this is the second of his two, one that I think is a way bigger issue than perhaps the authors understands:
The second issue was with the Full Swing simulator technology. This didn’t appear to be an issue on the first night, but it was clear the tech wasn’t working properly Tuesday night.
There’s a zero percent chance that Woods, the greatest ball-striker in history, would hit a flush 100-yard wedge shot and wind up blowing it 30 yards over the green. There were too many moments on Tuesday night where the simulator left players perplexed at how poorly they hit a shot, especially from short range.“I didn’t even hook that,” is not something that needs to be a common saying on TGL broadcasts.The technology can’t make the best in the world look silly or inept. Full stop.
Holy Shotlink, Batman! That's just what this venture needs, an assertion that the tech of a tech-infused golf league doesn't actually work. This item is written by the previously unknown-to-me Josh Schrock, but we've had launch monitor technology for decades now. You'll notice that none of the players are hinting at this, because how ya gonna bring them back for Week 3 if it's all effed up?
Amusingly, even if I were to accept his premise that Tiger airmailing the green had a zero percent probability, now do Rory! Yeah, 30 yards long on a 100-yard wedge shot is his signature move! The only thing missing when Rory makes his January 27th debut would be JP and Rory asking each other what just happened..... IYKYK.
This Schrock promised two fixes, yet offers up a third:
That brings me to the green. It’s a technological innovation, but the league must fine-tune it. Players of this caliber rarely run 25-foot putts 7 feet past the hole. Tiger Woods and Justin Rose having an impossible time stopping downhill puts and/or missing putts in the 5-to-7-foot range by half a cup or more is…not great.As my colleague Dylan Dethier pointed out, the players stopped short of openly criticizing the technology on Tuesday, but the league needs to polish it by next week’s match.
Obviously the players have to keep their yaps shut, but are we sure about excluding the possibility that Tiger simply has no golf skills...
As I understand things, this tech-infused venture is supposed to be somehow dependent upon a dirty rag:
Easiest Fix: The HammerAfter two weeks of play, TGL appears to have some very tricky problems to fix, but one that shouldn’t be difficult is the Hammer. Last week, we said the Hammer had a lot of potential, but Golf Diget’s resident Hammer skeptic Drew Powell raised some valid concerns. On Tuesday, after an early flurry of Hammer blows, those issues quickly bubbled to the surface when LAGC took control of not only the scoreboard but the Hammer, allowing them to simply play keep-away with the supposedly match-changing gauntlet. This issue has rendered the Hammer largely impotent in the back half of both matches so far, with the losing team unable to access their only means of mounting a comeback. Thankfully, the solution shouldn’t be too radical:Give teams a high-risk mechanism for “stealing” back the Hammer. Perhaps they can challenge the Hammer-holders to a closest-to-the-pin contest on par 3s or an eagle challenge on the par 5s, wagering their own points on the board in exchange for the yellow towel. This doesn’t need to wait until Season 2. The TGL concrete is still wet. Much like the NHL, the league should be willing to make rule changes and improvements on the fly, and this feels like a logical place to start.
It's pretty lame, no? There's this inevitable tension between competitiveness and entertainment value, but I don't think they can make this work simply as a hit-and-giggle undertaking. Unless, of course, Kiz plays every week.
Employee No. 2 had quite the range of reactions, not having watched the first week. She initially found it pathetic, though we kept watching and she did admit to that contradiction. Her final take was that the evening needed to end with the six guys in a fistfight.... Hmmm, GMTA:
Most Needed: VillainsSo far, TGL has placed a huge emphasis on Good Vibes™. The players yuck it up with each other, the celebs flash their pearly white veneers course-side and Matt Barrie, well, let’s just say he’s no Johnny Miller on the mic. While this is all by design—the league is clearly geared towards being a fun golf gateway for casuals—it has started to feel a lot like an exhibition. On Tuesday, as Woods, one of the fiercest competitors in sports history, smiled his way through a truly abysmal performance, it became painfully clear:TGL needs villains.Sports fans love nothing more than something to hate. Usually that’s an opponent. Sometimes it’s a coach, GM or owner. Heck, we even pick scapegoats on our own teams. TGL is crying out for a few Bad Guys—a T.O., a Nick Kyrgios, a Roger Clemens, a Patrick Reed, perhaps. There has to be some friction, because friction is inherent in competition. Without it, TGL will always feel like empty calories. Maybe a fiery guy like Atlanta Drive G.C.’s Billy Horschel can provide that spark. Or maybe recent match-play controversy alumni like Patrick Cantlay and Tom Kim will martyr themselves for the cause. As we all learned at a young age, there can be no Batman without the Joker.
Despite the in-house audience, TGL is primarily a TV-based enterprise, and from that perspective, the product still needs work. ESPN doesn’t yet appear to have decided whether the tone of this should be serious or jovial, and so the coverage pinballs between the reverential and the silly. TGL ought to be the equivalent of a televised beer-pong match, not a PGA Tour event, and ESPN ought to lean into that strangeness rather than, say, seriously trying to compare LAGC to the Lakers dynasty.TGL also brings one of the most cringeworthy elements of PGA Tour broadcasts indoors: interviews with sponsor executives. It doesn’t really matter in this case that the executives are famous athletes; a segment with Serena Williams — who clearly has little interest in golf — was a tough listen.
I think the whole venture suffers from that competitiveness vs. entertainment dichotomy, and they're really not delivering much on either front. Watching these guys struggle has some appeal, but I'm not sure this thought actually helps:
Most Important Distinction: These are great golfers, not great simulator golfersTiger Woods, Xander Schauffele, Rory McIlroy, Collin Morikawa, Hideki Matsuyama, Ludvig Aberg. To say TGL boasts some of the best golfers on the planet is not a stretch. The problem, which became clear as Tuesday’s night chop-fest unfolded, is that simulator golf is a very different discipline. Though TGL’s roster boasts 13 major winners, South Korea’s top simulator pros would wipe the floor with them in a head-to-head screen match, so why aren’t they the ones we’re watching?Simply put, the level of play hasn’t been sharp enough through two weeks, and the carnage, apart from Kisner’s hosel rocket, hasn’t been that fun to watch. It’s one thing to watch Jean van de Velde take off his socks and wade into the burn with the Claret Jug on the line. It’s another to watch a guy splash one in a virtual water hazard, take a drop two feet away and hit it back into the same screen. There’s plenty of reason to believe these guys will get the hang of it—they have the raw ability, work ethic and the professional nous to do anything with a golf club in their hands—but the question is whether they’ll improve fast enough to make the rest of this season worth watching.
How about we find some actually good simulator players? Maybe folks will tune back in to see what Kiz does next, but other than that......
By delaying this post a day we have actual ratings:
Tiger Woods, the headline player and co-founder of TGL, did not play in the simulator golf league’s first night—instead he waited a week in what was widely believed to be a strategic move to keep interest and buzz high for the new venture.That turned out to be a smart move.ESPN reported Wednesday that the second TGL match, in which Tiger Woods’s Jupiter Links was soundly defeated 12-1 by Los Angeles Golf Club, drew an average audience of 1 million viewers. That’s a 9% increase from the inaugural match on Jan. 7.According to the network, viewership peaked at 1.1 million from 8:30-8:45 p.m. and was steady in the 1 million range from 7:30 until past 9 p.m. The match ran 18 minutes past the allotted 7-9 p.m. window, forcing the start of a Duke-Miami basketball game to be moved to ESPNews.
God is worth less than 100,000 pairs of eyeballs? Good to know....
Where does it go from here? This is your Week 3 match-up:
I know, they made us wait three weeks for Lucas Glover..... Should we do a reader poll as to projected audience size? They're pumping the bejeesus out of the following week's Tiger v. Rory match-up, but I'm thinking Week 3 will be quite the downer....
I had some other stuff to blog, but we've gone long here and I've got a day to kick off. Nothing that won't keep, so we'll catch up down the road.