I was planning to blog yesterday, but got tied up with a contractor trying to solve one of our recurring pesky issues.... What would you like to discuss?
Masters Detritus - Still sifting through the aftershocks, though the protagonist himself is back at work, if one can call hanging with Shane Lowry work.
We'll all say "Amen" to this, though perhaps respectful silence might be the more appropriate reaction:
In 6 silent minutes, CBS delivered a Masters broadcast masterpiece
Golf television is an exercise in relentless motion. On a typical Sunday, eight voices are employed to speak about at least 50 balls spread over 18 fields, while two dozen production folks work any number of jobs focused on the past (replays), present (directing) and future (production, graphics, commercials, pre-produced segments).When it works, it all sounds like a symphony orchestra — a series of masterfully talented individuals serving as a necessary piece of a much larger whole. And when it works really well, sometimes it sounds like it did for six straight minutes on Masters Sunday: nothing at all.CBS did not say a word for six minutes as Rory McIlroy wept his way to the scorer’s room at Augusta National on Masters Sunday. Instead, in what might be the CBS team’s finest moment under the leadership of lead producer Sellers Shy, the network sat back and watched, holding a single steady-camera on McIlroy as he faced his first moments as the Grand Slam winner.It can be excruciating — and feel somewhat counterproductive — for those who are paid to talk to sit in silence in the aftermath of a historic moment. But often silence tells the story far better than analysis could. That was the case here.
Well, that's exactly what the Ayatollah preached to them for all those years. And now that Sir Nick's blubbering is off mic, there's a chance.
Though this feels like quite the stretch:
EXTRA KUDOSShy was thrilled with his team’s handling of the situation, but the unsung hero of it all was Nantz, who delivered the closing line — “The long journey is over — McIlroy has his masterpiece!” — and then disappeared into the night.Nantz’s grasp of the brevity required in that moment was quickly followed by the rest of his CBS Sports counterparts and delivered an added depth of emotion.“In that moment, that’s when you want Jim Nantz,” Shy said. “He knows what to do in that moment, and we all take his lead. The visuals speak for themselves.”
Those faux-spontaneous reactions from Nancy-Boy are among my least favorite moments. They seem about as spontaneous as the interviews with the sponsor's CEO.
And wither Rory in the interim?
McIlroy’s first stop after Augusta was London, where he and his wife, Erica, are building a house. From there, McIlroy said, he, Erica and their 4-year-old daughter, Poppy, hopped a jet to Belfast to spend time with Rory’s parents, Gerry and Rosie, and “a few other people that are important to me.”Among that group of revelers, McIlroy said, were Michael Bannon, Rory’s swing coach since his Holywood youth, and Rory’s caddie and boyhood friend, Harry Diamond, and his wife. “To celebrate with the people that have been a part of this whole thing for my entire career, my entire life, was absolutely amazing,” McIlroy said.
London, eh?
Not really linked to this bit, but Employee No. 2 felt that the vibe between Rory and Erica in the aftermath of his win was....well, coolish.
But that linked piece did answer a minor lingering question, why weren't his parents there? The broadcasters spoke as if they were, without a doubt, in Northern Ireland, and I assumed they were being their characteristic clueless selves. In fact, I gave it a verbal "Pshaw", noting that Gerry was for sure watching from the grill room at Seminole.
Well, mark this date on your calendars, because the clueless have stumbled upon a clue:
Earlier this month at Augusta National, though, Gerry and Rosie were nowhere to be found. As a victorious Rory walked from the 18th green to scoring on Sunday evening, tearfully embracing seemingly everyone in his path, his mother and father were nearly 4,000 miles away, back home in Northern Ireland.And, from the sound of it, surrounded by boxes.Rory said Wednesday that his parents missed his Grand Slam moment because they were moving houses.“Which they said was a good thing,” Rory said on Michael Breed’s SiriusXM show. “They were glad they had something to do to take their mind off what was happening at the Masters.”You know, parental stress and all.When Rory did finally connect with Gerry and Rosie?“Very emotional,” Rory said. “It was amazing to relive the week — and not just relive the week but the entire journey we’ve been on to get to this point.” He added, “Being an only child, I obviously have an extremely close bond with my parents, and to be able to share this with them was incredibly special.”
Which do we think is ore stressful, closing out the career slam or moving? I know, kind of a coin toss, no?
Geoff's Cutmakers post is available, though he has thus far denied us the third of the troika, where folks visit the woodshed. But he has all sorts of good stuff here, this one being right in my sweet spot:
Tribute Pins. The Lords should never be discouraged from celebrating history. They do it so well and with a level of authenticity that only adds to the accomplishment of winning the Masters. But taking it onto the course for the final round and losing the iconic 16th hole pin placement to celebrate Jack Nicklaus’ winning putt from 1975? To coincide with elaborately planned social and CBS rollouts? It was a bit like putting pickles on the Masters Pimento Cheese sandwich. I love pickles. Who doesn’t love pickles? But you don’t mess with a proven recipe. Especially since the 16th’s upper left shelf offers the least interesting pin on the green. There’s good reason it’s no longer used on Sundays: even if a player hits a great shot, the green’s steep pitch leads to few made putts. The green contours are more pronounced than in Nicklaus’s day, making a repeat of his putt unlikely. The 16th played to a 3.019 average Sunday and saw 10 birdies despite 83% of the field hitting the green. The players took more putts per GIR there on Sunday than any day of the week. In the name of watching balls feed dramatically to the hole and players doing amazing things (it’s harder than it looks), let’s hope they go back to the normal Sunday pin. After all, it pays tribute to all of the amazing moments at No. 16.
I don't actually love pickles, or was that question rhetorical?
It's quite obviously a horrible pin, and I have long expressed some doubts about this hole and green. Geoff correctly notes the drama of the traditional Sunday pin, but to me it's the only good location on the green. And even there it's a bit of a conundrum, because it's a Par-3 with water and the pin is placed closest to said water, except that, because of the slopes, the players never have to fire at that water-adjacent pin, they can play safely right of it.
This was his lede item, and there's much praise for the set-up, so much praise that one wonders why it's included in the middle tier. But it also includes one unbelievable howler from Geoff:
Course Setup. Probably the best setup of the last decade, it’s no coincidence we got a thrilling weekend of play with a nice variety of contenders. The first two rounds were especially good with a nice mix of hole locations. Perhaps worried about pace of play due to the huge field size, or simply realizing that a hybrid blend of hole locations makes for a better setup, the Cup and Tee Marker Placement Committee did a fantastic job presenting the course while working in a few fresh looks. Better weather helped. But huge swings in humidity and temperature from morning to evening must have made finding the green speed and firmness sweet spot the ultimate first-world battle. This year, the increasingly excessive 18th hole seemed to play better thanks to the markers going down in the 440-450 range instead of going back to 465. The 72.807 scoring average was the lowest since 2020 (71.752). For the fourth year in a row, the second nine (36.899) played almost a stroke harder than the front nine (35.909). The course played surprisingly tough on Sunday when the greens veered close to the speed limit and McIlroy mentioned it played more like a U.S. Open. The sense of defensiveness might have been a product of the pressure he faced more than setup, since there were 12 rounds in the 60s led by Rose and Hideki Matsuyama posting final round 66s.
Huge field size? At the Masters? That's a good one,. Geoff.
The 2025 Masters field consisted of 95 golfers. The field was one of the smaller ones on the PGA Tour, typically featuring around 90-100 players. While some players initially had invitations, a few had to withdraw due to injuries or other reasons, resulting in the final field of 95.
I is at the higher end of the field size they allow, and I could understand Geoff making that point. But HUGE? This is the era we live in, where 95 players are too many to get around a golf course. Sheesh!
Need a laugh?
Butler Cabin. This year’s surprising explosion of white orchids and stockpiling of firewood added to an aesthetic rollercoaster ride that has featured ferns, flowers, unusual table pieces, five-alarm scarring above the fireplace, and the annual school detention center body language. Without an amateur making the cut, this year’s ceremony moved briskly. Since the telecast ran long and everyone just wanted to hear from McIlroy, the whole thing was shaping up to be the least-awkward Butler ceremony on record. But in a tradition unlike any other, Scottie Scheffler kept the weirdness streak alive despite doing his third straight year in the Cabin. After putting the jacket on McIlroy and shaking the new champion’s hand, he rapidly exited stage left. It wasn’t quite a full “Bennett,” named after low amateur Sam’s abrupt mid-ceremony departure in 2023. Nonetheless, the tradition continues.
The problem here is that the kids don't know any history. The Butler Cabin ceremony in recent years is awkward and bad television, but not to an extent that it becomes entertaining. But Jim Nantz is no Clifford Roberts, but amuse yourself at some point and seek out some of those YouTube videos. My personal favorite is when he asked Seve how tall he is.... I know, the look on Seve's face is just priceless.
Udder Stuff - Just between us kids, I already have my eye on the exit..... In a more recent post, Geoff was lauding the week at Harbor Town:
Novel concept: put on a closely contested competition played at a compelling and proven venue, maybe include a few people we’ve heard of, sprinkle it with underdogs or comeback stories, and call it a golf tournament. If possible, throw some history on the grill and guess what? People worldwide start to forget the last few years of bratdom, greed, entitlement, brooding, bungling, and, hopefully, the whole creator-with-a-capital-C mishegas.While this concept explains the huge Masters ratings, the impact of Rory McIlroy’s playoff win over Justin Rose spilled into the RBC Heritage in Hilton Head. Harbour Town week sometimes features a sleepy vibe following the Masters, but instead, we got firm, fast greens, a tight leaderboard, and Justin Thomas’s emotional bid to win again after severely over-tinkering the last few years. The sports fans rewarded with a thrilling Masters finished tuned in again to produce the most-watched Heritage in 23 years, peaking at 6 million viewers Sunday evening on CBS and also drawing (undisclosed) strong numbers via Paramount+ (which, incidentally, has more than double the subscriber base as NBC’s Peacock).Golf Channel also reported eye-opening Heritage numbers to reinforce a newfound fan enthusiasm largely thanks to McIlroy and a thrilling Masters: the network averaged 562,000 viewers on Thursday and Friday, up 35% from last year. Those were the most-watched early rounds on record. And despite Golf Channel reaching far fewer homes than just a few years ago, a whopping 1.2 million viewers tuned in for Sunday’s lead-in coverage.
But I was reliably informed that professional golf can only thrive if we let the LIV guys come back....
Knowing the place (not that I've neem there for some time), this seems mad:
In its annual pre-championship economic outlook, the R&A announced that it expects 278,000 fans will attend this year’s Open Championship at Royal Portrush. If such numbers pass through the gates, it will be the best-attended Open Championship held outside of St Andrews.
- The R&A says one million ticket ballot applications were submitted.
- The attendance expected would surpass 2019’s 237,750 fans who witnessed Shane Lowry’s six-shot victory over Tommy Fleetwood.
- The 153rd Open will also be the largest ever sporting event held in Northern Ireland.
- The event will generate more than £213 million in total economic benefit according to an independent forecast by the Sport Industry Research Centre (SIRC) at Sheffield Hallam University.
- The Open will account for £63 million of the benefit, with “the destination marketing benefit” exceeding £150 million.
- Under the “Kids Go Free” initiative more than 27,000 tickets are available for those under the age of 16, with reduced price tickets for fans under the age of 25.
- 89,000 spectators are expected to attend the four sold-out Practice Days up from 61,000 fans who attended the equivalent days in 2019.
- 4,600 have booked a place in the on-site Open Camping Village and have proudly committed to a week free of 21st-century indoor plumbing.
Also not a juggernaut, though I feel that recent play has elevated the Euro's prospects somewhat. Viktor coming back from the dead is huge, and one expects Ludvig to be a killer in this. Current Euro standings can be found here, and I encourage you to not take comfort from Laurie Canter being there, since I expect Robert MacIntyre and, especially, Sepp Straka to be there.
That will have to sate you for today. Not planning on blogging tomorrow unless something drives me towards the keyboard,. Worst case, we'll catch up on Monday. Have a great weekend.