Tiger preps at Oakmont
U.S. Open - 2007
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04-23-2007, 07:24 PM
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Homer on POWER
GOOD GOLF IS POWER GOLF. Homer Kelley.
Bring on the 288 yard hole. Could be one of the more interesting holes come Sunday.
See the Tomasello Video Chapter 5 on POWER.
DG
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04-23-2007, 09:03 PM
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Originally Posted by Delaware Golf
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GOOD GOLF IS POWER GOLF. Homer Kelley.
Bring on the 288 yard hole. Could be one of the more interesting holes come Sunday.
See the Tomasello Video Chapter 5 on POWER.
DG
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Come on ! I'm all for power but this seems like another stupid U.S. Open ploy for protecting the "lowest scoring major ".I seem to remember a lot of U.S. pros complaining about CARNOUSTIE-wasn't it davis love who said "it got the champion it deserved"- what ! Justin Leonard was the only American who could hit it straight! So don't reward accuracy ,reward luck and bye ,bye Fred Funk!-oh, and Justin Leonard ,Luuuuke,Brian Gay .A SHAME
Actully I bet Brian is one of the few who could hit that green with driver--maybe not a bad idea after all!
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neil k
Last edited by Yoda : 04-23-2007 at 10:35 PM.
Reason: addition
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04-23-2007, 09:51 PM
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It would be interesting to see what John Riegger has got to say about this as he is one of the more qualified to answer .
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neil k
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04-23-2007, 10:52 PM
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John Riegger On the Coming Test At Oakmont
Originally Posted by neil
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It would be interesting to see what John Riegger has got to say about this as he is one of the more qualified to answer.
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I had lunch today with John in Atlanta -- he stayed over after his great closing 66 yesterday and solo 9th place finish at Jennings Mill -- and talked with him tonight by phone in Richmond. I told him about the thread, and he told me he played the course in its Open set-up last fall. He remarked how Johnny Miller's 63 in 1973 was one of the great rounds of all time and predicted that, if things stay the way they are now, the winning score in this year's U.S. Open would be +5.
He said that the USGA purpose behind the 288-yard par 3 (he said it can play to 305!) was that they wanted a "true fairway wood" test. And they also wanted a true 3-shot par 5...which they apparently have achieved by lengthening the 12th -- already the toughest par 5 on the course -- to 700+ yards.
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Yoda
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04-23-2007, 11:41 PM
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Originally Posted by Yoda
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I had lunch today with John in Atlanta -- he stayed over after his great closing 66 yesterday and solo 9th place finish at Jennings Mill -- and talked with him tonight by phone in Richmond. I told him about the thread, and he told me he played the course in its Open set-up last fall. He remarked how Johnny Miller's 63 in 1973 was one of the great rounds of all time and predicted that, if things stay the way they are now, the winning score in this year's U.S. Open would be +5.
He said that the USGA purpose behind the 288-yard par 3 (he said it can play to 305!) was that they wanted a "true fairway wood" test. And they also wanted a true 3-shot par 5...which they apparently have achieved by lengthening the 12th -- already the toughest par 5 on the course -- to 700+ yards.
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I understand the true fairway wood test part; it makes sense. But 288 is a bit long for a fairway wood shot for a lot of the pros, unless it's downhill. Isn't the average driving distance on tour like 289?
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04-24-2007, 01:08 AM
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Accuracy with Driver
To me the long par 3 makes sense  .....let Brian's accuracy with the driver off the tee rule the day.
DG
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04-24-2007, 08:58 AM
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In some respects, what is the difference if there is a 400 yard par 3? All the players that complained about Carnoustie were basically out of the tournament before it started. If your mind is too weak to handle the challenge then don't enter. It's the FREAKING US OPEN, I think it should reward the most mentally tough player. If you look at some of the most difficult US Open venues you find some of the most mentally tough players in history, as it should be!
Great shots should be rewarded and mediocre shots punished.
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"In my experience, if you stay with the essentials you WILL build a repeatable swing undoubtedly. If you can master the Imperatives you have a champion" (Vikram).
The reason you can't sustain the lag is because you are so eager to make the club move fast (a reaction to the intent of "hitting it far"). So on a full shot you throw it away too early, which doesn't happen for your short chip. (bts)
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04-23-2007, 11:24 PM
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Originally Posted by neil
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Come on ! I'm all for power but this seems like another stupid U.S. Open ploy for protecting the "lowest scoring major ".I seem to remember a lot of U.S. pros complaining about CARNOUSTIE-wasn't it davis love who said "it got the champion it deserved"- what ! Justin Leonard was the only American who could hit it straight! So don't reward accuracy ,reward luck and bye ,bye Fred Funk!-oh, and Justin Leonard ,Luuuuke,Brian Gay .A SHAME
Actully I bet Brian is one of the few who could hit that green with driver--maybe not a bad idea after all!
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The USGA has made the once great US Open not only my least favorite Major, but one of my least favorite tournaments within the year.
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