US Open: Moving Day and Beyond

Moving day at the US Open did not disappoint. I was waiting for some amazing golf and the third day at Erin Hills was it! The leaders kept making the knockout punch against their competitors and they all responded in kind. I found the seesaw battle of the top 10 finishers amazing; none of the players carded anything worse than a 68; with a 63 and 65 thrown in the mix!

If someone was tuning in for the first time this weekend and just looked at the scores, they would never think it was moving day at the US Open!

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The Masters – Moving Day

The Masters never disappoints. After an amazing minus 7 start, Charley Hoffman appeared mortal on Day 2. He did not have that confidence and zeroed in focus we saw in his opening round and I am not surprised. Augusta National is a fantastic course that requires 5 hours of intense concentration if you have any illusions of scoring well. So, the second day of play unfolded exactly as I expected. Continue reading

The 2016 Ryder Cup – Day 2

Day 2 of the 2016 Ryder Cup did not disappoint. Unfortunately, I did not see much, but reviewing all the action, I missed quite a bit. I am not surprised to see the US Team still up by 3, but it took an outstanding effort on Saturday afternoon to get there. They rallied when needed and their performance was unexpected by many golfing fans.

The match-ups were solid and the Team Captains did their job. The players executed as expected, however, Team USA rose to the occasion on Saturday afternoon and now need only 5 points to win their first Ryder Cup since 2008! Saturday was as exciting as moving day at the Majors! Continue reading

The Open Day 3: Moving Day

The Open is a great Major. This years Major at Royal Troon is providing something uniques that evens the field…if the players change thir course management.

I was reminded by Nathan, a regular member of The Grateful Golfer community, that The Open is about pure golf where weather and course conditions are major factors. The power and wedge play of the PGA is not an advantage on a pure links course. This years Open is about pure golf and draws many players back to a more traditional style of golf. What donyou think?

Nathan’s point is not lost. The weather conditions worsened as the day progressed. The afternoon pairings face tougher conditions, yet several were still players met the challenge head on and troomed Royal Troon.

It is difficult to disect any portion of the player’s game. Day 3 was a perfect example of playing reactive golf. Each player had a game plan, but more often than not, their plan changed and they reacted to what Royal Troon dained to offer.

This is a great lesson for all players. It is important to understand when to react and when to drive your golf game. I have played in many tournaments and have struggled learning this lesson. But, I can say that learing when to react to what the course offers does produce lower golf scores! Unfortumately, I learn this lesson from time to time.

Moving day at The Open did not produce any real surprises. Phil Mickelson was steady and played as a shooter, not a basher. Henrik Stenson was even more in sync with his game. The scores were by most of the field were considerably higher, but were as expected given the weather and course conditions. 

Day 4 will be about survival. The top of the leaderboard will continue to do more of the same and managed the links style course by being more reactive to what is offered by Royal Troon. Most North American followers will be red-eyed as they get up early to watch the presentation of the Claret Jug!

I am a grateful golfer! See you on the links! 

The Masters – Day 2

Masters Trivia by The Grateful GolferIn a galaxy far, far away, there was a small group of talented and dedicated men trying to fight for their survival battling a golf course that was unrelenting at best. Day 2 at The Masters, Augusta National Golf Course proved to be that course! I am not sure what happened yesterday, but Augusta bared its teeth and took a huge bite out many of the worlds best golfers.
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