Wednesday, February 2, 2022

Offshore Flow defeats Crosby Weather at the 2022 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

The phrase “Crosby Weather” has traditionally been the shortcut term for the wild & woolly weather conditions that players and spectators are called upon to endure during the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am; it is so endemic that even non-golfers in the local area use it to describe stormy weather in January and February.

Some of the most famous examples of “Crosby Weather” include the 1962 snow storm that delayed the tournament by a day (prompting Jimmy Demaret, the 1952 champion, to quip “I know I got loaded last night, but how did I end up in Squaw Valley?”); the heavy rain in 1998 that shortened the tournament to 54 holes, persisting over the weekend to the extent that the final round was delayed six months, finally being played on August 17th; and the brief but heavy hailstorm on tournament Sunday in 2019 that carpeted the putting greens with white pellets, resulting in a two-hour delay that pushed the event to a Monday finish[*].
The forecast for the week of the
2022 AT&T Pebble Be
ach Pro-Am is
uncharacteristic for the time of year.

This year, however, in keeping with the new world order that seems to be affecting all aspects of life on planet Earth in 2022, the new two-word buzzphrase for the weather at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am is “offshore flow”. High pressure over the inland areas of the western United States is causing winds that blow from the interior to the coast, northeast to southwest; the air compresses as it descends to lower elevations and, as you know if you were paying attention in your high school science class, warms up as a result.

The forecast for what we locals still call “Crosby Week” is for mostly clear and sunny, if somewhat chilly, conditions. The winds will generally be calm at the low, coastal elevations where the three courses in the tournament rota are located, so we are likely to see some low scoring this year.

We are also seeing the return of spectators and amateur playing partners to the event after their absence in 2021 due to COVID-19 restrictions, and the third course in the rota, Monterey Peninsula Country Club’s Shore Course, which sat out last year due to the reduced field size.

As much as some PGA Tour pros, and some golf pundits, don’t like the pro-am format of this event, the presence of celebrity golfers and even the deep-pockets non-celebrity amateurs in the field is a unique and very special factor in the success of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, and we are very happy to see things getting back to something like normal.

Except for the weather, which is going to be spectacular.


[*] Five-time AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am winner Phil Mickelson seems to thrive on delayed finishes at this event; the 1998 and 2019 tournaments were his first and fifth wins at Pebble Beach.

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