Friday, February 17, 2023

A look back at a classic by Michael Bamberger, “Men in Green” ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Just today I learned that one of my favorite golf writers, Michael Bamberger, has a new book coming out in March. The new book, The Ball in the Air, is being described as “an exhilarating love letter to the amateur game as it’s played—and lived—by the rest of us.” I am going to do my best to get hold of a copy of the new book to read and review here at Will o'the Glen on Golf, but in the meantime I would like to post a review that I wrote for his 2015 release Men in Green, posted to my former online outlet, Examiner.com, which went dark in 2016 (taking four years of my content with it, unfortunately.)

So here it is, my review of Michael Bamberger’s 2015 book, Men in Green:

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One night at dinner during the 2012 Ryder Cup matches at Medinah Golf Club outside Chicago, Michael Bamberger, a senior writer for Sports Illustrated, wrote down a two-column list naming 18 Americans – 17 men and one woman – who are legends in the world of golf. All 18 are associated with the game in the period from the mid-1950s through the 1970s, the years when golf was maturing into the big-money sport it has become. Out of that list came a quest, of sorts; a plan to track down as many of those 18 as he could and ask them a few simple questions – “What was it like?”, “Who did you hang with?”, “How does then look to you now?”

Drawn to golf in the late 1970s as a teenager growing up in a small town on Long Island, Bamberger’s formative years in the game were populated by the names on that list he drew up in Chicago: Palmer, Nicklaus, Watson, Venturi, Crenshaw – just to name a few. So, inspired by the baseball classic The Boys of Summer, Bamberger took up the challenge posed by his list of names, crisscrossing the United States over the next couple of years to talk to as many of the “legends” as he could. 

Out of his travels came the book Men in Green, in my opinion one of the finest works of golf-related non-fiction to be published in many years. His quest led him down paths he never anticipated traveling when he began, raising questions he couldn’t have known would arise, and from those paths and out of those questions came revelations about the names on the list, and himself, that will resonate with readers who grew up in the game in those years, as Bamberger did. 

In keeping with his position in the game “The King”, Arnold Palmer, opens and closes Bamberger’s physical and temporal journey through the landscape of golf’s mid-20th-century heyday. Along the way, Bamberger checks in with the next-biggest name from the period, Jack Nicklaus, as well as Tom Watson, Ken Venturi (just weeks before his death), Hale Irwin, and Curtis Strange – all names off the “Living Legends” side of his original list. Accompanying him on many of these visits is his friend, and a name off the “Secret Legends” side of the roster, Mike Donald, a long-time PGA Tour and Champions Tour pro. Donald is a veteran of the Tours whose biggest claim to fame among the golfing public is his narrow loss to Hale Irwin in the 1990 U.S. Open.

The strength of Men in Green, aside from the depth that comes from Bamberger’s whole-hearted investment in the game of golf, is the intimate, personal-history glimpses it affords the reader, glimpses into the PGA Tour in the Palmer-Nicklaus-Watson era – pre-Tiger – and the interconnections between the players, caddies, golf writers, and even officials, of those times. 

This was an era when the PGA Tour chartered airline flights to carry players and their families from tournament to tournament, when there was more of a family atmosphere than there is now, yet still some hints of the old rough-and-tumble Tour. The world of the PGA Tour wasn’t as corporate as it is nowadays – there were no entourages of swing coaches, short-game gurus, mental-game seers, and publicists, and many players were still driving from one tournament to the next. There was still something of a Mad Men-like sensibility to the times – a pretty woman was a “good-looking broad” (according to none other than Arnie himself!) and the players’ after-hours entertainment might include drinks with Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, or Sammy Davis, Jr.

The beating heart of Men in Green, and the part of the book which has left an enduring impression on me, is the interwoven tale of Arnold Palmer and Ken Venturi. Remembered now more for his 35-year career in the broadcast booth with CBS Sports than for his playing days, Venturi was a promising young amateur in the mid-1950s, a native San Franciscan of Irish ancestry who nevertheless identified more with the Italian-American heritage of his stepfather, Fred Venturi, longtime manager of the pro shop at San Francisco’s Harding Park golf course.

Bitter disappointment at the Masters tournament, the ultimate golf venue of the ultimate gentleman-amateur golfer, Bob Jones, led Venturi to abandon his oft-declared plans to maintain a career as an amateur, like Jones, and not turn professional. The best-known of Venturi’s disappointments at Augusta National came in the 1958 Masters, the result of a controversial ruling involving Arnold Palmer, who was playing with Venturi when it happened.

The repercussions of that rules controversy, along with the fallout from harsh statements Venturi made to the press after a final-round 80 at the 1956 Masters, rippled down through the years, and Venturi watched as Arnold Palmer ascended to a position in the golf world, albeit as a professional, that he had aspired to. It becomes apparent, through Bamberger’s accounts of interviews with Venturi, that the revered elder statesman of the game was a very bitter man for much of his life, and somewhat given to embellishing recollections of past events to his advantage.

Connections abound between not only the big names, the “Living Legends” on Bamberger’s list, but between the less well-known “Secret Legends” whose stories weave in and out of the narrative. Serendipitous discoveries turn up at every corner, in conversations with an old-time Tour caddy, Adolphus “Golf Ball” Hull; retired CBS Sports producer Chuck Will; and even a couple of ex-Tour wives: Conni Venturi (Ken’s first wife), and Polly Crenshaw Price, another first wife – Ben Crenshaw’s ex.

The title, the cover illustration, and the release date (April 7, 2015 – two days before play began at the 78th Masters Tournament), tend to give the impression that the book is a look back at past Masters champions. That’s a fine subject, and five of the names on Bamberger’s list are past champions of the event, but this book is so much more than that. Men in Green is a look back to the formative years of the current state of the game, by a man who was growing up in the game, and with the game, in those same years. There is nostalgia and revelation in equal parts, all tempered by the love of golf that shaped the author’s life in so many ways.

Golf fans will know Michael Bamberger from his 20-year career at Sports Illustrated, and perhaps from his earlier books To The Linksland and This Golfing Life, also non-fiction travelogues through the landscapes of golf and life. A few years ago Bamberger teamed up with his friend and fellow SI staff writer Alan Shipnuck for the fiction hit The Swinger, but it is the insight and emotion he brings to his non-fiction works that is his strength, and the reason why every fan of the game of golf should read Men in Green.

Monday, February 6, 2023

Justin Rose prevails in Monday finish at AT&T Pro-Am

The two most dreaded words in professional golf are “Monday finish”, and as luck would have it, the windy conditions on Saturday at the 2023 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am brought them into play. While for recreational golfers the prospect of playing Pebble Beach Golf Links on a clear, calm, if somewhat brisk, February morning would be a dream come true, for pros, to be pulled off the course at sunset, mid-round, and then have to come back the next morning, pick up where they left off and play for a paycheck, it’s a much less ideal situation.

As it has been so often in the history of the AT&T (née Crosby) Pro-Am, the weather was the story. On a multi-course tournament like this, where three courses have to be maintained in the same configuration over three days, making corrections to a hole placement or mowing conditions to mitigate a change in the weather is not an option, and when Saturday’s gusty winds caused balls to move on the exposed 9th and 15th greens at the MPCC Shore course, play was suspended, then ultimately called.

At Spyglass Hill, where all but three holes are sheltered amidst towering cypress and Monterey pine trees, the wind was not a factor, nor was it at Pebble—despite nine holes running along the ocean—because the wind direction left Pebble somewhat sheltered by Pescadero Point and the Del Monte Forest northwest of the course.

Unless it’s a situation where dangerous weather is the cause for a play stoppage, players are given the option of finishing the hole they are on when the horn blows. Some took the option, starting from the tee on their next hole this morning, while others marked their ball and headed in. Leader Justin Rose returned to his ball marked in good position on the 10th fairway; Keith Mitchell’s first shot on returning to the course on Monday morning was a delicate chip from the rough just off of the 12th green.

Crashing surf in Carmel Bay provided a dramatic backdrop of foam-crested waves and azure water for the television coverage of the final holes of the tournament, but the flags hung limp in still air, with nary a breeze stirring to affect the flight of a ball. Restarting the interrupted round in these pristine conditions posed no problem for leader Justin Rose, who made a hot restart with birdies at 11 and 13. The two strokes he picked up bumped Rose’s score to 17-under, maintaining his lead over Brendon Todd, who (no slouch himself) birdied 13 and 14 to get to 15-under.

The NorCal players in the field fared middling to well when play resumed this morning. Chico’s Kurt Kitayama righted the ship with a string of pars after closing out Sunday afternoon double-bogey, bogey; Brandon Wu and Joseph Bramlett each put up pairs of birdies in the first few holes after the restart.

In the meantime, Justin Rose was solidifying his lead with another birdie, at the long, sometimes punishing, par-five 14th hole, distancing himself still further from Brendon Todd. Two holes ahead, Todd, though playing well, was running out of time, and eventually just flat ran out of holes in his bid to overtake the surging Rose.

With no serious contenders ahead of him, Rose played conservatively down the stretch, leaving his driver in the bag for the last three holes. Hitting a four-iron off the tee at 18, followed by two more irons to the green, he finished up with a no-stress two-putt par to complete a three-shot victory. The win makes Rose the first European winner of this event, and only the second non-American champion. 

“Pebble is the type of golf course with the conditions and the elements that you think you could argue would suit European players a little bit more.”

  – Justin Rose

(Vijay Singh was the first, and previously only, non-American winner of the Pebble Beach Pro-Am, carding a 15-under 272 for the victory in 2004.)

The top NorCal player in the field was Stanford Men’s Golf alumnus Brandon Wu, who carded four birdies on the back nine in Monday play to record a 6-under 66, tying Brendon Todd for second at 15-under.

Wu has great memories of Pebble’s 18th green—after missing his Stanford University graduation ceremony to play in the 2019 U.S Open here at Pebble, and after a T-35/2nd-place amateur finish, Wu was presented with his diploma by then USGA president-elect Stu Francis, who got his MBA at Stanford.

Asked how he would characterize the week overall, Wu said:

 “I think it was awesome. I’m glad the weather kind of held off and we finished with a perfect morning this morning. I’m really happy to be out here and happy with how I played.”

The next NorCal finisher down the order was another Stanford alumnus, Joseph Bramlett of San José. Bramlett played well after the restart, closing out his round in 3-under 33 for the back nine, but on top of the even-par front nine he put up yesterday afternoon, it wasn’t enough to move him up on the leaderboard. Bramlett’s T-7 performance is his best finish to date on the PGA tour.

Chico’s Kurt Kitayama, playing in the final group, had a front-row seat to Justin Rose’s march to victory, but the specter of yesterday’s 5-over front-nine 41 that opened with three bogeys and finished double-bogey, bogey was too much for him to overcome. Kitayama made a single birdie this morning, at the par-four 15th hole, rolling in a 15' 9" putt from the front fringe.

With the Pebble Beach Pro-Am increasingly coming under fire from some commenters for slow play due to the amateur participants, for the logistical complexities, and for the impact that weather has historically had on the event, it was gratifying to hear Rose, in the post-round interview, characterize the tournament as an event “that really matter(s)”:

“Access to the major championships is a large part of my decision to be playing where I’m playing, for sure, (and) obviously playing in events like this that have a great history, that give access to iconic golf courses, all of those things—winning events that really matter.”

Sunday, February 5, 2023

Sunday afternoon start of final round leads to a Monday finish at AT&T Pro-Am

Despite a smörgåsbord of “Crosby weather” conditions Sunday morning, third-round play in the 2023 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am wrapped up just before noon, setting the stage for the start of final-round play.

Conditions in the afternoon were breezy and slightly brisk, but mostly dry. Towering cloudscapes drifting downwind on northwesterly zephyrs enhanced the already picturesque views from the course across Carmel Bay and Stillwater Cove toward Point Lobos, but the afternoon was generally uninterrupted by the rain squalls that had plagued the morning’s wrap-up of third-round play.

Despite the breezy conditions, there were players from back in the pack making big moves as the day progressed. Denny McCarthy, a pro since 2015 out of Rockville, Maryland, and the University of Virginia, went out in 7-under 29 on Pebble’s front nine, climbing 16 spots on the leaderboard to an eventual three-way tie for second with only one blemish on his scorecard, a bogey five at the par-four 13th hole. Also in the tie for the runner-up spot are Peter Malnati, who remained static through today’s play, and UG grad Brendon Todd, who moved up eight places carding 5-under through twelve holes, including an eagle three at the par-five second hole.

Canada’s Taylor Pendrith made the biggest move on the day, moving up 27 spots on the leaderboard to solo 5th to sit at 8-under through 16 holes.

Smaller gains, and reversals, held the NorCal players in the field back from keeping up with the big gains that were being made ahead of them, and when play was called at 5:33 p.m., Kurt Kitayama had dropped four shots, and 27 spots on the leaderboard. His precipitous drop came as the result of opening with a trio of bogeys and making a double-bogey six at #8, the cliff-hanging par-four that opens the difficult three-hole run of par-four’s—8, 9, and 10—that famed sportswriter Dan Jenkins dubbed “Abalone Corner”.

Former Stanford golfer Brandon Wu made the strongest showing of the NorCal trio, sitting at 3-under for the round through ten holes to hold at T-5. San José’s Joseph Bramlett played even par through ten holes, birdies at 2, 4, and 6 being offset by a bogey at the par-three 5th hole and a double-bogey at #8 after flying the green to the topside bunker and taking a chip and three putts to get down. He had dropped eight spots to T-13 when play was called.

Justin Rose goes into the final holes of the round the solo leader at 15-under after posting 3-under through 9 holes. Rose had teed off at 10 when the horn blew calling play, so he marked his ball—in good position on the right side of the tenth fairway—and headed for the clubhouse.

Twenty players had completed their rounds by the time play was called, and players within the top twelve when the horn blew have anywhere from one to nine holes left to complete when play resumes Monday morning at 8 a.m.

Wild weather follows delayed third round into Sunday conclusion at AT&T Pro-Am

After an eventful day on Saturday, when high winds suspended and then stopped play, the third round of the 2023 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-am wrapped up Sunday morning, setting up the reshuffle to get the final round underway. It was an archetypal “Crosby” day, with sun, wind, rain, and hail all within the three hours it took to finalize the third round of the tournament.

Justin Rose took over the 54-hole lead from over at a calmed-down and once again easy-playing MPCC Shore Course, where he completed eight holes at even par yesterday before the suspension of play and was then 6-under for 10 this morning, closing out 54 holes at 12-under.

When the third round wrapped up at around 11:30 Saturday morning Rose was followed on the leaderboard by Indiana native Peter Malnati and Chico, California’s Kurt Kitayama, both at 11-under. Tennessee’s Keith Mitchell went 2-under at Pebble in the third round, good for solo 4th, with bogeys at 10 and 17 keeping him out of a share of the lead.

Following Mitchell at 9-under, T-5, NorCal natives Joseph Bramlett, of San José, and Brandon Wu, of Danville—both Stanford Men’s Golf alumni—were within striking distance of the lead once play restarted. Joining the two Californians at T-5 were Floridian Brent Grant; first round leader Hank Lebioda, who has been stuck in neutral since taking the lead on Thursday with an 8-under 64 at MPCC Shore; and Norwegian Viktor Hovland. Hovland won the 2018 U.S. Amateur Championship here at Pebble Beach, earning exemptions into the 2019 Masters as well as the 2019 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach, where he claimed Low Amateur honors.

AT&T-sponsored Jordan Spieth, the 2017 winner and 2022 runner-up in this event, hung on to make the cut at 1-under, maintaining a now 11-year-long streak of made cuts at this event.

Saturday, February 4, 2023

“Crosby weather” strikes on Day Three of the 2023 AT&T Pro-Am

Despite the best efforts of the PGA Tour in bumping tee times up by an hour in the face of forecast high winds, Mother Nature took the wheel today at the 2023 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, as increasing winds led to a weather delay being called just after 12 o’clock. Conditions didn’t improve (not that any of the old Crosby hands expected them to…) and play was called at 2:30 p.m.

The current plans announced by the PGA Tour are to return Sunday morning at 8:00 to finish the third round, with final-round play expected to start at 12:30. Amateurs are not required to return for the completion of Round 3 (but are welcome to, if they choose), and only the pros will be playing in the final round. A pro-am champ will be announced after the completion of 54 holes. With the amateurs being excised from the field for the final round the cut will move to the Tour’s normal 65 and ties, from this event’s usual 60 and ties when the pro-am teams are competing.

Chief Referee Gary Young explained that the delay was predicated upon conditions experienced at holes 9 and 15 at MPCC Shore, where the exposed conditions led to instances of unacceptable ball movement on the greens. In multi-course events of this type, every effort is made to maintain identical playing conditions at each course for each round. A minor relocation of a hole, of no more than a yard or so, can be made if necessary, but conditions at MPCC were such that the amount of change in the hole locations that would have been required to mitigate the situation was deemed to be unacceptable.

Before the weather moved in with a vengeance, Saturday morning had gotten off to a good start for NorCal golf fans, as overnight leader Kurt Kitayama of Chico was quickly joined at the top of the leaderboard by two fellow Northern Californians, and Stanford Men’s Golf alums, Joseph Bramlett, of San José, and Brandon Wu, of Danville. Bramlett and Wu played at Pebble Beach Golf Links today, while Kitayama was at Spyglass Hill.

Wu quickly stepped up to the solo lead with a birdie at his fifth hole of the morning, Pebble’s long par-four 14th, and was joined there minutes later by Bramlett, who rolled in a 32-foot birdie putt at the Jack Nicklaus-designed par-three 5th hole.

Bogeys in tough, windy conditions at holes 9 and 10 (#9 is playing hardest today, at nearly half a shot over par) dropped Bramlett back to 9-under, but he got one of those shots back at #11, a strategic uphill par 4 that takes the course routing away from the ocean. He had this to say about the weather conditions after play was suspended:

Friday, February 3, 2023

Chico’s Kurt Kitayama leads after two rounds at AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

Pebble Beach Golf Links, and indeed all of the Monterey Peninsula, on and off the three golf courses where the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am is taking place this week, is utterly spectacular in bright, sunny weather. In gloomy, overcast weather like today, with a little bit of light rain and drizzle thrown in, it takes on an entirely different aspect—calm, quiet, and conducive to introspection and deep thoughts.

OK, enough of that—let’s talk about golf.

Today’s light rain and drizzle—though it led PGA Tour officials to launch a preemptive strike and call for “lift, clean, and place” for the first three rounds, despite Thursday being mostly clear and dry—did not impede play at any of the tournament’s three courses: Pebble Beach Golf Links, Spyglass Hill, and MPCC Shore. The 8:30 opening tee times went off without a hitch at all three, and play was never stopped or delayed over the course of the day.

The stiff onshore breeze that was bending the flagstick on Pebble’s shore-hugging 18th hole late Thursday afternoon died down overnight; only a moderate surf breaking against the rocks at the water’s edge broke the calm.

First-round leader Hank Lebioda, who opened with an 8-under 63 at MPCC Shore on Thursday, started his morning with a birdie at the daunting par-four 10th hole at Pebble Beach, solidifying his lead, while a posse of other players, including Chico, California’s Kurt Kitayama, Harry Higgs, and England’s Justin Rose, moved up to 8-under.

Rose, playing at Spyglass Hill, went out in 32 on the back nine, on the strength of two birdies and an ace—at the par-three 15th hole—with another birdie, at the 3rd hole, pulling him to within a shot of the leader, but two late bogeys dropped him to 6-under and T-11. Harry Higgs carded two birdies and an eagle, at Pebble’s par-four 4th hole, with a bogey at the par-five 6th—after excursions to the left rough, the right rough, and a right greenside bunker—marring his card, also dropping to 6-under and T-11.

The wind came up after lunch, most noticeably at Pebble Beach, but it appeared not to faze Kitayama, who closed his second round at the 9th hole, a tough cliffside par-four, after rolling in a birdie at #8 to tie Lebioda at 9-under.

After moving to 10-under and the solo lead earlier in the day after a birdie at #2, the shortish par-five which has played the easiest today relative to par, Lebioda dropped back to 8-under with a double-bogey 5 at the fifth hole. Designed by Jack Nicklaus and put into play in 1998, number 5 is a deceptively difficult par-three that is playing second-toughest in the tournament to date with an average score of 3.58. Recovering one of his lost strokes with a birdie at the long, intimidating par-five 6th hole, a bogey at #9 dropped Lebioda to 8-under, T2.

With that slip by Lebioda, Kurt Kitayama inherited the lead going into the weekend.

Kitayama’s lead headlines a strong halfway-point showing by NorCal golfers. San José native and Stanford Men’s Golf alum Joseph Bramlett went around the Shore Course at Monterey Peninsula Country Club in 4-under 67 today to close the day at 8-under, T-2; Brandon Wu, another Stanford Men’s Golf alum and a native of Danville, joined Bramlett at T-2 after completing his second round, also at MPCC Shore.

Martin Trainer of Palo Alto sits T-12 at 6-under; Maverick McNealy, who narrowly missed a win in this tournament two years ago, sits at 1-under after two rounds, T-57, as does Nick Watney of Davis. UCLA graduate Kevin Chappell, a native of Fresno, is even par going into the third round, and James Hahn of Alameda is at 3-over. Hahn, who notched his first win at the 2015 Northern Trust Open at Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, recovered from a 6-over first round at Spyglass Hill with a 3-under 69 at MPCC Shore today.

Tomorrow’s forecast is showing rain, with high winds in the afternoon prompting a one-hour bump in the starting tee times. First balls will be in the air at 7:30 a.m. at the tournament’s three courses, in hopes of concluding play before the worst weather moves in.

Thursday, February 2, 2023

The State of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

Golf fans of a certain age, myself included, remember when the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am—aka the Crosby Clambake, the Bing Crosby Pro-Am, etc.—was a glamour event. Back in the days when the list of celebrity amateurs included such names as Clint Eastwood, James Garner, Jack Lemmon, and Phil Harris, and the professional ranks could list multiple members of the Top 20 players list. These days, however, as the amateurs list has moved from the original ratio of roughly four parts professional golfers to one part show business and sports celebrities, to a one-to-one ratio in a field that consists mostly of middle- to lower-tier pros, and CEOs and B- and C-list celebrities, the revered tournament has lost much of its luster.

But what would be required to return this tournament to some semblance of its former glory? On the amateur side of the roster that is a two-pronged question: 1) How to get a better class of celebrities, and 2) how to improve the viewing (and playing) experience while still maintaining the unique pro-am format.

The first part of that question is difficult to answer. The mechanics of who gets invited is a closely held secret, I imagine, known only to the inner circle of the responsible people in the presenting sponsor’s organization and their counterparts in the tournament’s organizing committee. The names of such popular celebrities of recent years as George Lopez and Andy Garcia (who was easily the best-dressed and most dapper amateur in the field in recent times) are now absent from the amateur roster, supplanted by DJs with single names and rap singers with rap sheets. The definition of “celebrity” has become so diluted these days that the glamour associated with the no-s**t-for-real movie stars that walked the fairways of Pebble, Cypress, and MPCC Shore in the “olden days” appears to be lost forever.

When it comes to improving the viewing and playing experience while maintaining the pro-am format, I think that that is an easier question to answer—though the people who mind the purse strings aren’t likely to look favorably on my solution: trim the field. The buy-in for amateur players is—well, it’s a big number; but one that a large number of “high-value individuals” (aka “rich people”) are willing to pay. I guess the cost is worth it for bragging rights at the 19th Hole of their home clubs; to be able to say that they played Pebble (and the other two courses) with a pro. Needless to say, the wealthy non-celebrity amateurs bring a lot cash to the coffers of the Monterey Peninsula Foundation, money that allows the Foundation to do a lot of good things in the way of charitable giving in the area.

Maybe the 4:1 ratio of Bing’s original format is too much to ask for, but cutting the pro-am field to no more than half of the full field is a feasible solution—or perhaps even 1:3, allowing the field to be split such that one course in each of the first three rounds is pro-am teams slogging through six-hour rounds while the pro-only groupings play the other two at a more normal pace.

As for improving the professional field, that is another two-part question. While once upon a time the chance to network and schmooze with the movers and shakers of the business world was a draw for the professional players in the field, in these days of agents, social media, and even the tour’s PIP system, that seems to be less of an attraction—and it is well-known that six-hour rounds with a CEO or hedge fund manager, even on the amazing and scenic courses in the tournament’s rota, are offputting to most of the top pros.

The other factor is money (of course.) While no slouch in the prize money department, with a total purse of $9 million and $1,620,000 to the winner, the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am lags behind the Tour’s new classification of “designated” events with their $20 million purses. In fact, Davis Thompson, who recently carded a career-best second-place finish at The American Express at La Quinta, in Palm Springs, WD’d from this tournament after receiving a sponsor’s exemption into next week’s Waste Management Phoenix Open, a designated event which carries the aforementioned $20M purse. His advertised reason was to get a week of rest after four weeks of play, but one wonders if, given his recent success at desert golf, the $20M purse isn’t an incentive.

Jordan Spieth had something to say about things that could help the tournament, both possible format changes as well as potential elevated status, in his press conference on Wednesday:

“I’m not sure how it could work. Let’s put it this way: I'm not sure exactly how it could work. I think maintaining, at least, if it’s not every year elevated, if it were to rotate or something like that.

You know, you still have the opportunity to have the pro-am portion and you could still work it into an elevated event, I think. It doesn’t really need to change. Or that year you have the pro-am going on on other two courses or — I think there's some options to play around with.”

If you have been reading my coverage over the years, you know that I am a big fan of this tournament, however it goes – but I think that in order to regain its former prestige, some changes will have to be made. I will be here for it, whatever happens.

Wednesday, February 1, 2023

Starting my second decade at the Crosby

Once again, my favorite week of the year has rolled around. No, it’s not Spring Break, or even Christmas vacation – it’s Crosby Week.

The poster for the first “Crosby” hints at the
fun-loving nature of the event in the early days.

For those in my audience who are below the age of, say, 50, “the Crosby” (officially the “Bing Crosby Pro-Amateur Golf Championship”, aka “the “Crosby Clambake”) is what the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am was called before AT&T brought a bucket of money to the table and started a decades-long run as presenting sponsor of the tournament. Started in the 1930s by crooner Bing Crosby (you youngsters can Google him) as a weekend get-together  for a bunch of his showbiz friends at Old Brockway Golf Course on Lake Tahoe’s North Shore, the tournament was later moved to Rancho Santa Fe, just north of San Diego, where the event’s pro-am format began. Bing would pair touring pros with amateur players drawn from the ranks of his show-business friends and the member of the Lakeside Golf Club in Hollywood, where he was a member (and five-time club champion).

The event came back from a 1942 wartime postponement with a move to the Monterey Peninsula in 1947, where it was played at Pebble Beach Golf Links and a rotating cast of supporting courses such as Cypress Point, the Monterey Peninsula Country Club’s Shore Course, Poppy Hills (home of the NCGA) and Spyglass Hill, over the years. In 1986 the people at AT&T bought out Bing’s widow, Katherine Crosby, changed the name of the tournament, and have been carrying on the tradition ever since.

My own history with this tournament started with watching it on TV as a kid growing up in nearby Salinas. I didn’t play golf, nor did any of my friends or their fathers, but everyone we knew watched the tournament. When I finally got interested in golf, many years later (thanks to the golf writing of Dan Jenkins…) and started playing and then writing about golf, I was lucky enough to get a foot in the door of the golf media world as a part-time freelancer, and get the privilege of entry to the media center at Pebble Beach for this event.

I actually wrote about this event for the first time in 2011, the year that saw long-time celebrity entrant Bill Murray and his then-new pro partner D.A. Points score the historic double, their team taking the pro-am trophy while Points won the pro event. I wrote that article (Cinderella Story) based on watching the event on TV at home, but two years later I was walking into the media center in the conference rooms above the Pebble Beach Gallery shops, a 50-something semi-rookie (I had started my official golf media career the previous year at the 2012 U.S. Open at the Olympic Club), rubbing elbows with the men and women who do this for a living.

I have covered the event every year since (though physically absent during the lockdown year of 2021), so the 2023 tournament marks my eleventh go-round, and the first year of my second decade as more than just a fan of the event.

In that time I have made friends amongst the ranks of the people who cover sports for a living. I kept my ears open and my mouth shut (for the most part), learning what I could from the pros in what used to be called the “press room”, and have enjoyed enlightening conversations with the likes of Bay Area sports writing legend Art Spander; the San Francisco Chronicle’s Ron Kroichick; and Mark Purdy, the now-retired sports maven for the San José Mercury News. When my first media affiliation, with the Examiner.com website, ended with the site’s demise in 2016, the connection I had made with the NCGA through my fellow Salinas homeboy and now NCGA Communications Director, Jerry Stewart, has kept me “in with the in-crowd” (PGA Tour press credentials are not available to freelancers without an affiliation with an acknowledged media outlet.)

It has been a privilege to walk the cart paths of Pebble Beach and the affiliated courses over the past decade, and to write about the events that transpire over these four days. I have seen a varied cast of characters leading and even winning this event, from big names like Phil Mickelson (twice) to no-names like Ted Potter, Jr. (sorry, Ted), and the storied venue and its companions in the rota haves never failed to provide drama and excitement – not to mention the best scenery on the PGA Tour. I look forward to at least a few more years of bringing my audience the stories from Pebble Beach (I’m no spring chicken, after all…) and hope that people enjoy reading about it as much as I enjoy writing about it.