Phil Mickelson was urged by R&A to skip Celebration of Champions and Champions’ Dinner (but is having a great 150th Open anyway)

“We both kind of agreed that it would be best if I didn’t.”

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ST. ANDREWS, Scotland – Phil Mickelson said he was contacted by the R&A a few weeks back and basically was asked not to attend the Celebration of Champions on Monday and the Champions’ Dinner on Tuesday.

The 2013 Open champion decided to pass on both.

And he was less than heartbroken.

“(The R&A) said, ‘Look, we don’t think it’s a great idea you go, but if you want to, you can,’” Mickelson said following Thursday’s first round of the 150th Open Championship. “I just didn’t want to make a big deal about it, so I said fine.

“We both kind of agreed that it would be best if I didn’t.”

Mickelson has still had a great week. He first took to the Old Course last Friday and has played every day since. And the Auld Grey Toun has not disappointed.

“I love being here. Everybody here loves golf, and we find this place to be very spiritual,” he said. “As great as this game has been to me, to be able to come here to the (Home of Golf) and compete again, I think this is my sixth one here.

“I just see the greatness in the course when you get different winds because you see bunkers you don’t even know are there. Just the greatness of it kind of shines. I love playing and competing here. It’s just a special place.”

Mickelson seems to be coming out of a vortex of strife in his life since he made derogatory and inflammatory remarks about the PGA Tour and its commissioner, Jay Monahan, as well as the oppressive Saudi Arabia regie that is bankrolling LIV Golf. He went on a four-month sabbatical. He’s been indefinitely suspended from the PGA Tour. And he’s making just his seventh start this year – two on the LIV Golf circuit.

But he has no regrets about joining the rival league that has disrupted the ecosystem of men’s pro golf. Mickelson reportedly got $200 million to join. The member of the World Golf Hall of Fame was heckled a bit in his first-round 72 but wasn’t bothered in the least.

“I think that I couldn’t be more excited and ecstatic with where I’m at,” he said. “I love the events. I get to have golf in my life and competitive golf in my life on a scale that is fun, exciting, different, and lets me play and compete but still do the things outside that I want to do. I’ve got a nice trip lined up after this and things that I haven’t been able to do in the past. So, no, I couldn’t be happier.

“I made the right decision for me. I couldn’t be happier. I think it’s been really good. I can’t wait to get to New Jersey and play another event there.”

Mickelson also can’t wait to put his game back together.

“So I had four months off. Obviously, when I came back, I wasn’t really sharp. I thought I was playing a little bit better than I was,” he said. “My game doesn’t feel far off at all. It just doesn’t.

“I let a few strokes slide today, but for the most part, I actually feel pretty good with, like, the parts, but I’ve just got to bring them together to make the whole. I actually think I have some good rounds in me. I think I’m going to play really well the next few days.”

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LIV Golf, not the 150th Open Championship, dominates R&A chief executive Martin Slumbers’ press conference

“Professional golfers are entitled to choose where they want to play and to accept the prize money that’s offered to them. I have absolutely no issue with that at all. But there is no such thing as a free lunch.”

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland – In his meeting with the media Wednesday at the 150th Open Championship at the home of golf, R&A chief executive Martin Slumbers knew what was coming, and in brief but at times stern remarks addressed a topic that has caused disruption in men’s professional golf.

That would be LIV Golf, the burgeoning rival league led by Greg Norman and backed by Saudi Arabia that has lured some of the game’s biggest names away from the PGA Tour and DP World Tour, including Dustin Johnson, Brooks Koepka, Phil Mickelson, Sergio Garcia, Patrick Reed and Bryson DeChambeau.

His remarks, while noteworthy, did nothing to stem the onslaught of questions.

Try as he might, Slumbers could not make the celebration of the 150th Open Championship on the Old Course at the Home of Golf the main talking point.

But he was unwavering in his remarks and answers dealing with LIV Golf.

“Professional golfers are entitled to choose where they want to play and to accept the prize money that’s offered to them. I have absolutely no issue with that at all. But there is no such thing as a free lunch,” Slumbers said. “I believe the model we’ve seen at (London’s) Centurion and (Oregon’s) Pumpkin Ridge (the first two tournaments of LIV Golf) is not in the best long-term interests of the sport as a whole and is entirely driven by money. We believe it undermines the merit-based culture and the spirit of open competition that makes golf so special.

“I would also like to say that, in my opinion, the continued commentary that this is about growing the game is just not credible and if anything, is harming the perception of our sport which we are working so hard to improve.”

When Slumbers was done with his remarks, 16 of the 24 questions had LIV Golf at their heart. One concerned Norman, who was asked not to come for Monday’s Celebration of Champions exhibition and Tuesday’s Champions’ Dinner

“We are absolutely determined to ensure that this goes down in history as about the 150th Open,” Slumbers said. “We decided that there would be, based on noise that I was receiving from multiple sources, that with (Norman’s attendance), that was going to be potentially unlikely.

“We decided that we didn’t want the distraction. We wanted to ensure that the conversation was all about this week and playing golf and balls in the air tomorrow and the Champion Golfer on Sunday.”

Many of the questions concerned the R&A’s potential adjustments to the qualifying and exemption regulations for the oldest championship in golf. This year, those players with LIV Golf were allowed to play.

“We have been asked quite frequently about banning players. Let me be very clear. That’s not on our agenda,” Slumbers said. “But what is on our agenda is that we will review our exemptions and qualifications criteria for the Open. And whilst we do that every year, we absolutely reserve the right to make changes as our Open Championships Committee deems appropriate.

“Players have to earn their place in The Open, and that is fundamental to its ethos and its unique global appeal. We will hold totally true to the Open being open to anybody. But we may well look at how you get into that, whether it’s an exemption or a need to qualify through our qualifying process.

“With that, I’d like to get back to what we are all here for, The 150th Open.”

That proved futile.

The next question dealt with Slumbers’ being on the Board of Directors of the Official World Golf Rankings Association. The OWGR will determine whether LIV Golf will receive world rankings points, which would help some players qualify for the major championships. Slumber said the question needed to be addressed to the chairman of the OWGR.

The next question dealt with the 150th Open.

Tiger Woods awarded honorary membership into Royal & Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews

His mood – and health – have been so good that he’s played 58 holes in practice rounds.

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland – Tiger Woods has had the week of the 150th Open Championship circled on his calendar for more than a year.

He was ecstatic to have worked and healed enough following a single-car accident in February 2021 that nearly took his life to be at the Home of Golf this week to try and add a fourth Claret Jug to his collection.

His mood – and health – have been so good since setting foot in this old grey seaside village that he’s played 58 holes in practice rounds. That’s twice as many as he played ahead of both the Masters and the PGA Championship.

And on Wednesday, Tiger’s week got even better when it was announced that Woods was one of three golfers to accept invitations to become Honorary Members of the Royal & Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews.

“It is not only the Home of Golf, but a place in this world that I hold near my heart,” the 15-time major winner and three-time Open Championship victor said in a statement. “I am humbled to accept this invitation alongside these outstanding players today, as well as those who came before us.”

Also receiving honorary membership were four-time major winner and 2014 Champion Golfer of the Year Rory McIlroy and 1999 Open Championship winner Paul Lawrie.

“It’s a privilege to represent a club that has done so much for golf over so many years,” McIlroy said. “I’m proud to play my part in promoting golf around the world.”

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The R&A to Greg Norman: Stay away from the 150th Open Championship at St. Andrews

Norman won the Open Championship in 1986 at Turnberry and in 1993 at Royal St. George’s.

The R&A said no way to Greg Norman.

The ruler of the game’s Rules of Golf outside the U.S. and Mexico who also stage the Open Championship announced Saturday it had reached out to Norman to tell him he was not invited to play in the Celebration of Champions on Monday.

Norman, a member of the World Golf Hall of Fame, won the Open Championship in 1986 at Turnberry and in 1993 at Royal St. George’s. But Norman is the head of LIV Golf, the Saudi Arabia-backed rival league that has lured top stars away from the PGA Tour and DP World Tour and caused angst in golf’s world order.

“In response to enquiries regarding the R&A Celebration of Champions field and the Champions’ Dinner, we can confirm that we contacted Greg Norman to advise him that we decided not to invite him to attend on this occasion,” the R&A said in a statement. “The 150th Open is an extremely important milestone for golf and we want to ensure that the focus remains on celebrating the Championship and its heritage. Unfortunately, we do not believe that would be the case if Greg were to attend. We hope that when circumstances allow, Greg will be able to attend again in the future.”

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National Golf Links set to host Curtis Cup for the first time in 2030

The USA leads the overall series, 30-8-3.

The Curtis Cup will be contested at National Golf Links for the first time in 2030, the USGA has announced. The famed Charles Blair Macdonald design in Southampton, New York, hosted the inaugural Walker Cup in 1922, and the matches returned there in 2013.

National Golf Links will become only the fourth club to host both the Walker Cup and Curtis Cup, joining Merion Golf Club, The Minikahda Club and Quaker Ridge Golf Club.

From June 10-12, the 42nd Curtis Cup will take place at Merion for the second time.

This will be the first time a women’s USGA championship will be contested at National Golf Links, which ranks No. 5 on Golfweek’s Best Classic Courses.

Private Golf Course in NY

The Curtis Cup, held biennially, features two teams of eight female amateur players, with one representing the United States and the other representing Great Britain and Ireland. The USA leads the overall series, 30-8-3.

After Merion next month, upcoming Curtis Cup venues include England’s Sunningdale Golf Club in 2024 and Bel-Air Country Club in Los Angeles in 2026.

“We’re thrilled to be able to welcome back the USGA, the R&A and some of the finest amateur players in the world,” said Michael X. McBride, chair of the Golf Committee for National Golf Links. “George Herbert Walker truly valued the camaraderie and level of play involved in team competition, and for National Golf Links to now be involved in support of the women’s amateur game is a special moment for all of us associated with the club.”

Stanford’s Rose Zhang and Rachel Heck are among those headlining this year’s U.S. Curtis Cup team, along with Amari Avery, Latanna Stone, Emilia Migliaccio, Megha Ganne,  Rachel Kuehn and 2021 U.S. Women’s Amateur champ Jensen Castle.

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Lynch: Three major championships will be cheapened in this season of Saudi sportswashing

The 58 days between Tuesday at Southern Hills and Thursday at St. Andrews promise to be a contentious period.

In their more reflective moments, it must rankle the triumvirate of Messrs. Waugh, Whan and Slumbers that the most compelling drama in golf over the coming months is likely to occur outside the ropes of their respective major championships. The 58 days between Tuesday at Southern Hills and Thursday at St. Andrews will be contentious and do much to shape the sport’s future landscape, and will leave many industry executives yearning for the halcyon days of Shells Wonderful World of Golf, when the influence of oil money in the game was considerably less toxic.

Seth Waugh’s PGA Championship is already being impacted. Phil Mickelson registered for the tournament but his agent said no conclusion about his schedule should be drawn from that, or his simultaneous request for permission from the PGA Tour to play a Saudi-funded event in the U.K. on June 9-11 (grimly meaningful numbers where the Saudis are concerned). Mickelson could defend his title at the PGA Championship, or he might stay home in the knowledge that doing so would only generate greater attention for the LIV Golf Invitational near London as the possible scene of his return.

The Saudi event in Britain is really just a distraction. Precedent exists for overseas money grabs so the PGA Tour will probably grant the necessary releases (perhaps with conditions attached) for members who want to compete, as it did for the Saudi International in February. Commissioner Jay Monahan’s decision must be rendered by May 10.

The first shots in the real war will be fired one week later.

Tuesday, May 17, falls during the week of the PGA Championship and is the deadline by which PGA Tour members must apply for waivers to compete in the second Saudi event, scheduled for July 1-3 at Pumpkin Ridge Golf Club in Portland, Oregon. Monahan’s decision on those asks must come no less than 30 days before the first round, or by Wednesday, June 1, but could be delivered at 5:01 p.m. on May 17. It will be a no.

PGA Tour rules do not allow releases for tournaments held in North America against its own schedule. Players know this—all of them signed up for the policies governing membership—so those who request an okay for Portland will be suspected of either stupidity or sedition. By May 17, the Tour will know who wants to play for Saudi cash in the U.S., a list that will probably include the names of some who intend to compete even without a release. And that’s where Monahan’s red line will be drawn, a belief emphasized in messages I’ve received in recent days from a number of his members.

Two scenarios then emerge: a player defies the Tour, triggering disciplinary action and potential litigation; or, the Saudis—under the innocuous-sounding moniker of LIV Golf—sue over the Tour’s refusal to grant releases, which would at least be an improvement on how the Crown Prince’s operatives usually handle disputes.

So Mike Whan’s U.S. Open will take place one week after the Saudi’s U.K. event and amid the fallout from waivers being denied for Portland. The toppling dominoes then reach the office of Martin Slumbers, whose Open Championship begins 11 days after Portland concludes. It’s feasible that by then Monahan may have issued suspensions. Will the R&A allow PGA Tour members not in good standing to compete at St. Andrews?

“There is no specific condition on that,” said an R&A spokesperson, wording sufficiently vague as to deny certainty to all. The same inquiry went to the U.S. Golf Association, although suspensions are unlikely prior to the U.S. Open. A USGA spokesperson replied: “We pride ourselves in being the most open championship in the world. However, we reserve the right, as we always have, to review suspensions from other golf organizations on a case-by-case basis.”

If the R&A takes a similar tack, then some well-known players might be denied entry to the 150th Open, though the names generating most speculation are unlikely to be of concern to the engraver come Sunday evening anyway.

The 58 days from May 17 to July 14 will reveal the extent to which golf’s bodies view Saudi sportswashing as a shared challenge. Absent from that fight will be Alexandra Armas. The CEO of the Ladies European Tour is continuing her ghastly flattery of the Saudi regime, to whom she bartered her circuit in exchange for sponsorship of five events. “To many of our members, these events feel like majors,” she gushed this week.

The LET runs on fumes—purses in non-Saudi tournaments are typically around $300,000—which is why Armas has put members in the position of choosing between abetting Saudi sportswashing or not making a living. It’s easier to understand her rationale than that of men on lucrative tours who make an individual choice to take Saudi money, but the decisions made by either are worthy of derision.

If the attempted Saudi hijacking of golf is ultimately repelled—an outcome far from certain—there ought to follow a proper reckoning on where and with whom professional tours do business. However much the tours view this as a matter of commerce and competition, there also exists a moral imperative to ensure golf is not used to normalize authoritarian states. The LET won’t lack company in the dock. The Asian Tour sold itself wholesale to the Saudis. The DP World Tour has long been compromised by visiting undemocratic provinces. So too has the PGA Tour with its presence in China.

Those indulgences are indefensible and should cease. Doing so might even weaken the water sprinkler of Whataboutism on social media, a phenomenon powered by clods who think discussion of one wrong is illegitimate unless it’s footnoted with misdeeds by every organization, individual, company and nation they deem indictable.

In the coming weeks, three of golf’s four great championships will feel the repercussions of years of improvident deal-making by tours whose commercial decisions helped lead to the geopolitical juncture at which the game finds itself. All four majors might ultimately prove to be the last bulwark against the entire sport’s looming disgrace.

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When it comes to the distance debate, the USGA and R&A have a friend in Augusta National

If Augusta opted not to implement the distance rules, it would be a potentially mortal blow to the debate.

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“You know Augusta National is going to be the real linchpin when it comes to distance, don’t you?”

I heard that sentence, or at least a version of it, several times during conversations with equipment makers after the U.S. Golf Association and R&A announced they wanted to explore new Model Local Rules that could reduce distance at the elite levels. Those two organizations want to potentially modify how they test golf balls too.

The USGA and the R&A are the governing bodies of golf. They make the rules, set the equipment standards and oversee the handicap system. They research the sustainability of soil and grasses, report on the environmental impacts of the game, study ways to improve the pace of play and host tournaments worldwide, including the U.S. Open and British Open.

But the Augusta National Golf Club will also play a critical role because its reach has expanded beyond Washington Road and Old Berckmans Road. These days, Augusta National awards invitations to the Masters to the Asian Pacific Amateur Championship and the Latin American Amateur Championship winners, so its influence is felt in those regions. It hosts the Augusta National Women’s Amateur Championship, which has quickly become one of the most coveted amateur titles in golf and the Drive, Chip and Putt National Finals on the Sunday before the start of the Masters.

The club is also home to the most influential course in the world. With all due respect to the Old Course at St. Andrews, the universally acknowledged home of golf in Scotland, the most influential course in the world is in Georgia. Since Dr. Alister MacKenzie and Bobby Jones transformed Fruitland Nurseries into a golf course that opened in 1932, it has been revered.

Only a privileged few get to play on the holy ground, but tens of millions of people see it every year on TV and think, “Now that is what a great golf course is supposed to look like.” The green fairways are lush and devoid of weeds, the edges of the bunkers are razor-sharp, the flowers explode in color, while the sand is pearly white. Even the new trees look like they have been there for generations.

When it comes to modifying the course and making sure it continues to challenge the game’s best players, whether that means adding length, adding or removing trees, or adjusting the position of fairway bunkers, no obstacle is too great. Augusta National has a state-of-the-art sub air system that can pull water down through the soil and pump it away to make fairways and greens drier, scores of lawnmowers to cut the grass and plenty of fertilizer is used to make the plants, bushes and trees vibrant. Unlike many golf facilities, money is not an issue at Augusta.

So, if there is one course in the world that could afford to keep up with the trend in distance, it’s Augusta National.

2022 Augusta National Women's Amateur - Final Round
Augusta National Chairman Fred Ridley speaks during the trophy presentation following the Augusta National Women’s Amateur golf tournament at Augusta National Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Michael Madrid-USA TODAY Sports

If the USGA and R&A decide to create Model Local Rules that allow tournaments to mandate players use distance-reducing equipment, they will put those rules into play at events they control, including the U.S. Open and British Open. It would then be up to the tournament committee at Augusta National to decide whether or not to implement the Model Local Rules at the Masters and the PGA of America to decide what to do at the PGA Championship.

If Augusta opted not to implement the distance-reducing Model Local Rules, it would be a potentially mortal blow to the distance debate. But, if you have listened to Augusta National’s chairman, Fred Ridley, over the last year, it sounds like that will not happen.

Before the start of the 2021 Masters, Ridley said, “We have had a long-standing position of supporting the governing bodies. I was very encouraged when I saw the areas of interest that were published by the USGA and R&A [in 2021].” He went on to add, “Growth of the game is a big issue, but our position would be to support the governing bodies, and then if there is no action taken, for whatever reason, then we need to look at other options with regard to our golf course and what we can do to continue to challenge these great golfers and maintain the design integrity that was initially adopted by Mr. Jones and Mr. MacKenzie.”

This year, after discussing the changes to the 11th and 15th holes, Ridley said, “We look forward to further discussions during the comment period this summer, as well as future recommendations and ultimately implementation.”

Ridley won a national championship while playing at the University of Florida in the early 1970s, won the 1975 U.S. Amateur (defeating Curtis Strange and Andy Bean), competed in five majors and played in the Walker Cup in 1977. He was heavily involved with the USGA, served as the USGA’s Championship Committee chairman, and was elected president of the USGA in 2004. People refer to him as “Chairman Ridley ” everywhere he goes around Augusta National Golf Club, but at the USGA offices, he’s Fred.

So, it’s safe to assume that if Augusta National Golf Club is going to play a role in the distance debate and the USGA and R&A decide to create Model Local Rules that could mandate golfers use distance-reducing equipment at an elite tournament, the Masters is going to adopt those Model Local Rules if Fred Ridley has a say in the matter. And as chairman, he’s got the biggest vote of them all.

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USGA, R&A exploring new ways to test balls, Model Local Rules to slow down drivers for elite golfers

“Today, for all golfers, represents just another step in our process,” said the USGA’s chief governing officer, Thomas Pagel.

The United States Golf Association and the R&A sent an official notice to equipment manufacturers on Tuesday regarding new Areas of Interest. The three-page message did not include any changes to the Rules of Golf, and it did not announce any changes to the rules governing drivers, golf balls or any other gear either.

What the USGA and R&A’s Areas of Interest email did do, however, is reveal how the game’s governing bodies likely intend to curtail the trend of elite golfers hitting the ball farther and golf courses getting longer.

In February 2020, the USGA and R&A released a joint statement saying hat they feel the trend in distance is putting golf on an unsustainable path. Golf courses have been getting longer, according to the USGA and R&A, to challenge players who hit the ball farther, and maintaining those courses requires more water, fertilizer and labor. Historically significant courses that can not be lengthened also risk becoming obsolete and devoid of challenge for the game’s best players.

On October 12, 2021, a new Model Local Rule was announced, allowing tournament organizers to limit the maximum allowable club length of non-putters to 46 inches. It became available for use on January 1 and will be in place at the 2022 U.S. Open and U.S. Women’s Open. It has already been adopted by both the PGA Tour and the LPGA. 

Now, the USGA and R&A have told manufacturers they are considering modifying how they test golf balls for conformity. They are also interested in learning more about how Model Local Rules could reduce the spring-like effect in drivers and reduce the maximum moment of inertia (MOI) to reward center-impact shots more for elite golfers.

R&A takes stance against Russian invasion of Ukraine, bans entries from Russia and Belarus

The R&A expected no entries from Russia or Belarus this year, yet announced none would be allowed.

The R&A is the latest international sports governing body to condemn Russia for invading Ukraine, with the Scotland-based golf organization announcing it would decline entry to any golfer from Russia or Belarus, which has supported the war that broke out last week.

The R&A – which operates the British Open and several other professional and amateur events – also plans to contribute to a humanitarian aid fund and offer support for the Ukrainian Golf Federation, which on its site lists five golf clubs inside Ukraine.

The R&A acknowledged that it expected to have had no entries this year in its championships from Russia or Belarus, making it largely a symbolic gesture of support, but it joins the International Olympic Committee and the International Golf Federation in banning athletes from Russia and Belarus.

From the R&A’s site:

“We have considered the situation in the context of our direct responsibilities for governance, for staging golf events and for developing and investing in the sport around the world.

  • The R&A fully supports the recommendations of the IOC and the International Golf Federation in excluding Russia and Belarus from international team championships.
  • The R&A is not currently expecting entries from Russian or Belarusian golfers in scheduled R&A-qualifying events, championships or international matches in the upcoming season, professional or amateur.  In the event that we were to receive entries, we would decline.
  • We are reviewing the implications for matters such as international rankings and the World Handicap System.
  • The R&A will contribute to a humanitarian aid fund and we will offer direct support to the Ukrainian Golf Federation.”

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Jack Nicklaus continues to campaign for the governing bodies to roll back the ball: ‘They say they put a line in the sand but that line in the sand keeps getting wider. They keep crossing it.’

If Jack Nicklaus has said it once, he’s said it a thousand times: the golf ball goes too far.

If Jack Nicklaus has said it once, he’s said it a thousand times: he believes the golf ball goes too far.

Golf’s distance dilemma has been debated for years. Nicklaus has been arguing for golf’s governing bodies to roll back the distance of the golf ball since the 1970s. “I said, guys, look at this now because this is going to be a problem,” Nicklaus said.

He turned out to be right. The subject reached a head when the U.S. Golf Association and R&A released its 2017 distance report and officially declared it is concerned about driving distance and announced in a joint statement that they have launched a project to analyze distance in golf and gather perspectives from the worldwide golf community.

“We believe that now is the time to examine this topic through a very wide and long lens, knowing it is critical to the future of the game,” said then USGA CEO Mike Davis.

The first phase of the combined Distance Insights Project in February of 2020 determined that distance is playing an excessive role in the game and causing the sport to go in an unsustainable direction. But then a pandemic hit and the governing bodies put things on the back burner.

“I really don’t know what they’re doing,” Nicklaus said.

The latest? In August, they announced that any further release of information in their study wouldn’t be released until March of 2021. (The comment period is scheduled to end in May.)

“They’re slow about reacting about this issue,” Nicklaus said to Gary Williams recently on his 5 Clubs podcast. “They say they put a line in the sand but that line in the sand keeps getting wider. They keep crossing it.”

As he nears his 82nd birthday on Friday, Nicklaus remains one of the most influential voices in golf but on the subject of golf equipment, he’s often gone unheard. “They didn’t pay much attention to a 30-year-old and they’re certainly not paying much attention to an 80-year-old,” he said.

“For all concerned, for the golf ball to come back to bring back a lot of things back into perspective is very important for the game of golf,” Nicklaus added. “I think something will get done, it’s just how long will it take for them to research the problem?”

Hopefully the wait won’t extend past March.

Wrapping up the discussion on if the golf ball goes too far with Nicklaus, Williams asked of Muirfield Village, home of The Memorial, “Is your golf course going to be 8,000 yards in 10 years?”

“I hope not,” Nicklaus said. “I’d have to buy all the houses around me.”

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