I’ve only been to a practice round but I got to follow Couples, Woods, and Parziale play together so my opinion is skewed.
My opinion is that practice rounds are very enjoyable, if you've already been to a real high stakes event. Otherwise it feels anticlimactic. But once you've gone to one, it's great to have a more casual experience
I’ve got an idea for a golf logo. Anyway know the process to see if there’s something similar out there and trademark process?
I agree with this. My best pro tournament memory was being at the Nelson when Tiger won. Second was watching the practice rounds at the 2001 US Open, and I was there every day, including the playoff. Third was holding the Quiet Please sign at an LPGA event. I’ll take practice nearly every time moving forward at normal stops, because it’s so chill and educational. I’d take any day at The Masters though
We were all about that too. Then the alcohol wore off. They had 2 2 bedrooms left. 1.9 million not decorated.
Was hoping we would get a discount through our club to play Citrus Farms but not looking good. They have taken a lot of our staff so I think our club is in a battle with them so not getting any deal in the near future.
I know they're really competitive, but I wish I had to worry about a 4 hour drive after stacking a million bucks,
He might not play it. Broadcast mentioned that the only reason he plays a yellow ball is because his son liked them and asked him to.
The best version of Cam Young and Zalatoris last year and we smoke the Euros in the Ryder Cup. /RandomGolfThoughts
Had Malnati about 5yrs ago at Valspar Pro Am & dude was awesome. Had us come out Tuesday night before and spent 45 mins on the putting green giving us all the drills he uses & his mental approach to it. Was humble & recognized he’d probably never be a top 25 in the world, but always believed he could win. Was a neat guy to be around.
I was texting with my group during it because it was so real & awesome to watch. Love seeing the guys that grind their asses off get one
The thing he stresses more than anything after repetition was & I quote “always have positive energy. Believe you will make the stroke & trust your line.”
Most fun I ever had on greens was at #2. You learn quickly to listen to you caddy or pay greatly. Caddy: “2ft right” ZZ: “that’s just stupid, I’ve got my line” Caddy after I missed hard left: “will we be doing this every hole or would you like to make a putt?”
For me it's, just don't fuck this up too much that you can't make the next one. (Even when it's not that far away)
Introspective moment here... mentally, I'd rather have 18 feet for birdie than 6. That "make expectation" weighs heavy.