The mowed area just long of the green seemed to be the place that they were going for off the tee. I don't think laying back in the fairway would have been an easy shot being that you would still have almost zero margin for error.
Be a part of the community.
It's free, join today!
Related Forum Threads
- LPGA in 10 Years? Last post on 4/27/12 at 7:03pm in Tour Talk
- The 2012 Heritage at Harbour Town Discussion Thread Last post on 4/17/12 at 2:45pm in Tour Talk
- Oostie's Albatross vs. Bubba's Winner Last post on 4/21/12 at 8:25am in Tour Talk
- Tiger "tantrum" Woods Last post on 4/29/12 at 12:05pm in Tour Talk
- The most exciting golfer ever? Last post on 4/10/12 at 11:42am in Golf Talk
Recent Reviews
-
As someone starting out I find this 3 wood easy to hit. When hitting the sweet spot at minimal speeds I can hit the ball 200 yards straight. I cannot do that with m driver consistently so I find...
-
I have used this towel for a couple weeks (3 rounds) and have had a great experience. The towel has great size, cleans dirty clubs well, and the scrub side does a good job getting the grooves...
-
Motorola Actv has been used for athletes and gym goers for a while now, but recently they released the Golf Edition. Currently only the 16GB version is available for MSRP: $299.99 And...
-
I golf here for school almost everyday during the spring and the course is always in great condition and it gives an opportunity for a great round if it is played smartly. The wide open links...
-
Stitch Golf hand makes head covers. They have been selling leather head covers for a few years and have added a wool line this year. I have the leather and they are great. I got the red...
2012 Northern Trust Open Discussion Thread - Page 6
- Joined: 6/2010, Posts: 1349
- Handicap Index: 13.0
- Select All Posts By This User
This being corroborated by the fact that--according to the announcing team--nobody who laid up off the tee made birdie that day.
I still probably would have laid up, but apparently the stats don't prove it to be the better strategy.
Brandon
- Joined: 2/2009, Posts: 5072
- Reviews: 10
- Location: MA/DE
- Handicap Index: 1.5
- Select All Posts By This User
I think we can agree that pretty much any shot came with zero margin for error. I guess with the driver they were trying to hit that spot you mentioned directly over the green, I'm saying that with a wood or long iron they could have hit for an equally meaty chunk of the fairway short of the green.
EDIT: I just saw a better picture than the camera angle from the coverage. I didn't realize how horizontal the green was, which makes my comment pretty much moot for sunday's pin position.
- Joined: 11/2011, Posts: 705
- Reviews: 7
- Location: Hawaii
- Handicap Index: 2
- Select All Posts By This User

In case anyone was interested in what's in Haas's bag
http://blogs.golf.com/equipment/2012/02/winners-bag-bill-haas-titleist-northern-trust-open.html
Bill Haas is another guy who still carries a 2-iron, FWIW.
- Joined: 11/2011, Posts: 705
- Reviews: 7
- Location: Hawaii
- Handicap Index: 2
- Select All Posts By This User
I just noticed that on the above link it says he carries 3-PW. However, in this month's golf digest, Haas confirms he still plays a 2-iron. Quote from the article: "Very few players still use a 2-iron, but I'm very confident with mine. I use it when I just want to hit the fairway or get the ball up near the green."
- Joined: 7/2009, Posts: 1156
- Location: Maryland
- Handicap Index: 1.2
- Select All Posts By This User

I think we can agree that pretty much any shot came with zero margin for error. I guess with the driver they were trying to hit that spot you mentioned directly over the green, I'm saying that with a wood or long iron they could have hit for an equally meaty chunk of the fairway short of the green.
EDIT: I just saw a better picture than the camera angle from the coverage. I didn't realize how horizontal the green was, which makes my comment pretty much moot for sunday's pin position.
Yeah I think you might have looked at the same pic I did when I made my comment about how to play the hole. I also agree that anywhere really didn't leave them with an easy shot but it seemed like the mowed area just long was the spot.
- Joined: 10/2011, Posts: 830
- Reviews: 1
- Location: Orlando, FL
- Handicap Index: 5.9
- Select All Posts By This User
But at least you could spin something in there. If they hit iron off the tee they can leave themselves, say, 80 yards in. You can punch a SW with spin as opposed to what they were left with after hitting Driver - mega-flops with no spin.
I mean, either way it's a shot to a pin with no margin for error, so it becomes what kind of shot you want to hit to such a pin. I would prefer something I could spin.
- Joined: 9/2008, Posts: 2672
- Location: Indiana
- Handicap Index: 22.7
- Select All Posts By This User
I see. Is that why they're paying you the big bucks? :-P
If the risks are equal, you might as well go for the reward. That, coupled with the general rule being "closer is better" is probably why they go for it. IIRC there is at least one thread on here with numbers that at least suggest that, in general, laying up to a distance is a losing strategy compared to getting as close as you can. While that doesn't directly apply if your close option is guaranteed to be a delicate flop, I'm inclined to think the guys out there know what they're doing...
- Joined: 10/2011, Posts: 830
- Reviews: 1
- Location: Orlando, FL
- Handicap Index: 5.9
- Select All Posts By This User

I see. Is that why they're paying you the big bucks? :-P
If the risks are equal, you might as well go for the reward. That, coupled with the general rule being "closer is better" is probably why they go for it. IIRC there is at least one thread on here with numbers that at least suggest that, in general, laying up to a distance is a losing strategy compared to getting as close as you can. While that doesn't directly apply if your close option is guaranteed to be a delicate flop, I'm inclined to think the guys out there know what they're doing...
Right. And look at the results from the three of them going for the green. Their 2nd shots were as follows -
Mickelson was left with an impossible (even for him) flop shot. He hit it in the bunker.
Bradley hit it to the fringe, 20 feet away.
Haas had to play sideways, hitting it to 40 feet.
Those are pretty crappy results for 2nd shots to a 310-yard par 4.
Even me, not playing for big bucks, can see that. 
- Joined: 7/2009, Posts: 1156
- Location: Maryland
- Handicap Index: 1.2
- Select All Posts By This User

But at least you could spin something in there. If they hit iron off the tee they can leave themselves, say, 80 yards in. You can punch a SW with spin as opposed to what they were left with after hitting Driver - mega-flops with no spin.
I mean, either way it's a shot to a pin with no margin for error, so it becomes what kind of shot you want to hit to such a pin. I would prefer something I could spin.
Yeah they were trying to get to an area where they could spin their chips which was the only way you're getting close to that pin. Hitting a punch SW from 80 yards puts you in the back bunker unless you hit the perfect shot which I'm not even sure would work. A punch SW is going to hop at least once so you'd have to hope it landed on the very front of the green one hop and checked hard. I just agree that it was more worth taking the risk off the tee than taking the risk from the second shot.
As for the playoff
Haas was to far left and played safe
Bradley wasn't in a terrible spot and played a decent shot
Phil was playing to win he had to have known he had no chance besides holing it, he could have played over towards Haas' ball which would have been playing for par and Phil can't do that
- Joined: 6/2010, Posts: 1349
- Handicap Index: 13.0
- Select All Posts By This User
- Joined: 12/2004, Posts: 3111
- Reviews: 1
- Handicap Index: Low
- Select All Posts By This User

If you notice, he often takes a water bottle out of his bag after tee shots and approach shots. They only showed it a few times, but I assume it happens often. Anyway, he's a very good player and young, so I don't want to be too hard on him. I'm just not sure what annoys me more--the spitting or the fidgeting? I did find it funny that every other time he would start his fidget routine, one announcer would continually say, "he's into it ladies and gentlemen! He's into it!"
Oh yeah, and I finally saw the full replay of the final playoff hole today (my recording cut off on the 1st playoff hole and I had to go online to see the highlights). It was definitely anti-climactic for two reasons:
1) Haas didn't react too demonstrably after the winning putt; and
2) He won the tournament before his competitors even reached the green! That has to be rare.
Brandon
Keegan still had a great look at birdie to tie. Plus, you gotta act like you've been there before right? 43' putt, center cup, eh, no biggie, happens all the time. No need for an over reaction, fist-pump frenzy, I say.
- Joined: 7/2009, Posts: 1156
- Location: Maryland
- Handicap Index: 1.2
- Select All Posts By This User
Technically yes but if you are 80 yards back trying to get at the pin you have to go over the bunker which leaves little room to get at the pin. If there was plenty of green Mickelson would have been able to keep it on the green and Bradley's bunker shot would have been simple. I guess if you are saying from front left to back right yes there is a ton of green but it's all about the angle you give yourself.
- Joined: 12/2004, Posts: 3111
- Reviews: 1
- Handicap Index: Low
- Select All Posts By This User

But at least you could spin something in there. If they hit iron off the tee they can leave themselves, say, 80 yards in. You can punch a SW with spin as opposed to what they were left with after hitting Driver - mega-flops with no spin.
I mean, either way it's a shot to a pin with no margin for error, so it becomes what kind of shot you want to hit to such a pin. I would prefer something I could spin.
I was at the event on Friday and spent a good amount of time near the 11th tee, directly behind the 10th green. The pin was in practically the same spot as Sunday but just a few paces farther to the back of the green. I saw one person layup to the green. I don't remember who it was, but he consequently didn't even hit the green. We all saw that green there, its no more than 15 paces from front to rear in that back section. Plus that green slopes from front to back, not your typical set-up. Those greens were playing awfully firm and fast. Laying back with a full SW type shot is asking to hit a spot about one, maybe two paces large on the very front edge. A tad short, and a high spinning shot may turn into a plugged shot in the bunker guarding the front. or a touch long and you could be in the bunker in the back. I don't know how it looked on TV, but those bunkers are crazy deep! particularly for a green that is so dang narrow. Its no wonder why hole 10 is widely considered one of the most challenging short par-4s on the PGA Tour.
- Joined: 6/2010, Posts: 1349
- Handicap Index: 13.0
- Select All Posts By This User

Technically yes but if you are 80 yards back trying to get at the pin you have to go over the bunker which leaves little room to get at the pin. If there was plenty of green Mickelson would have been able to keep it on the green and Bradley's bunker shot would have been simple. I guess if you are saying from front left to back right yes there is a ton of green but it's all about the angle you give yourself.
Yeah, you're right. I forgot about the angle. You would probably have to hit no less than 3 wood or your longest iron to actually get the proper angle to have the entire green to work with.
Brandon
- Joined: 10/2007, Posts: 452
- Handicap Index: 8.3
- Select All Posts By This User
Agreed. And given that for his last win he took home $1.44M for the tourney and another $10M for the Fed Ex Cup, the $1.1188M check on the line for this last win was "just another day in the park".
- Joined: 2/2009, Posts: 1006
- Reviews: 1
- Location: San Diego
- Handicap Index: 7
- Select All Posts By This User

I was at the event on Friday and spent a good amount of time near the 11th tee, directly behind the 10th green. The pin was in practically the same spot as Sunday but just a few paces farther to the back of the green. I saw one person layup to the green. I don't remember who it was, but he consequently didn't even hit the green. We all saw that green there, its no more than 15 paces from front to rear in that back section. Plus that green slopes from front to back, not your typical set-up. Those greens were playing awfully firm and fast. Laying back with a full SW type shot is asking to hit a spot about one, maybe two paces large on the very front edge. A tad short, and a high spinning shot may turn into a plugged shot in the bunker guarding the front. or a touch long and you could be in the bunker in the back. I don't know how it looked on TV, but those bunkers are crazy deep! particularly for a green that is so dang narrow. Its no wonder why hole 10 is widely considered one of the most challenging short par-4s on the PGA Tour.
Ben described this hole very well. I had the privilege of playing Riviera years ago, and to this day I still think #10 is the hardest golf hole I've ever played, even when they had conditions set up for members and not for a Tour event. The tee shot appears to give you a lot of room to lay up between the sets of bunkers, but after hitting it and then seeing your second shot you realize that there is a very tiny area in the fairway that gives you any shot at that pin position. A few yards too far to the right and you've got no room to work with whatsoever. A few yards to the left and you're in the same condition. Even if you're in the perfect spot, you are looking at this little sliver of green in front of you with just no room for error left to right. And then you realize the green slopes away from you, meaning that you can't fly it into the hole and have it stop. You have to hit short and let it run up to the hole, and the only way to do this is to be in the exact perfect spot in the fairway and have exceptional control of your spin. And as Ben says, if you miss just a little left or right you're in the bunker and they're deep, leaving you a tough bunker shot onto something the size of a coffee table. Laying up off the tee is in no way a certain par. It is just simply a tough, tough hole that doesn't leave much room in the risk/reward spectrum. I'm astounded someone could birdie it in the easiest of circumstances, let alone under tournament pressure in a playoff.
- 2012 Northern Trust Open Discussion Thread
Recent Discussions
- › Good round gone bad.... 1 minute ago
- › Hello from Roll Tide central 3 minutes ago
- › LPGA blows it with Morgan Pressel slow play penalty 24 minutes ago
- › 2012 HP Byron Nelson Championship Discussion Thread 39 minutes ago
- › Top Ten Players in the World at A4 41 minutes ago
- › Hello everyone, another newb from England. 52 minutes ago
- › Golf Channel Morning Drive 1 hour, 19 minutes ago
- › Crushing the One Iron? 2 hours, 26 minutes ago
- › Longridge pin seeker range finder 2 hours, 29 minutes ago
- › Hooking 3 hours, 11 minutes ago
Recent Reviews
- › Titleist 909 F3 Fairway Wood by Daver77
- › Rule Golf Rule 14 Invisibrush Golf Towel by vasaribm
- › Motorola MOTOACTV Golf Edition GPS Watch by Sai-Jin
- › Washington County Golf Course by highschoolgolf
- › Stitch Golf Leather Headcovers by rustyredcab
- › Cobra Baffler Rail F by ajst22
- › Hoakalei Countru Club by k-troop
- › Skyline Country Club by ajst22
- › Cobra S2 Driver by JuicePGA
- › Scratch 8620 Milled Wedge by Bullitt5339
New Articles
- › The New 2nd Swing Golf Website 1 Year... by 2nd Swing Golf
- › 2012-predict-the-players-championship-sawgras... by mmckay
- › Member Review Guidelines by iacas
- › Pings Beryllium Copper Irons What Happened... by mmckay
- › 2012 Ping Watson The Masters by mvmac
- › 2012 Predict The Masters Contest by shawea
- › Current Contests and Promotions by mvmac
- › Buyer's Guide to Counterfeit Clubs and... by iacas
- › Sand Trap Site Awards by iacas
- › Rules Of Golf In One Page Maybe Two by iacas
About TheSandTrap.com | Join the Community | Advertise
© 2012 TheSandTrap.com is powered by Huddler Active Outdoors | FAQ | Support | Privacy/TOS | Site Map









