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Posted

So far LIV is getting the players that are logical choices to leave, with the only exception being DeChambeau.

If DJ only wants to play for a few more years, this works out well as he can come back and be welcomed on the Champions, if he wants to.

Few people will miss Reed or even Fowler.  Rickie has really been struggling for a long time and I was surprised he didn't jump right away.  I doubt he likes going back to qualifying, or Korn Ferry.

Bryson is interesting as he has a legitimate chance to win more on the PGA, especially if his injuries are behind him.

It will be interesting if the prince calls him Brooksie.

John

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Posted
48 minutes ago, 70sSanO said:

If DJ only wants to play for a few more years, this works out well as he can come back and be welcomed on the Champions, if he wants to.

Uhmmmmm…

Also, Rickie hasn’t jumped.

Erik J. Barzeski —  I knock a ball. It goes in a gopher hole. 🏌🏼‍♂️
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Posted

I know I'm jumping in late but 35 pages is a lot to read. So sorry if it has been covered.

1. We know this is "sports washing" (as mentioned many times before in this thread), and I assume that because of that, the players have secured their money in contracts, and presumably in neutral nation banking systems, but can they be sure of every dollar? I wonder. This is clearly going to be a tour operating in the red. There's literally zero chance that they can operate profitably with these kind of payouts. No chance. IMPOSSIBLE CHANCE. The Saudi's have done this before. Soccer/football fans can remember the (I think) Saud Cup which eventually morphed into the Confederations Cup. It wasn't profitable. They jumped ship. They WILL NEVER BE PROFITABLE with this tour. You sure you're getting the money? If you're Bryson's age, you sure it's worth the risk?

2. The majors may decide to assign exemptions to these tournaments at some point, but right now they are not. The talking heads are pointing out that the USGA has allowed them to play in the US Open, but these players are already exempt. What happens when those exemptions expire? What becomes of the OWGR points allocation? If the USGA, R&A, Masters Committee, and the PGA of America decide otherwise, this tour is dead in the water. And you've burned your bridge. Now you're MORE beholden to the tour than you ever were.

3. Do any of you care to watch these events? Because on the surface, I do not. These ideas of "super leagues", in any sport, rely on the idea that as a neutral I will tune into a big event. And if you have a big event every week, surely I will watch! That's absurd. It doesn't work that way. At the top of their games, a slam final between Federer and Nadal was must watch (or must DVR watch later) viewing for me. But it wasn't if they met in a Masters series event. Just because you create a WGC-style field every week you play, doesn't make me feel it's big tournament viewing appointment. 

4. I'm a big statistics guy. I'm a very good poker player, do well at sports handicapping. A forty eight player field does not bode well for entertaining Sunday rounds. It is too thin. And it's too thin even if the 48 are in the world top 150. Maybe even top 100. You will get a lot of events where the Sunday back nine begins with somebody up five shots. 

5. The underdog story. This happens on the PGA Tour far more often than on the ATP Tour, because of the nature of the sports and field size, but it's part of the charm. How are you putting up and coming players in your field, and who are you freezing out? This is a mystery. It makes it smell more like a "celebrity" professional golf tour than an actual athletic competition, where a committee of marketing executives tell me who to watch, rather than the results tell me who to watch. 

6. f*** Saudi Arabia and their sports washing blood money.

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Posted
6 hours ago, iacas said:

I've heard… the Masters will not give the same type of reaction as the USGA. And that at least one Masters champ was going to go to LIV and decided against it because of what they were told by Augusta National.

 

If Augusta bans them, that's enormous. Biggest golf tournament in the world. I wonder if the USGA will change their stance at that point? USGA statement seemed very specific about 2022 in particular and left open a chance that they will have a different stance next year. 


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Posted
6 hours ago, Aguirre said:

A forty eight player field does not bode well for entertaining Sunday rounds.

They’re done on Saturday.

😊

Erik J. Barzeski —  I knock a ball. It goes in a gopher hole. 🏌🏼‍♂️
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Posted

here we go

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Posted
9 minutes ago, jbishop15 said:

here we go

So would it be fair to say, Liv's shotgun start will "trigger" the PGA Tour? 😆

Sorry. I know that's bad.

 

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Posted

One of the things I don’t like about watching golf is schmalzy sycophant commentators. Well after 5 minutes of watching LIV, I’m nauseous already. 
Hyperbole, ass kissing, “everyone’s just so happy and relaxed this week”.🤢🤮🤑

Its not a golf tournament it’s a bullshit exhibition. 

 

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Stevie T

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Posted
3 minutes ago, Beastie said:

Hyperbole, ass kissing, “everyone’s just so happy and relaxed this week”

You'd be happy and relaxed to if you could bank on millions and shoot +10 at the same time.

Hope the boys aren't in a coma out there.

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Posted

 

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Hunter Bishop

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Posted
6 hours ago, Dr. Manhattan said:

If Augusta bans them, that's enormous. Biggest golf tournament in the world. I wonder if the USGA will change their stance at that point? USGA statement seemed very specific about 2022 in particular and left open a chance that they will have a different stance next year. 

I think the USGA has done what's appropriate right now, they published a specific list of criteria, and they're not going to change that criteria just a week or so before the competition starts.  However, given a year to prepare, they have the opportunity to make a different decision for 2023.  Separately, the OWGR folks may not recognize performance in the LIV Tour, or may value it so lightly that LIV players won't get enough points to be exempt from qualifying.  That would relieve the USGA from doing anything specific, they can simply keep the exemptions the same, and require LIV players not otherwise exempt to go through Local and Final Qualifiers.

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Posted

 

 

Matt Dougherty, P.E.
 fasdfa dfdsaf 

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Posted
18 minutes ago, Beastie said:

“everyone’s just so happy and relaxed this week”

Didn't really get a sense that there was any meaning in this for the players. I guess when you take tens to hundreds of millions of dollars up front, your competitive spirit and will to win might be dampened a bit.

I watched for about 10 minutes - youtube said there were 34k people watching which doesn't seem like a lot.

11 minutes ago, Beastie said:

Its not a golf tournament it’s a bullshit exhibition. 

I was hoping to see the team uniforms, but alas, none. Everyone was just dressed like they usually dress.

Pretty boring golf, and if felt like it was moving slow (but only tuned in for 10 minutes).

There is a different style of leaderboard, not really sure that was a feature that needed to be innovated.

Golf course seemed like a non-descript generic course, but the announcers did mention it was in perfect shape, lol.

The announcers mentioned that all of the players are really great golfers, even if we haven't heard of them, lol.

The announcers mentioned the crowds were huge and the event was sold out. There seemed to be a medium sized group following the Phil/DJ/whoever group, but another tee shot I saw had zero fans in the picture.

Some shots had a tracer, and some didn't, even within the same group.

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Posted

Just seems like the LIV is just "paid golf exhibition". They are on teams, without a cut, only 54 holes, guaranteed money. With Bryson joining, makes me wonder how hurt his wrist is? Maybe worse than we know? 

 

Also, the pros that have signed up, I wont miss watching. 

Just tell the truth. You joined for the millions they offered. Not more competition, just more money. 

 


Posted (edited)
18 minutes ago, Darkfrog said:

The announcers mentioned that all of the players are really great golfers, even if we haven't heard of them, lol.

To be fair, depending on what your comparison point is, they're right. It's certainly not an elite field but it's not like it's a field of Phil, DJ, Sergio, and a bunch of high school state champions.

18 minutes ago, Darkfrog said:

Pretty boring golf, and if felt like it was moving slow (but only tuned in for 10 minutes).

No different than the beginning of Round 1 on any average PGA Tour tournament. I doubt very many people will consider the first few holes of the RBC Canadian Open this week as "exciting golf"

18 minutes ago, Darkfrog said:

Golf course seemed like a non-descript generic course, but the announcers did mention it was in perfect shape, lol.

Again, no different than the majority of the PGA Tour courses that get played on a weekly basis

18 minutes ago, Darkfrog said:

Some shots had a tracer, and some didn't, even within the same group.

Same thing happens every single week on the PGA Tour, and the PGA Tour does this week in and week out so they should be much better at it.

 

A lot of what you just stated as observations, issues, etc aren't unique to this LIV tournament, they exist on the PGA Tour as well.

This kinda sums up my thoughts thus far

 

Edited by klineka

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Posted
13 minutes ago, Darkfrog said:

I was hoping to see the team uniforms, but alas, none.

Yeah. Saw a logo on a caddy's bib, but that's it.

Really could have played up the team aspect to it more. Groups of three and nobody from the same team are playing together. Since it is a shotgun start, none of them will see their teammates until it is all over. Kind of defeats the point.

Match play would have been a better choice.

 

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Posted
26 minutes ago, klineka said:

A lot of what you just stated as observations, issues, etc aren't unique to this LIV tournament, they exist on the PGA Tour as well.

Sure, but after watching the promo, LIV made it seem like their product was different, and at least initially it doesn’t live up to their own hype.

 

-Peter

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Posted

It's hard for me to disagree with this tweet. I don't think the PGA Tour will react swiftly enough or in the appropriate manner, even if they did. Kyle Robbins posted an article last night about the split of open wheeled racing in the US, and how its fracture into two seperate leagues was essentially the death knell for the sports popularity. 

Professional golf does not have the necessary fan base to support this level of fracturing. It's going to be a long, slow bleed, or maybe not that slow, I don't know. This whole enterprise is vastly, deeply disappointing. 

Hunter Bishop

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    • If you're not into physics (or nitpicking at physics) as it applies to golf, you can just stop reading right here. If you are, keep reading! I have a few problems with the video above. The title of the video gets to the topic: the idea that "force precedes motion." It's a statement that, if you hang around golf instructional conversations long enough, you're probably going to hear it. The thing is… it's not true. In trying to simplify Newton's Laws of Motion, golf instructors frequently bungle it. There's value in simplifying things, but I reject simplification when it leads to a poor understanding. In this video, Dr. Greg Rose and Dave Phillips (mostly the former) goof up on the physics of Newton's First and Third Laws of Motion. I'll explain why in this post. Right away, Rose starts with the "notion" that "force precedes motion," which he then calls "Newton's First Law."  That's not true — Newton's First Law of Motion is: A body remains at rest, or in motion at a constant speed in a straight line, unless it is acted upon by a net force. Rose, at the very least, left out not only the part about a body in motion staying in motion, but also left out a very important word: "net." If you think back to your high school physics, when a bullet is fired horizontally from a gun, it begins falling immediately. There's no delay. The force (gravity) doesn't "precede" the motion (the bullet dropping) — it's acting on the bullet the whole time (even when it's sitting in the cartridge or traveling down the barrel of the gun) and the bullet begins dropping right away, as soon as the bottom of the barrel stops "holding it up." Rose saying that "force precedes motion" implies that things "wait" before moving like Wile E. Coyote floats before falling: Rose does immediately restate Newton's First Law as "objects at rest will remain at rest unless there's some type of external force that makes them move." Ehhhh, better, but still not quite right. It's an oversimplification that muddies the waters instead of clarifying them. Rose introduces two things that are oversimplified as well. First, the idea of "movement." Physicists define it slightly differently than the common usage. Imagine that you're floating in outer space and the only forces really acting on you is a negligible amount of gravity (from the sun, Earth, Jupiter, a far-away black hole… etc.). You can "move" (the common usage) a finger, an arm or a leg, or bend forward at your waist. That's "movement" with no external force. But, physicists would say that  because your center of mass didn't move (physics definition), you didn't move anywhere. There's no "external force" acting on you there, but you're "moving" (common usage). Second, the idea of internal and external forces. Rose says that "we can't move unless some external force makes us move." Again, I can "move" by using my muscles. They are what "cause" the movement. I gave the outer space example above, and  Rose himself will later about a player's foot slipping, resulting in movement of the body despite a loss of ground reaction forces. The body moved in that scenario because of the muscles, or the internal forces. Rose says "when you go to walk, you actually push into the ground." This is super nit-picky, but no… you don't. You push the ground horizontally, in a shear force direction. You're already pushing down into the ground because you're standing on it (gravity * your mass is doing it, really). Have you ever heard the idea that walking is repeatedly falling and catching yourself? To begin walking, you actually lean forward a little bit (applying a small shear force in the opposite direction), then move your foot and leg out to "catch" yourself before you fall on your face. Rose says "one of the principles that we always like to talk about is that the force happens before you start to move." No! It does not. Phillips then goes into a top of the backswing position and Rose correctly says that to move your right hip forward, your right foot actually tries to "pull" the ground behind you, away from the ball while your left foot tries to push the ground away from you, toward the ball. That is correct, and we call that A/P force (anterior/posterior). Phillips says "to do that, you've gotta push in the right direction," at which time (1:45) Rose says that "now you're bringing up Newton's Third Law," which he then says is "there's an equal and opposite reaction." No! Newton's Third Law of Motion is: If two bodies exert forces on each other, these forces have the same magnitude but opposite directions. Rose gives the example that if you push down with 100 pounds, the ground pushes back with 100 pounds. Yes, that's true… but that's not particularly relevant. If you weigh 100 pounds, but you push down with 200 pounds, the ground also pushes back with 200 pounds of force, but you are overcoming the force of gravity and you begin moving your center of mass upward. (Good golfers often generate 2x their body weight or more in vertical GRF.) The shorthand “for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction” is common, but it often leads people to think that one force causes another. That’s not what Newton’s Third Law says. The two forces are part of the same interaction and exist simultaneously. They are equal in magnitude, opposite in direction, and act on different objects (each other). For a golf-related example, when a golfer pushes against the ground with their lead foot during the downswing, the foot exerts a force on the ground. At the exact same time, the ground exerts an equal-magnitude, opposite-direction force back on the golfer (the ground reaction force). These two forces are a Newton’s Third Law pair. Notice that they act on different objects: one force acts on the ground, the other acts on the golfer. For another, it doesn't matter to the physics at all if you swing a driver at a stationary ball… or propel a ball at a stationary driver: the physics and the reactions will be the same (within the right frame of reference). For a non-golf related example… if you stand on a dock and push a boat away with your hands (or your foot), you exert a force on the boat. Simultaneously, the boat exerts an equal and opposite force on you. The result is that the boat moves away from the dock while you are pushed backward. Again, the forces are equal and opposite, but they act on different objects. Again, Rose properly stays that to move your right hip forward and your left hip backward, you must try to push the ground in the opposite direction. Since the ground won't move (its mass is a little bit bigger than your own, and Chuck Norris has sadly passed away), you move as a result of the interaction (which is also, if you have friction with the dock, why the boat moves and you aren't pushed back much). This (around 2:18) is also when Rose mentions the golfers slipping… in which case there's not an equal and opposite reaction, because we have a net force causing movement (slippage through loss of friction — the ground is no longer pushing back horizontally enough to stop your foot from moving). Rose then shows a graph (there's a reflection on it so I grabbed the best screenshot I could): I've colored coded the lines to make it easier to see what's going on: The top graph is their lead (left) leg, the middle graph is their trail (right) leg, and the bottom graph is the "pelvis rotation." Greg doesn't say what kind of "pelvis rotation" graph it is, but from looking at it, I think we can assume it's the angular velocity of the pelvis, as if it was the actual angle of turn, the golfer would reach the end of the follow-through with a pelvis right back where it started at address, and that seems unlikely. 😄 Rose states correctly that when the lead leg "goes negative" the left foot is pushing forward and the GRF is pushing backward (away from the ball), that the trail leg goes positive, away from the ball, and the GRF pushes the right hip forward, toward the ball. Rose has his assistant move the playback forward to this point: I've added a vertical yellow line through the graph at that point to show it: Rose says "the first thing [this golfer does] is push with the right leg backward so the ground starts to push [the right hip forward]." Yes. Phillips then says "it happens this early" and points at the skeleton avatar here: Also yes. No problem with these things — they're just measurements. The assistant advances the swing a few more frames, and Rose says "now all of a sudden comes the left foot." Rose then says at about 3:40, "because everything's rotating [in the backswing direction], they need to start to create these forces to stop the rotation." Yes! Then at 3:50, Rose adds "the forces have already happened, but notice this is pelvic rotation" (he points at the bottom graph). "Pelvis is still rotating negative. When this (bottom graph) goes positive, your pelvis is rotating forward." Phillips says "which is huge, because most people do not understand this." Given this video, most people includes Rose and Phillips! 😛 At 4:07, Rose again says "they're starting to create this a/p push in the backswing to slow down the rotation…" YES! But then he continues with "Let's go all the way to when the pelvis starts to rotate forward…" Then we get this exchange: Rose: "I want you to notice how much earlier did the forces start?" Phillips: "Way earlier." Rose: "Way earlier. Forces precede motion." NO! Like Leon Lett, Rose was saying some good things, then fumbled the ball at the 1-yard line on this specific part of the video. The motion that the forces created where the yellow line exists is, as he said twice, to SLOW the rotation of the pelvis in the backswing direction. I use this example sometimes: imagine you have a frictionless surface, and a spring attached to an unmoving wall. You slide a block along the surface and it contacts the spring. The spring begins pushing against the block immediately, but the block doesn't change direction right away. It compresses the spring a bit, the forces are unbalanced, and the block slows down (it could be negative or positive acceleration depending on which direction you've set up as positive). When the block reaches a speed of zero (for an instant), it begins accelerating in the other direction as the forces remain unbalanced, right up until the block leaves the spring and slides at a constant speed (the speed at which it hit the spring if the spring is "lossless" as we often assume them to be in simplified physics test questions) because the forces are again balance (no net forces anywhere). Rose says "what's about to happen is a result of the forces that happened before." No! It's already happened. If those forces in the downswing direction didn't already happen, the golfer's pelvis would have kept turning in the backswing! Rose: "What did the great player do? They started turning earlier. They started creating the resistance earlier because they're going to use those forces to come out of the backswing with speed, they're not going to start the downswing with force." Once again… No! I talk about this a lot with lateral forces. I prefer my golfers to shift to their trail side about 2-3" very early in the backswing, and then to shift forward toward their front foot around P3 (it varies depending on the golfer, the length of the backswing, etc.). I'm going to show you the lateral movement graph from one of the first golfers I had on my Smart2Move 3D Dual Force Plates. In the graph below, the red line is the contribution from the right foot, the blue line is the left foot, and the yellow line is the sum of the two. Negative is the golfer pushing away from the target, positive is toward the target. I've stopped the graph at the first moment where the graph reads as net positive — the golfer pushing toward the target: What direction is the golfer moving here? Away from the target! It's really, really early in the backswing that the golfer begins pushing toward the target: Why? Because if he didn't, he'd continue to sway away from the target. The spring begins pushing back against the block immediately, first to slow it down, then to accelerate it in the other direction. The golfer pushes away from the target (green shaded area), then almost immediately begins pushing toward the target (magenta shaded area), to slow down and then begin moving forward. Just like the golfer in the TPI video above, and just like EVERY GOLFER ever. The difference between great players and poorer players? The timing of when these things happen, the magnitude of the forces, and the relative balance of those two things for parts that involve both feet. But I guarantee you every golfer begins pushing in the downswing direction before the downswing actually begins, and that's NOT an example of "force precedes motion." There's no delay. A common misconception in golf instruction is to identify the force of a golfer against the ground as waiting on the "reaction force," or as viewing it as an “action followed by a reaction.” In reality, neither comes first or second — they occur at the same time. They are the same interaction viewed from opposite perspectives, occurring at the same instant. The phrase “force precedes motion” is a useful coaching cue, but it’s not literally true. In physics, force doesn’t sit around waiting for something to happen — if there’s a net force, acceleration (deceleration is negative acceleration, depending on the orientation of your reference frame) begins immediately. A more accurate way to say it is that force causes changes in motion, not that force somehow precedes motion.
    • Listening to episode 71 on golf equipment and I have to admit I never fully got the importance of grinds and bounce and sole shape generally. Why would it matter if you’re hitting ball first?
    • Had a couple lessons. Trying to work more on having sway away from the target to start the backswing and achieving more hip depth and some other details as well.  
    • When I first upgraded my three HackMotion 3.0 devices to 4.0 devices, I was told to discard the 3.0 devices. 😛 I asked them why I couldn't sell them (or give them away) to another person rather than contributing to electronics waste, and was told they were working on a program to do just that. The program is now finally here, so… I have three HackMotion 3.0 devices for sale. Straight from HackMotion: The Core license is $275 (with a 3.0 unit) if purchased from HackMotion (the extra $125 gets you the hardware): Golf Swing Analyzer & Wrist Angle Training Aid | HackMotion Fix common golf swing faults, improve ball flight and master clubface control with the help of the HackMotion wrist sensor. If you'd like more info, send me a DM.
    • Wordle 1,853 6/6* ⬜⬜⬜⬜🟩 ⬜⬜⬜⬜🟩 ⬜⬜🟨⬜🟩 ⬜🟩⬜⬜🟩 ⬜🟩⬜🟩🟩 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩 now that was an adventure….
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