Friday, May 16, 2008

Sybase Classic – NO Round

What was THAT?

The morning groups got about halfway through their rounds (some playing as many as 15 holes) before rain halted play around noontime. Just before ESPN2 went off the air, it was announced that today’s play was suspended and Round Two will be played in its entirety tomorrow. You read that right – all holes played today will be wiped out and the field starts Saturday as it stood at the end of Thursday, and the event will now be 54 holes.

That’s bulls—t. These players were -2 on the day when play was stopped: Catriona Matthew (-6 overall and tied for the lead), Michele Redman, Meaghan Francella, Alena Sharp, and Kate Golden, who had climbed to within two shots of the current cut line. Rachel Hetherington was -1 and tied for the lead through seven holes. A lot of players were over par today and I’m sure they welcome the resetting of scores but…

If shortening the event is necessary, why not just resume tomorrow about the same time play was stopped today with the players already on the course picking up where they left off. The LPGA
did a similar thing in Korea back in October when the final round couldn’t be completed (they reverted to the standings from the previous day) but that was because the course was so unplayable that they realized they wouldn’t have been able to play on Monday either. The Sybase will be playing tomorrow and there is simply NO excuse to wipe out today’s scoring.

UPDATE: Ok, there IS an excuse. Since the round was not started with lift-clean-place rules in effect, the LPGA decided that the fair thing to do was to wipe it all out and start over Saturday morning with LCP. Larry says he didn't hear one complaint about it from the players. I'm all for being fair although like The Constructivist says, this doesn't ever come into play on those occasions when the morning groups have no wind to deal with and the afternoon groups fight gusts.

I didn't say the excuse is a good one. They got into this mess because they didn't declare LCP yesterday morning even though there was a 100% chance of rain. I'm sitting behind a keyboard in Atlanta, GA and I knew the chance of playing without interruption Friday was negligible. Stating after the fact that the forecast didn't call for as much rain as they got is bogus, given that the forecast they had called for at least half an inch. When these rounds take 12+ hours to get in, you have to err on the safe side and be fair to the players BEFORE the fact.

And don't ever tell me that television considerations had no bearing on a decision to shorten an event so that it can end on Sunday.

UPDATE 2: The LPGA is developing a pattern. They've made a series of decisions at one event and then another which gives them a ready-made precedent for whatever CYA manuever they need to pull in the future. Accidentally screwed the players by not declaring lift-clean-place before a round that gets postponed by rain? Just use the "Wipe The Scores and Start Over Tomorrow" precedent we set at Michelob a couple of years ago. Bury all of the other examples of where the situation was handled differently. Need to be in Sweden by Tuesday night and you don't want to let them finish a rain-delayed event on Monday? Just cancel the whole damn thing and tell us it never happened. Tell me - did some of those NASCAR officials I use to wail about relocate to a different part of Daytona Beach?

5 comments:

The Constructivist said...

The only thing I can think is they delayed too long in suspending play and had too many angry golfers who had blown up picketing them to erase the round on grounds of having to play in unplayable conditions. But that's no excuse for reducing it to a 54-hole event--why not just finish on Monday?? It's not like it's that far from Clifton to Corning....

sag said...

Today's scores had to be wiped out because, with all the rain throughout the day and into the evening, it will likely still be too wet tomorrow to play the ball down. It's just not fair to switch to lift, clean, and place in the middle of a round.

As Larry pointed out in his blog, the mistake the tour made was in lacking the foresight to play lift, clean, and place from the very beginning of today's round.

Regarding the 54-hole finish, Sybase agreed to pay the whole purse anyway. I bet the LPGA would have played 72 holes if Sybase wasn't so cooperative in that regard. I find it disturbing that the LPGA's first choice seems to be to shorten a regular tournament rather than finish Monday. Even if the sponsor is willing, in my view it cheapens the image of the tournament. At a major, by contrast, 72 holes would have happened no matter what.

The Constructivist said...

The LPGA spokesperson suggested they couldn't have anticipated it would have rained so hard or so long when play started in the morning, so it made no sense at the time to go with lift, clean and place in conditions better than the Monday qualifier (when they didn't). But she was implausible in claiming the shift to it had no effect on their decision to wipe the round and basically gave a non-answer (and was unchallenged by reporters at the time) on why the tournament was reduced to 54 holes. The AP reporter notes they did the same thing here in 2006, but fails to point out it didn't involve wiping scores.

Stupples and Han must be kicking themselves for withdrawing....

Hound Dog said...

Technically speaking, since Han and Stupples withdrew Friday morning (they were still on the board until then) and Friday was wiped out, they should have the option to un-withdraw, yes? Not saying this is actually going to happen.

So the fact that they made a mistake on Monday forced them to make the same mistake on Friday? I love it.

The Constructivist said...

I guess some things are final in the LPGA and some are not (what if Han had actually WDed after they announced the rounds would be wiped? not that it happened that way, but it was relatively close)....