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It's Not the Player - It's the Golf

As Sergio Garcia two-putted to win The Players Championship this past Sunday, after Paul Goydos hit an unlucky shot into the water, the NBC announcers were falling all over themselves trying to praise Garcia and talk about how "he's back" after his first win in three years.  Garcia did end up winning the tournament, but the fact of the matter is, he made exactly two "tester" putts in the final round.  Garcia shot an opening round 66, but shot 70-73-71 to close it out, having to hold off such luminaries as Paul Goydos, Jeff Quinney and Briny Baird who were nipping at his heels.  The Players Championship does traditionally have the strongest field on Tour outside of majors; but this year Tiger wasn't there, Vijay (among others) missed the cut and Phil was just dying to put up his clutch closing-round 78 to take himself out of contention.  That left Garcia as the only upper-echelon golfer on the first two pages of the leaderboard.  And he still had to wait until the 18th hole to catch career journeyman Paul Goydos.

The fact of the matter is, the way the top of the leaderboard was playing on Sunday; Garcia should have won by three or four shots going away and had a victory walk up 18.  The reality was, Garcia did what he's been doing for years, missing 10-15 foot "tester" putts that an "elite" golfer should be making.  In essence, Garcia was trying his best to throw away the tournament; only the fact that his competition was too far behind to start (Quinney) or just wasn't very good (Goydos) made it possible for Garcia to win; and even then he needed the lucky water shot by Goydos that was about six inches off the ground away from landing about two feet from the cup.  If Goydos gets the break there; would we be talking about another epic Garcia collapse?

My guess is probably not, and it's interesting to listen to network golf announce teams who don't cover the Tour every week (NBC for example) fall all over themselves about a golfer like Garcia; but barely remember Jeff Quinney's name.  For all intents and purposes, Quinney's had a much better season than Garcia this year, and one would think the announcers would be aware of it, rather than only knowing about a name that's well-recognized.  I understand the want for networks to attach name recognition to the game.  It's almost unavoidable when it's an individual sport, and it's also an individual sport where the most recognizable name is really, really good.  And it's not recent; you can look back to Nicklaus and Palmer for earlier examples.  For the best of the best; pushing name recognition isn't a bad thing.

However, pushing name recognition for people who haven't won anything isn't just confusing, it can damage the game.  If you push a name like a Garcia for the last eight years or so, and a viewer connects with him and likes his personality; but six years down the road, he STILL hasn't won anything and tends to choke like a dog down the stretch, that eventually is going to damage the game on the grander scale.  At least Mickelson, who has a similar M.O., is good enough to push through it and win occasionally.  But the fact still remains, it seems like the networks (not The Golf Channel, they aren't guilty of this), especially ones that don't broadcast golf every week, seem to latch on to five or six names and talk about them incessantly; regardless of where they are on the leaderboard.  All golf broadcasts will look for Tiger wherever he is, understandably.  However, when Kenny Perry and Paul Goydos are dueling it out on a Saturday afternoon to see who will have the 54-hole lead, and you're yapping about Phil and Garcia, there's something wrong there.

The fact of the matter is, the vast majority of the time, the top-5 of a tournament is going to be made up of people you aren't familiar with.  My question is why aren't you familiar with them?  Why hasn't the network broadcast educated folks about these players?  Why not a mini-Who Is He on each golfer in contention, if you will?  It's not like they don't have the budgets for it.  It's almost like these network announcers don't want to do any work, and just want to bang the same drum about the same six players.  Isn't that counter-intuitive however?  Wouldn't you want your audience to have a good base of knowledge on 30 players, rather than six?  Would you rather your audience want to know about golfers like Stewart Cink, Geoff Ogilvy and Chad Campbell; or would you rather have them endure another "Sergio Garcia is from Spain" story?

Golf has come an awfully long way over the last 30 years, and a good portion of that can be traced to television, among other sources, for being responsible for its growth.  Golf has a great opportunity now, especially in the middle of Tiger's prime, to grow the game to mainstream levels, if they go about it the right way.  The era of the six-player Tour is over; and I think it's time to go back to the ad campaign of a few years ago, that could have been even bigger than it was: "These Guys Are Good."  The fact of the matter is, these guys ARE good, and there are more than six golfers who are good.  There is simply too much talent on Tour for it to be ignored, and ignoring the younger generation of those looking to enter the fray is a mistake as well.  Eventually, Tiger will go into semi-retirement, and the Tour will need something to market itself around.  It's time for them to start building that "something" now, rather than 10 years from now, when it will be too late.

Golf fans and Fantasy Golf players all know this: The Name isn't what's important, it's the golf.  This means, whomever's playing well will get the attention/start, and whoever isn't, won't.  If Fantasy players can dispassionately take name recognition out of the equation when selecting their starters, and golf fans can enjoy good play as well as watching personalities; why can't the networks and the PGA do this?  The popularity of the game is already on the decline, and is in danger of falling off the cliff completely if something isn't done.  It's crossroads time for the PGA.  Are the going to lay-up, or are they going for the green?

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