No Laying Up - Golf Podcast - 1149: 12 Storylines For The Chevron Championship
Episode Date: April 21, 2026Soly, Randy, TC and Cody preview the Chevron with a quick history lesson on the events origin as the tournament better known as the Dinah Shore, some of our favorite storylines headed into this year�...�s event, Solheim Cup roster chatter, a look at some of the key holes at Memorial Park, and we close with our picks to win - and not to win, and some thoughts on the building of the pool on the 18th to replicate Poppie’s pond. Timestamps: 00:00 - Intro and Tournament History 12:00 - 2026 Chevron Storylines 56:00 - Solheim Cup roster standings 1:06:05 - Course preview 1:13:10 - picks to win and not to win 1:17:00 - the pool/pond Support our Sponsors: Titleist Gruns Pinehurst If you enjoyed this episode, consider joining The Nest: No Laying Up’s community of avid golfers. Nest members help us maintain our light commercial interruptions (3 minutes of ads per 90 minutes of content) and receive access to exclusive content, discounts in the pro shop, and an annual member gift. It’s a $90 annual membership, and you can sign up or learn more at nolayingup.com/join Subscribe to the No Laying Up Newsletter here: https://newsletter.nolayingup.com/ Subscribe to the No Laying Up Podcast channel here: https://www.youtube.com/@NoLayingUpPodcast Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Be the right club.
Be the right club today.
Johnny, that's better than most.
How about him?
That is better than most.
Better than most.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome back to the No Laying Up podcast.
Sali here got a preview coming here shortly of this week's Chevron championship down in Houston.
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Without any further delay, let's get to our preview.
All right, folks, we are here.
We have made it first women's major championship of the year.
We are recording this episode on Thursday, April 16th for the listeners' sake here to get
out ahead of some travel next week for the big guy.
Let me introduce the big guy himself.
Hello, Mr. Big.
Hi, guys.
Happy to be here.
Feels like the women's season is like properly.
starting so excited mr cody mcbride hello cody hello mr sally excited it's uh it's chevron
new course hopefully not the same old baggage but we'll see a lot to talk about on that front tc is
here as well hello me mr t ron greetings gentlemen i'm glad to hear that we are considering this a
major right from the jump i think it gets what a two or three year grace period and then and then we will
make the final verdict on whether this remains a major moving forward i don't
don't think we've ever given anything a two to three year grade period i think it's going to say one year
we're going to see how memorial park plays well moral park slaps though we know that but the overseed
we got we were going to break it all down we got a lot to talk about on this randy's going to give us
a little bit of a history of the chevron how we got here we are going to go through 12 of the biggest
storylines for the 2026 chevron talk a little bit about the golf course of course the new golf course
that will they'll be playing we're going to make our picks to win who won't win a few questions
to round it out so big how do we get here where are we playing this year take us to a little bit of a
history of this championship i don't have to put a time limit on you like i normally do with stuff
with tc i don't think but a brief history if you will yeah yeah we'll we'll keep it brief
here's what you need to know this event started back in the early 70s okay this was founded in
in 1972 to be specific by a businessman named David Wallace who worked for Colgate Palm Olive,
TC. I don't know your thoughts or feelings on the Colgate business empire.
Not a trap draw, not a trap draw. Okay.
We're going to be able. I do use Colgate toothpaste. I switched over from Crest to Colgate
about six or seven years ago. I'm a Proctor and Gamble.
I was. I was a P&G loyalist.
Still not a trap draw. We're keeping a moving here. We're keeping it moving.
Okay. So David Wallace and Dunder Mifflin that era.
Yes, yes. Uh, 1972, David Wallace and Dina Shore. Okay, Dina Shore is an important name to know.
Perhaps people know this tournament as the old Dinosaur. I got to put a hand up. I'm not like super
familiar with Dinoshares game, but just a quick kind of Wikipedia research session. Dinosaur is a true, just
entertainer throwback Hollywood type okay she's she's now to see she passed away in 1994 um but
she was very very popular in the 50s 60 70s was married to bert reynolds for like five years in
the 70s so just like a very Hollywood type like a bob hope yes dinashore enjoyed golf okay and so that's
where she comes in she played golf she just really enjoyed the game and so she used
her celebrity in conjunction with David Wallace and those people to found this tournament.
They put it at Mission Hills Country Club, which is just outside Palm Springs, and Palm Springs
is where Dinah Shore lived. So this tournament from its inception was the richest purse
in women's golf. At the time it began in 1972, it was the purse was more than double the LPGA
championship, which is now the KPMG Women's PGA and the U.S. Women's Open. So big deal right
from the start, big purse, big celebrity backing. And this was the tournament in Mission Hills,
California, Palm Springs. They play the tournament. In 1988, Amy Alcott won the event. And in a
moment of pure bliss, ecstasy, she jumped into the pond.
surrounding the 18th Green there at Mission Hills.
And this would begin the tradition that I know we're going to talk about it this year,
but this would begin the tradition of jumping into the pond.
It didn't take hold right away, though.
In 1991, Alcott won again.
She jumped again, this time along with Dina Shore.
And this was kind of the real catalyst.
And so in 1994, a woman named Donna Andrews,
she was the first non-Amy Alcott winner to jump into the water.
And I think this is when the tradition gets firmly cemented.
So that pond at Mission Hills, it was known as Poppy's Pond.
That was in honor of Terry Wilcox, who was a longtime tournament director for the then, you know,
it's had many names, but for the Dina Shore.
So I know we're going to talk about the winter jumping into the pond.
Another thing to mention that I think is important to what this tournament was.
In 1991, a women's festival began concurrent with the golf tournament in Palm Springs.
We had our buddy Travis Hill of The Golfers Journal on, gosh, several years ago now.
He grew up in this area.
I think the way he dubs it, it was lesbian lollipalooza.
It was at the time, the largest gathering of lesbian and queer women in the United States.
United States. It was a week-long celebration with music, with art, just a true like coming
together. And it was always around this golf tournament. This went on through the 90s,
through the 2000s, through the 2010s. In 2021, Chevron bought the naming rights to this tournament.
And this is kind of where things really start to shift. They would eventually move the
tournament to greater Houston beginning in 2023 we can debate whether this is a good move this
probably isn't the episode to do that i know the long time people who have a history at mission
hills country club have always thought that was the wrong move to to move the chevron out of palm
springs but in 2023 it went to greater houston it went up to the woodlands they had to dredge
There was a pond at the 18th green of the Jack Nicholas course where they played this event the last three years.
They had to dredge that pond.
They had to clean it.
They had to put in netting to keep like alligators away.
A lot of people were wondering, will the winner still jump?
Lily Avous won the event in 2023, and she took the plunge and continued the tradition.
Nellie Korda did the year after her, and we've been going since then.
Mal Saigo last year made the jump.
even though she can't swim.
I think it was a little scary for folks.
And so,
Sallie,
this year is the first year,
this event.
It's still in the Houston area,
but it's moved from,
like,
very suburban,
the woodlands,
which, as Cody has told us time and again,
like,
it's not really Houston.
And they've parked it
very much closer to the city center
at Memorial Park.
Of course,
we've seen this as a PGA tour stop
the last several years,
but it's much more
connected with the city of Houston. And so unfortunately, the women's festival is a casualty of this
move to Texas. That's no longer, you know, it's no longer really lesbian lalapalooza.
It doesn't seem like Houston's the best environment. Yeah. So this is just a tournament that
has a rich history on the LPGA tour in the women's game, but I think is at a crossroads with its
identity with the scale of what the LPGA tour was. This event made sense for a lot of years,
and it was great in Southern California. But as the LPGA has wanted to grow and expand,
especially as purses at the U.S. Women's Open and the AIG Women's Open have grown.
This event just feels a little bit, in my opinion, too much like a signature event and not enough
like a true major championship.
And so we'll talk about Memorial Park.
We'll get our reaction on what we think about that.
If I can real quick, let me just run through this tournament
tends to yield in its recent history,
first time major winners.
The first tournament I really distinctly remember watching the Chevron
was 2018 when Pernilla Lindberg in eight playoff holes
outlasted M.B. Park.
They had to come back.
They suspended play Sunday night.
They had to come back Monday morning and they finished up.
Pernillo was a first time major winner.
And since that time, you had Jin Young Coe in 2019, Miram Lee in 2020, Patty T in 2021,
Jennifer Cup Show in 2022, all first time major winners.
Lili Avous continued that in 2023 in Texas.
Nelly Korda won in 2024.
She was not a first time major winner, the lone exception to this list.
And now last year, Mao Zigo, she captured her first major title.
Will that trend continue? I don't know. We're going to talk about it. But that's kind of why,
how we're at Memorial Park as quickly as possible and kind of what this tournament is and
has been on the LPGA tour. Thank you, Big. That is a complicated history. Indeed.
And we will get, I promise we'll circle back to kind of the golf course. It's merits as a major
championship. What people can expect and how the city of Houston is going to respond.
the positive changes that come with this in the back half of this.
But before we do that, we are going to get, it sounds like an ad transition, but it's not.
We're going to get to some storylines here.
We're going to talk about the golf and the upcoming major championship.
We are going to each cover three storylines that we are looking forward to the three kind of questions we have going into this.
Three things we're anxious about, three things we're excited about seeing in this coming week.
And Randy, we're still going to throw it to you first.
Save a little energy for the back half.
I know we're taxing you here.
A lot of big pitch inning.
here off the jump. But first storyline, off the top of the board, first draft pick. What's the
biggest storyline for you heading into the Chevron? I think I pose this in our agenda. The question
that I think he can ask it every major these days is it's just around Nelly Cordo. And so my
storyline is, is this Nellie's tour or not? You know, we're just coming from Augusta on the men's side
where I think we see a distinct like Rory McElroy, Scotty Sheffler,
like those are the dudes on the men's side, right?
And Rory's got six majors now.
Scotty has four,
but there's like a clear separation.
And you kind of know where the major championships run through on the men's side.
On the women's side, I think it's a bit less clear.
And I know we're going to talk about several players,
but I just think it starts with Nelly, right?
Nellie is the face of the LPGA tour.
I consider her the face of women's golf right now.
In saying that, she has just, and I do say just won two majors.
And so I think every major is a big opportunity for Nellie to kind of separate herself from her peers at this stage in her career.
I think a third major would be a big step, would, would,
quite honestly, it would put her alongside Minji Lee and Ingy Chun and some of these other women,
current players with three majors. And so I guess I kind of just yearn for some dominance on the
women's side. And we saw Nelly two years ago, you know, went in seven times and five straight
starts. Like, I just wanted to keep going. And so, yeah, is this Nellie's tour? Is this not
Nellie's tour. You know, come here, be the favorite, back it up. Like, I think that would be great.
And coming off of some pretty rocky, shaky finishes for her winning contention the last
a lot of runner-ups. Yeah. Yeah. Her four finishes this year, she, she won the Hilton Grand Vacation
Tournament. It's not a real tournament. It was second at the Fortinet Founders Cup, second at the
four championship at Wild Horse Pass.
And then T2 at the Aramco to Lauren Coglin at Shadow Creek.
Yeah.
Four events are worst finish so far is a tie for second.
Shaggy starts.
I understand that we're expect, I, I don't get there.
I understand that we'd expect her to like run through the finish line.
That's the player that we want Nellie to be.
And so far that she's kind of proven that she hasn't been able to do that,
except for when we look back at 2024, which wasn't that long ago.
What I'm super impressed with so far with Nellie is that she usually starts the year off pretty shaky and doesn't have the pieces put together.
And she seems to have the pieces put together.
And she's making smarter decisions scheduling wise.
Now, a lot of people can give her a bunch of crap for missing the Asian swings and not playing as many tournaments as others.
But she's clearly found a recipe because I'm sure she agrees with what we're saying right here big.
She also wants to win majors.
and she's changing her schedule to be able to fix that.
She's not playing in LA this week so she can maximize her prep with her coaches.
So she does show up to Houston and be able to actually win.
So yeah, I think that that is the biggest storyline,
not only on player dominant side,
but also the marketing side of the LPGA tour and women's golf at large.
Everybody is waiting for Nellie to take control, take the reins and run,
because that's really where this boost that everybody's thinking is coming is going to come from.
Yeah, I just, that put that she missed, the short putt that she missed is still just haunting me a little bit from, from the one up at Sharon Heights.
Yeah.
Is that a month ago now?
Yeah, she's gotten the early season golf channel short miss putt montage already.
And good and good on them for for putting that montage together because that has been Nellie's things.
And I'll say this.
There's some bad info put out sometimes on this here podcast.
Nelly has gone to the mallet before.
We've covered this.
We've apologized for this.
Okay.
Well, she's bounced back and forth quite a bit.
I will say this year and we don't get nearly as much data as we know.
But KPMG performance inside she is gaining 4.01 strokes total so far.
this year, clearly above and beyond everyone else,
she's positive in every single category, except for putting.
She's given up a half a stroke to the field there every single time.
So she clearly knows that's what it is.
We'll see when,
I'm excited to hear what you dive in about Memorial Park in the setup here.
But I'm just guessing the, like, it's mini verde greens that they have down there at Memorial Park.
I'm guessing that that is going to be super comfortable with where she's practicing
at right now. So I think we're going to see a really good putting week coming from Nellie on
greens that aren't going to be really like crazy fast. Nellie's results here real quick before we go
to the next storyline starting in 2020 and this is across Mission Hills and the Woodlands.
We don't know about Memorial Park, but she was T2 in 2020, T3 and 21, did not play in 22,
solo third and 23, one in 24, and then tied for 14th last year.
So, you know, her floor here is like, really it's like she's got a top 10.
I think we just want to see that dominant performance, you know, leave no doubt,
Nellie.
The Woodlands was a great course fit for her, and it looked like if that tournament was going
to stay there for a long time, she was going to be able to rack up some majors there.
And we'll get into kind of course fit and setup here.
but if it plays near the yardage that it's listed at playing as,
it should be a good thing for Nellie Korda.
I think it should be bombers featured heavily here.
Cody, second storyline.
Yeah, I'm going to go to the one woman who's had to hold up that wall,
that defense on Nelly twice so far this year.
And that's Hoizu Kim.
Phenomenal, two victories to start out this year,
currently up to number three in the world.
It's just crazy.
And she is, I would say, leading the effort now on the Korean side.
And they're, as Korea themselves try to, like, fight off all the Japanese, young stars that are coming up in the game.
We grew up.
I think a lot of us got super into women's professional golf in the 2010s, when you just saw every single Korean was like winning majors left and right.
It's just crazy to see from 2010 to 2019.
They won 23 major championships as a country and only three since then.
So we'll see what happens there.
But, you know, Hoy Joach is 30 years old.
She's having a heck of a year.
The two victories, like I said, and then she actually played really good,
exhausted.
And she talked about how exhausted she was at Shadow Creek, finished tied for 13th there.
But if you look at Memorial Park, and again, I don't want to get ahead of, of course,
fits or anything but I think of the group I don't know TC have you played Memorial Park yet I haven't
no I've watched a lot of that tournament but I haven't haven't played it personally okay so from the one person
here that has played it like it's pretty wide off the T but it is a hundred percent a second shot golf
course and it's going to be awesome to see the women coming in from a much different clubs and
trajectory into greens that are pretty firm and runoffs all over the place so you got to be
dialed with your approach play and your short game
has to be rock solid because there's just runoffs all over the place that's going to have really
sticky Bermuda that's coming up through that overseed. No one's had a better short game so far this
year than than H.J. I could ride for her any, you know, every single day, every tournament. I think
she's awesome. Big. I know this is a homer take, but like the fact that we got to spend time with
her last year is just like incredible. She's such an awesome person and I'm so excited to see her,
you know, hopefully content of this first major.
Cody, question for you on Kyo-Kim.
Will she have a driver hit at a different ball speed other than 141 or 142?
Probably not.
140 or 143, is it in play?
That's something to watch for.
I want to see if she hits even one single shot that's not 141.
That is not me making fun of her ball speed.
That is me marveling at the consistency at which she hits the ball and refusing to, refusing any temptation to swing harder at it.
Because it looks like she swings at 30% of her capacity.
And she is one of the most remarkable players to watch because it is a drastic, the different style.
There's not a ton of drastically different styles on the LPGA tour, but you compare her to Nelly,
and it is drastically different.
So I wouldn't be surprised, of course, if those two were dueling in some way again.
I do have some on that.
When we played with her, I asked her specifically about that tempo, and she said when they're kids and when they start being taught golf as kids in Korea,
that their instructors, they have them all line up,
and they're not going and doing like individual swings,
like, you know, at their own pace.
Like we teach, you know, kids here in the States.
What they do is they all line them up and they all swing at the exact same time
in rhythm together.
So the instructor would be like, back through, back, whoa, through.
And they're all synced up like that.
So she's like, that's where I got my tempo from.
And I've just never changed it.
Wow.
that's interesting
randy what are you cruising at for your for your ball speed these days
probably pretty similar yeah yeah truly i i have a game made uh made for this tour um i was just
going to throw in one interesting thing about about huj kim is she won the evion in 2014
which was her very first major appearance and then nothing since then and a boatload of top tens a few runner-ups
but is definitely somebody that can win this tournament for sure runner-up last year different golf
course but i remember i asked her what does she like about houston of course the barbecue so she got
she got to be feeling good good food city tc uh well first of all i want to
say that the people of carlton woods uh even though they've been some of the most hostile
aggressive great people uh people that i've encountered in the last decade in golf both verbally and
with their leaf blowers i hope they're doing well uh including p p and lady j who i believe live
within that community all of that said i think my first thing off the top of my head is this is the first
big litmus tests for the LPGA's enhanced improved broadcasts we saw you know we've seen
shadow creek we saw it at Sharon Heights I didn't watch too much of the board championship
at wild horse pass presented by you know like that that one that one just didn't didn't really
rise to the level on my it's a turkey shoot down there and it just didn't really appeal to my
sensibilities but I think this one is it's a
like it's already wired for you know tournament golf as far as like they wired it for the
the Houston Open a few weeks ago on the men's side they should have good infrastructure out there
let's see if this thing feels distinct from from last year's run at carlton woods because I think
that if they're you know like they're probably working out the kinks testing stuff out at those first
few events where they did this. And now it's like, all right, it's prime time. We got a,
this is a major championship. Broadcast windows are bigger. Let's, let's see. Let's, let's stress test
this new, you know, FM Global's kind of rejuvenation of the LPGA tour broadcast, because that is
the product, right? And if you want to get like, like, if, if Nelly comes, like runs out to a first
round lead or a second round lead, that's how you're going to get new fans into the game. It's
presenting an awesome product on Saturday and Sunday to showcase what she's doing well or to
showcase the drama and then introduce a bunch of other players along with her.
It's a huge spot.
I mean, you, I've been extremely critical of the way Golf Channel has handled this event in
the past, just same graphics, same announcers, same cameras, same views just from the
high tower cams and just a ton of putts and no bringing the golf course to life.
the golf course didn't really, wasn't really elevated to major championship level prior to this as well.
But like you got to, I said this a bunch.
Like you just can't have Terry Gannon saying 30 times this is a major championship and it feel like a major.
Like you just, you won't be doing that down the stretch of the U.S. women's open.
They will not be saying this is a major championship.
Now she's trying to become a major champion.
That's the only thing that identified it as a major prior.
And you can elevate that with different graphics, different music, different, you know, cameras.
that you're using different a style of presenting it and this is i don't think they're going to get
all of that right in year one of this kind of makeover i'd be that's probably an unfair expectation
but it needs to be different than the wild horse pass and that's a yeah and i think it's it should
be a great opportunity with some handheld cams and some ground level stuff to show some of those
things you were talking about cody with uh the runoffs and the just you know like the second shot
nature of this golf course and the intricacy of the design and and you know just some of the stuff
that doked it out there that's that it doesn't really it gets washed out from above but if you're
seeing it from ground level it's like oh okay i get it there's there's a lot of a lot of a lot of
nuance a lot of subtlety a lot of strategy out there yeah i would just add because we're
recording this uh the week before i i haven't seen mc's like personnel roster for the week
Saul, you mentioned Terry Gannon.
Like, is it Terry?
I assume it's not Dan Hicks.
I assume it'll probably be Morgan and Terry.
But, you know, what type of on-course reporting do they have?
It's, I totally agree.
It's a huge test.
And I wish I was more optimistic.
I know we'll see some better camera views, some drone shots.
But, yeah, I wanted to feel like a major.
Not to insult anybody who's listening.
here, but if you have no clue what we're talking about, last November at the CME Tour
Championship, newly LPGA Commissioner Craig Kessler announced that LPGA with support from
FM and Trackman. They're going to have 50% increase in the total number of cameras, three
times more microphones, slow motion camera capabilities, drones, and quadruple the number
of shot tracing capabilities. They will all be used to heighten focus on player storytelling
more walking talks and a whole bunch more. And so far, you know, we've seen it a little bit
and bits and pieces. And we mentioned the Nelly Miss Putt collage there that they had. But I don't
know if I've really totally seen what this new power, firepower is supposed to actually be yet.
So I'll see you guys are right. It's a big week for that. I feel like we got glimpses of it
at Sharon Heights. Just, you know, more handheld cams, showing off some elephant.
change, more drone stuff, a little bit more sense of place, just a little different pacing.
I agree it. It can probably still be flexed up. And hopefully this does feel elevated in that way.
But it also think Sharon Heights, like probably the like topo of that property, the light when it was coming in.
Like it doesn't really matter where you put the camera. You could just like turn it anywhere and point it.
People are going to be like, oh my goodness. That's gorgeous. Versus, you know, it. Mavora Parks
going to look a heck of a lot better than Carlton Woods. I'll tell you that. It will. Yeah,
like we'll get, yeah, well, you can stay tuned for next week. You know, we'll have some some plenty of
info, I'm sure, on social covering all of the announcers and all that stuff. But with Big having
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All right.
It's time for your storyline.
I know.
I'm playing a favorite here. I'm playing a hit here, but I genuinely think this is a good opportunity.
Our friend Lauren Coglin won a very difficult golf tournament at Shadow Creek just a few weeks ago.
I don't necessarily think this week is going to play especially difficult, but I do think it is going to play long.
If this golf course is going to, you know, the listed yardage is over 6800 yards with five par fives.
Lauren is a long hitter.
Lauren hits it, you know, when, not only is she long, but from her approach play is really good.
So longer approach shots are going to play into her hand in theory as well.
She putted really well at Shadow Creek.
Her putting stats don't look amazing for the course of the year.
But when it got difficult, it went really, really well for it.
And I think this is a really good opportunity.
She's had some good opportunities in major championships,
this being one of them.
I know it was at a different golf course,
but I think this is aiming towards a,
this is the type of setup where I would get excited for her game.
Like US Open, US Women's Open right now.
I'm not like, oh, this is LC style,
but this kind of golf course I feel like is.
And I think there is a very solid chance
we could be having an extremely fun Sunday show this upcoming weekend.
It's not a home game, but it's like a very, very familiar have spent years of my life.
Exactly.
Very comfortable environs for her.
I mean, she might be one of the few people that are disappointed that it is leaving the woodlands because that's where, you know, she spent all of her time.
I don't know how much she's gone down to Memorial Park.
Unfair advantage, just like Lori.
Yeah.
No, I hear you, though.
I mean, I know.
It feels like we're building there.
Right?
It does.
You know, we talked about players.
Some just take off like rocket chips and some kind of just make those incremental gains.
And you can really start to plot their ascension that way.
And I think Lauren, it just feels like, as you say, we're, she just keeps leveling up.
And I thought that that win at Shadow Creek on a very difficult.
golf course, playing with Nellie Korda and the final group, you know, winning by five shots,
not not buckling to any type of pressure.
Like that has to fill her with so much confidence coming into a week like this.
I'm very excited.
And I might partially walk back something I just said of just like, I think I said something
like, yeah, I don't expect the course to play especially difficult.
And I'm like, wait a second here.
The LPJ tour is trying to make their golf course is more difficult and more challenging.
And this is a major championship.
Like I don't know what they actually can do from I don't yeah I don't know how firm they're going to be able to get it and how difficult they're going to be able to make the golf course
but I think they're going to take more make more of an effort to do that than they potentially have in the past for this championship and that should play into her hands I think is I think just with the five par fives I think we're still likely to see good scoring but that doesn't mean that there's not going to be some challenge involved with that her like I think the margins were so thin at Shadow Creek with how firm it was
that i've just full confidence in her iron play yeah like to hit the right shot at the right time
and then even to see that that that wedge she hidden into the last hole shadow creek 72nd
hole was just like all right like not only did did she win by five she ran like she ran through
the line you know she she put an exclamation point on it i thought that was that was really cool and
yeah it's like like that's i don't know her progression as a player it's fits and starts but it feels
like there's incremental improvement. Even when the putter wasn't cooperating earlier this year,
she had the calf issue or Achilles issue. And it's like, she's always getting better at something.
And it's, it's kind of slow and steady wins the race. And I think at some point it's going to,
it's going to pop in one of these majors because her game was built for one.
Back to the top of the order.
Time major winner. Who will that be? I would like to present to you my current top five players.
without a major championship.
I expect there to be
asserting tally
disagreements here.
Yeah,
a strict tally just missed.
So let me run through my top five
and you tell me where I'm stupid,
where I'm wrong.
Number five,
I didn't want to put her in this list,
quite honestly,
but on the strength of European Tour wins
and a 2022 LAT
Player of the Year award,
I'm putting Ling
Grant here at number five.
Wow. After T.C. just quit her, you're going to make him relapse like this?
We expected a lot more. I think it's safe to say out of Lynn. She's what, 26 years old now.
She has one twice on the LPGA tour. But she's my number five for best current player
without a major. Number four is Angel Yin. She has two LPGA tour wins. She has top
sixth in all five majors, top fives and four of them. She's had runner-up finishes at the Chevron
and the U.S. Women's Open. She's just somebody that kind of shows up a lot, and especially in the
bigger events and on the more difficult tests. So Angel Yin is my number four. Number three,
this player has seven wins on the LPGA tour. She has finished top seven in all five major
championship. She's had runner-ups at the KPMG and the AIG Women's Open in her career.
This is Japan's Nasa Hataoka. She, I think, has fallen a little from top of mind, you know,
with the influx of new Japanese talent arriving on the LPGA tour, but don't forget about Nasa.
And in Houston, you know, she's named after the space program.
So she's number three.
Number two, eight wins worldwide has top six at all the majors.
She's had runner-ups at the Chevron, the U.S. Women's Open and the AIG.
Charlie Hall.
She's another one.
You know, when she's on, she plays such an exciting, just invigorating brand of golf.
Big questions on whether she can close a major.
I think it's a pretty fascinating case right now,
but I gave Charlie Hall the number two spot.
And the number ones should be very easy.
It's Gino.
Gino Titicum, number one player in the world,
can quote all the stats,
but I think we're still waiting for Gino to break through.
So that's my top five.
Just missing the board, I had LC.
The EY twins are very good.
I just don't know if their body of work puts them into my top five yet.
Rio Takeda, another very good Japanese player.
Hadron Roo from South Korea.
Those were other names I considered.
I can't believe you didn't put L.C. on the top five.
L.C. Lottie?
Lottie Wode.
Rose Zhang would be too.
Or are you doing this based on resume?
Are you doing this based on?
I tended more towards resume.
And so that's why I didn't have either of the EY twins.
But as far as like who's got the best shot to win this
week the EY twins would be above you know a lot of these names in the top five and I think
LC will be ahead of like Lynn Grant and A's gonna say I would I would take yes I would take LC
over Lynn Grant 10 days out of 10 for sure you know I don't know how I got so much flack for
the hate on you pronunciation and Randy can just do whatever he just did with that it just
greases right past like nothing absolutely nothing you just say it quickly enough and you just
keep going that's my hey ran rue whatever i don't know what you do went for there hey
hey don't here's almost like a d sound in there yeah that's what i got
trouble for saying he was leaning into the d sound everybody yelled at me for that or just tc i should
have known that that's not necessarily every how she even pronounces it her on you
yeah there's no d that's it's it's like a it's like a soft d sound yeah i know head on
head on i don't know what the hiojou did you
Cody had going on earlier.
Hoyjoy, I think, was at some point.
I just try to say it as fast as I can.
Keep it moving.
Blanket.
My head, I've been working on these guys.
I know that you're not the trap draw, but just blanket meaculpus for any mispronunciations.
For eternity.
Yes.
And honestly, I feel like I know how important it is and I know how much a sign of a respect it is.
I will sit here and read and go over these names.
Then when you get to the point in the podcast, you're just sometimes you're just like,
oh, my goodness.
So please.
Please all the people like we're trying, man.
The hard thing is like, how do you say this?
Like to say like a Japanese name,
you almost have to do like a Japanese accent
and it can sound like offensive when you do it
unless you like speak Japanese, you know, the proper way.
It's not like, it's not Yamash does.
Probably like they just enunciated different,
but then you sound like an idiot when you go that way.
So when you try to say like your English way,
it's extra confusing or extra brain melting.
It is quite challenging.
I mean, every time we reference a Japanese name, who's just, guys, and he'll spell it out phonetically with all.
We're trying. Okay. And speaking of, I'm next on the list. Last year, we had an awesome winner in Mao Saigo at the Chevron Championship.
And I mentioned earlier when I was talking about H.J. Kim, that, bailing on it.
Yeah. Yeah. That, like, there's this.
new dominance in the Japanese women in the professional game. And it's so awesome to see they
currently have five players in the top 20. That's the most by any other country. South Korea has four.
The United States currently has three, excuse me, four. And then Australia has, you know,
kind of the rest besides the sampling of single representation there. Nine total in the top 50.
they're absolutely dominating the game
and they're showing up so deep.
Will a Japanese player go back to back?
And I would say that there's no other place
that I kind of want to look.
Not just back to pack of the Chevron,
but back-to-back major championships
is the winner of our AIG Women's Open last year,
Mia Yamasha.
And I think that she is rounding into form
at the right time of year.
She does have one miscut this year so far in Arizona,
but that tournament truly doesn't count.
She played really good at Shadow Creek, finished solo fourth there.
And then it just been like slowly plotting her way and getting warmed up for a season.
She's so good.
She was the LPGA tour's rookie of the year last year.
Not only with the AIG women's open win, but also won in Maybank as well to round out the season out.
She is not like a, you know, she was not a rookie last year.
She is so good at golf.
And I think this could be a tournament.
really good tournament for her.
See, yeah.
Guys, I am once again wondering if Gino has that dog in her.
Man, she slid down the board.
I'm not going to lie.
Does she even need it out here?
Like, how are they going to set it up?
If it's a birdie fest, I think she has a better opportunity.
You know, like, damning.
Yeah, exactly.
That's kind of been my platform with her for the last 12 to 18 months.
It just seems like if it's an under 14 or 50,
like if it's harder than 14 or 15 under par winning score,
it seems to eliminate her from contention,
whether it's a major or it just seems like she does well in the turkey shoot events.
In fact, of her eight LPGA wins TC, the lowest to par she has been is 16 under.
So there is some, like, now she's won by like four strokes at 17 under par.
So she didn't need to like get all the way there.
But she, yeah, she's never won a difficult tournament on the LPGA tour.
I haven't been close to my memory.
I mean, I don't mean that literally, but like it's not.
There's no instances that come to mind of like when the going gets tough.
Some of that's just there's not that many tests out there that are set up in that form or
fashion but i don't know like you look at i think you look to it like her her us women's open record
not good uh she's got a solo t6 she missed the cut last year women's women's women's british open not good
she's got a t7 otherwise like pretty middling results and i think those are the two the two
events that are set up properly every year to test all facets of your game and she hasn't really
passed the test with flying colors at those.
She just, yeah, just a few numbers to kind of back all this up.
Last two full season, so 24 and 25, she's made 32 starts on the LPGA tour outside of majors,
and she has 23 top tens.
and in the 10 majors in 24 and 25 she had three top tens
a runner up at the Evian being kind of her closest
where Grace Kim quite honestly stole that from her
but yeah we just haven't seen her be as you know
the Gino Titicum that she is week to week on the LPGA tour
we haven't seen that in majors and I think the further we go without seeing that
it just becomes a bigger and bigger story so yeah I think this is
this is a big one this week i it's every major i think from here on out is like it's a big spot for
gino until she wins at least one she's not coming in with like very good gino form either i mean
she won in thailand back way back in february but has had no top tens uh since coming back
stateside even before leaving the asian swing so yeah and i think like she's missed two of the last
10 cuts in majors so and i get it she's 23 like she just turned
23, but also she's been a pro for five years, right?
Or she's been, she's been playing majors.
She's played, she's played 27 major championships.
All righty.
So it's not like we're talking about a small sample size or, so I would love nothing more
than to see Gino and Nellie or Gino and L.C.
Square off down the stretch.
But I think we're, we're kind of reaching the point with Gino where it's like, all right,
like, it'd be one thing if it was kind of like the Ricky Fowler,
or JT before he won a major.
Like, all right, he's won a bunch.
Like he's won PJA tour events or he's finished top five
in a bunch of these things and he just hasn't gotten over the hump.
I think with Gino, it's like she's,
like she hasn't even finished top five in a bunch of these things.
She's got five top fives and 27.
Yeah, I'd struggle to reach back for a comp even on the men's side.
Of somebody that, you know, wins a ton of with great regularity.
Kind of like can't lay.
But like she wins more than Cantlay does.
It's like super high floor does win some now.
But yeah, we just are not seeing in the majors yet.
It would be it would basically be like if I'm not throwing,
this is not a dog whistle here for T.C.
It would be like if ROM hadn't won two majors.
Like that's what it would be like.
It's basically ROM level of play week to week basis.
If Ram had never won two majors,
that's basically what Gina would be.
A bit of a stretch there, but I think we got there.
I am going to say, I rarely end up picking Minji Lee,
and she sneaks up on me more often than she probably should.
But I just find it, I'm curious if she can elevate to becoming a four-time major champion,
like joining the likes of Laura Davies and Meg Malin and separating herself from Lydia Co,
like Lydia versus Menji.
I think Lydia's wider resume is better, but if Minji becomes a four-time major winner,
I like her chances more than I do Lydia's as it stands right now.
And it feels like she should have more majors than Anna Nordquist, who also has three majors.
Nancy Lopez, NG Chun, all have three, and I think four would just put her in a completely different class in her era.
And I'm stretching the word era a little bit.
She didn't play with Sayreepok, but, you know, Sayri Pak has four.
Yanni Sang has five, or sorry, Sayri has five as well, I think.
But kind of getting her closer to that level, I think we'll probably view Minji
Lee's career through an entirely, entirely different lens.
And I feel like we don't-
Chuck, off course.
I know, yeah.
So that's up for her.
Could be, if it plays firm, if it plays difficult, a short game, like the way she
scrambled around Frisco last year, like, and scored really well on a difficult setup there,
has me has me thinking thinking mingy i'm not it's almost like the kepka thing i'm not going to get caught
forgetting about mingy ahead of this week she uh sully i think it's a it's a great it's a great
point that it's weird taking out yani sang who is still playing and has won five majors but
it's not really competitive uh these days the active leader on the l pGA tour has three majors and i i
It just goes back to like, I think it would be good for women's golf to kind of have somebody getting into that four, five, six major territory mark.
Just to set a standard, right, to have everybody else start really chasing.
Especially with Lydia saying that she wants to start winding down her career.
Right.
Yeah.
I am curious.
So Minji has won the U.S. Women's Open.
She's won the KPMG and she's won the Evian.
If she were to win the Chevron, would this count as a grand slam for her?
Because I know the LPGA kind of does, like, you have to win four out of the five for it to be a grand slam.
So that might be, it's so convoluted.
But that could be, you know, if she were to win this week, I think maybe it would be a grand slam.
I don't think the LPGA wants to open that door.
I think because I think the answer there is one of these things is not a major.
If you can win four of the five and it would be considered a grand slam.
Yeah, no, I agree with that, but I just don't know technically speaking if they would.
I don't think she's not one of women's, uh, edgy women's open, right?
So correct.
There'd be no grand slam combination that wouldn't include that one, even though that became a major in like 2013 or 2014 or something like that.
Yeah.
Uh, just historically, and I know we're at a completely new golf course.
This is the weakest of Minji's, uh, kind of majors that the, the, the,
where she's had the least amount of success.
So yeah, we'll see.
Interesting.
She is somebody that it's like easy to forget about,
but you don't want to forget about.
Yeah, that would be a mistake.
She won, was it, 22 U.S. women's open at Pine Needles in North Carolina?
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Chevron might be a major, guys,
because I'm in major championship segue form.
I'm not going to lie.
I spent a couple of days this week with Bill Corp, Ben Crenshaw,
and talking to them about Pioneer's number 11,
just coming along and, oh, my gosh,
it sounds and looks so awesome.
So, yeah, I'm excited to get back up there later this year.
Number two is just the more I play golf on that course,
the more I like it's just the best public golf course in America.
I continue to continue to innovate there at Pinehurst every every single year.
So all right.
Last round here, Randy.
One more go around for to round out our 12 storylines.
Okay.
I this storyline, I'm really curious how this hits you guys.
And it's not like super specific to this week,
but I think it's something TC we might just need to start monitoring.
I think we have been monitoring.
And I'm calling it, where did all the American stars go?
My thesis is, I don't love where American women's professional golf is at the moment.
You have Nelly Korda, okay?
So you have somebody at the top.
LC is currently ranked 12th in the world.
She's the second best American.
But you start going down the Rolex rankings, okay?
and no shade to L.C.
But she's won three times, you know, no major.
The next American Angel Yin ranks 16th.
Two LPJ wins, no majors.
And then the other ones in the top 50 at the moment,
Andrea Lee has one LPJ win, no major.
Austin Kim has not won on the LPJ tour.
But she's a sending.
She's up and coming.
Yes.
Cup Cho and Lindy Duncan.
And I just think, you know, like Yulimi No is a name.
What are we doing there?
Megan Kang has never really materialized as a major winner.
Alison Corpus won the U.S. Women's Open, but has not done much since then.
Lili A Voo was on top of the world and because of injuries and whatnot.
Like she has fallen.
Rose-Zang has not materialized.
like I think I thought she would at this point.
So I just, you know, you go back at different points in time
and just using the world rankings as a measuring stick.
I just feel like there's not a ton going on right now
in American women's pro golf outside of Nelly.
And, you know, like if L.C. could win, that would be fantastic.
But I'm just wondering, like, where this next real crop of elite players
who is it and when do we see them because we're not quite seeing it right now loki kind of a lot of
riding on this asterisk tally ascension yeah you have giana clementi on the epsen tour she'd be
maybe another name but you know cody talked about like the the japanese wave is here and they're
not going anywhere the koreans are always strong you know it's it's i just feel like the americans have not
really kept up. Swedes are not strong. The Swedes stink, TC.
No, the sweet, hold on. All right. Well, one of them won a major last year.
The one that nobody expected to win. You got Ingrid should should start winning at some point here.
You've got like I feel like there's they don't belong in that conversation is the
no, I know, but I'm just saying for from a from a relative perspective like the Swedes or the
or the Brits, like there's, there's, there's some strength there,
relative to population size into, you know,
they're punching above their weight.
I am, uh, I'm very disappointed in the Swedes play, uh,
to be like completely honest.
I think if you look at that, it's, it still shocks me that in that class,
uh, coming out of the academy between, uh, Ludwig, Lynn and Maya,
that Maya's the only one with the major that it's really like, you know,
Ludwig has had chance.
is there. I did not expect between Maya and Lynn that she would be the shining star,
and she burns bright when she does, but man, the lows are so low that it's hard to keep
up with. Ingrid, I'll meet you there. I think she had a good start to the season, you know,
her full year last year with that win in L.A. And then just really had some rocky patches. And I think,
you know, she's been pretty honest about trying to figure out how to play the professional game and
professional life and hope that she'll settle in there a little bit. But you're right. I do know
that like the amateurs that we have and we have a good pool of amateurs that are teamed up in the
Chevron this year, but like Kearra Romero, nobody ever really talks about. She's the best
amateur in the world right now. I know Astrid gets a lot of the headlines because of how
young she is and where she shows up and things like that. But there are people. Farrow-Keefe,
I just don't know like truly where the depth.
is big that you're kind of searching for because it's not like it doesn't jump out at you.
Right.
It's like if LC hadn't won Shadow Creek, you know, if she was kind of scuffling at the start of this year,
outside of Nellie, there's really nobody that, like there's no American woman that's a threat,
I don't think, to win a major right now.
And that's like, just kind of prepping for this.
I was like, holy shit.
It just kind of hit me like, this isn't a great spot.
for American women at the moment.
American men either.
Kind of different scales.
I think they're going to get smoked at this O'Lheim Cup.
But if you say that every time.
But they have to keep dragging out Lexi, you know?
Like that's, it's, yeah.
So if you, we can, I don't want to make this like an entire thing.
But if you look at the U.S. team right now, rankings-wise,
it's Nelly, Angel, Austin, Kim, Yuline.
me know, Elsie and Andrea Lee. That's your six. That's a solid six. The two highest that will come
from Rolex will be Jen Kupcho and Megan Kang. And then the rest will be picks. The names that we're
missing out on that are like right there is going to be Lindy Duncan and Alison Corpus.
That's a tough, tough list. And I'll say this.
Sarah Schmelzel or yeah, yeah. I mean,
Sarah's way, she's like 12th in points right now, but then you get down there like Lucy Lee is 10th and points.
Megan Kang's 11th, Schmezzles, 12, Jenny Bay, Rose, Lexi's still in 15th.
I think one of the shocking things for me when we look at it for a, you know, Solheim Cup specific on the European squad is how different that European team could look this year.
And them coming off back to back, you know, a retain and then an outright,
You have newcomers in Lottie.
You're going to have Maya and Lynn.
Celine will still be there in Carlotta.
The rest of them is literally, you know,
the Chiarra Tamburlini, Helen Breen, Mimi Rhodes,
Manon-Doroy, like a bunch of rookies.
I think we're going to see this year for the European squad.
That's where I think Lynn is so much stronger in matchplay
or as a weapon in that.
then she's just building a 72 whole score.
It just undersc-
like if you took that American squad
and they were playing a women's presidents cup,
like they would be such big
underdogs to an international women's,
like it would be,
they might not win one of those for 50 years.
Nellie said that,
remember she just got caught on a hot mic?
The US Women's Open.
I'm like, yeah, we get our ass kit
if there was a U.S. versus a career or something.
like that yeah i feel like as americans we like underdogs maybe that's the thing to do is set
it up as like i know that and then say like yeah maybe you're going to get smoked for the first
few years but this will make everybody come together and start doing the right stuff you know
i've been saying that about the u.s writer cup team tc nobody's coming together okay i got braddle
saying justin lillard should be the captain anyways cody you're up next yeah i was going to make a
case here for Charlie Hall because I figure if somebody's in the top five in the world and they're
not really mentioned but big you did an awesome job of mentioning her for people who should win a
major that that that's like a gaping hole in her and gino's resume so I'm going to flip it uh we mentioned
min gee but there is a hotter player in the world than min gee leave from australia and that's
hannah green three wins so far uh this year uh all you know either in australia or
part of the Asian swing. She's only played one of the mainland LPGA tour events this year,
and that was at Las Vegas at Shadow Creek, and she missed the cut there. Not really too concerned
about that. Well, we can throw that one out as an outlier. But man, so impressed with her,
a major champion already. Somebody who clearly has everything clicking. We mentioned it a couple
times, but she went back to back to back wins with her husband on the bag caddying for her. He's
no longer the caddy. I think he's just like moved over to kind of manager duties as they're
trying to figure out what they're doing in the states. But man, there's nobody that's making more
putts. She's just making everything. And I think if you look at, you know, Memorial Park that,
again, it's going to be getable if you have a good short game and just keep it in the fairway.
And it seems like the way Hannah goes like about just plotting her things, she loves Wilshire. And we're
not getting Wilshire this year, but when I think of the layout of like just plotting yourself
around a map, I think that's like a very good Compton Memorial Park. And that's why I think
Hannah Green continues to just like ring and ring and ring for me. Two quick, just stats to back
up what Cody's saying. Nobody happier to leave the Woodlands than Hannah Green. She missed the
cut all three years at the Woodlands. And shockingly, Cody, does.
not have a top 10 in the last three years in major championships. So I think this season's majors are,
yeah, they're big for Hannah. Like let's, I think she's going to show up.
It's really interesting to look at her, her year last year, because she, she started finding form
late, but she had, I mean, she missed, she missed, she was 68th at the KPMG women's PGA, 16 over,
which from a, from a.
horse perspective, you would think that firm and fast and dry would kind of resonate.
And then missed the cut at the Evian, missed the cut at the Women's Open,
missed the cut in Portland, missed the cut in Canada, and then kind of started to find,
find some form and then played great heading into the fall in Korea and at Maybank,
and then just carried that over in the spring. So it's one of those things. You're just like,
man, it's just Jekyll and Hyde with her very streaky.
Yeah.
T.
Steve.
My next one was just like, I think it's always an interesting case study when we get to see,
we'll get to see it this year.
A U.S.
Women's Open as well of like comparing and contrasting the men's and women's games.
And I think from a course strategy and course management perspective from a, like this place,
Sully, I know it's been a kind of a haven for for some BSIs on the men's side.
I would say like, you know, some would maybe consider like a Brooke Henderson.
Maybe she's got a little BSI in her.
She's just kind of a female lady's BSI a little bit.
So it's like, is that going to shine?
Like is the architecture actually going to shine here?
Or are the women, you know, there's so much more accurate off the T.
You know, are they going to just, just kind of pick this place apart and be really patient?
I think if they set it up long enough, they'll have to hit, hit a lot of drivers and kind of
try to try to go for different angles and you know hit it over some of the dog legs but um but yeah
i'm just i don't know i'm really it like i loved it when they did the the back-to-back weeks at
pinehurst for the u.s open us women's open just think that's cool when we get um context around
you know certain expectations for certain shots on the golf course and then you see
a totally different side of the corn um yeah
kind of transits into my final storyline is just will memorial park feel like a major championship venue and
i think that part of that goes to what you're talking about of how the course is going to fit the scale
of the women's game and the shot's going to be interesting or the hole's going to be memorable and
like what's the what's the environment going to be like i think a big selling point from moving this
from the suburbs into the city was the hope that it would feel a lot more connected to the community i hope
it's been promoted a lot better than it has been uh in the past and that i hope we get some crowds uh out
there and some support out there that makes it feel big and elevated.
Again, probably, I've been stuck on this of like, it takes a long time to create traditions,
which I get some of the discussion around moving some of the old traditions into,
into different golf courses that we talked about off the jump.
But it's going to take a, it's going to take time for this, you know, if it stays at this golf course
for six, seven, eight years, who knows how long.
I don't know what the future of this championship really holds.
but it will be very different in year six, seven, or eight,
then it will be in this first year.
And it's, it's, it's going to be hard to,
I don't, I don't have rushed to a judgment on this,
but I think it is a huge ask to have a golf course be,
to have a golf course that is not a historic venue
in terms of people's memory of it and have it be an annual stop.
It's just going to get graded on a really, really, really harsh curve
because like the elevated events.
I mean, Evion is one that's kind of in a similar bucket,
which I think that golf course has grown on all of us,
but like flip over to men's side,
like the constant is like Augusta and the Masters, right?
And this isn't even trying to be anything close to that,
but like that's the kind of the what is exciting about the OSW Women's Open,
the KPMG Women's PGA and the IG Women's Open is the rotation
and the visiting of historic venues.
And it's going to just be a big,
hurdle to climb. And I know big we've talked about that just clearing that signature event
hurdle and feeling like a major championship is a massive one. And I'm suspect on this,
despite it being a good move. This is a better move than what they were doing. And I do want
to celebrate that. But I'm still suspect in that field, that getting that, that, that itch
in that feel like this is a major championship. So I think it's a good point. I think it ties into
our discussion previously about the broadcast partner and just how important it is for them to
show us the golf holes. Get us familiar with this venue, right? And especially the back nine
and the strategy. And if this tournament is going to be at this golf course for this foreseeable future,
like we need to start learning these holes and and the strategy and it just is it's incumbent on
NBC Golf Channel as well to to really lift that lift this up and so yeah I know we've talked
about all that but it it takes a whole effort so on the golf course so the scorecard yardage as it's
listed par 72 6,811 yards just under 3,300 on the front nine just over a 3,500.
on the back nine.
I'm flagging this, guys.
We could be potentially headed for a pace of play disaster.
And I'm just going off of a long scorecard yardage and the flow of this,
like five par fives, five par threes is not sound like ideal for pace of play.
It opens par five, par three, par five, which the third is reachable as it stands now,
480, I would think would play more reachable than the.
the first hole is going to play 533 as listed.
That's less than ideal also.
Like a, if,
if you have people waiting for greens to clear on three,
that can back all the way up to two.
And I, I'm nervous about that.
And I don't, I hate when we get to these women's events
and the pace of play thing becomes like the storyline of it.
And, and that's all anybody has to talk about.
But I'm worried about that part.
There are, if I'm counting right, five holes where it looks
like they have the possibility of moving teas up. The 13th is listed at 384 yards, but there is a
a T location at 260. I think that we've all agreed that's one of the most exciting holes to watch
on the men's side is that short par four with dramatic pinehurst-like runoffs to all sides
to the front part of that green. And that's the hole I'm most definitely most excited to watch the
women play. The 14th hole is listed at 530 but can play as short as 487. The 16th hole listed at 540.
but can move up to 514 and 17 is listed at 414 but there is also a T listed at 264 there so possibility of flexing that hole into a drivable 4 as well I would think they would do that on Sunday if I was trying to create a little drama in the back nine there with the final hole being 412 yard par 4 so lengthy golf course but possibility of flexing a couple T's here and there and
going to be plenty of birdie opportunities with the with the volume of par fives yeah the the men's like
they set it up 7400 plus 74 75 for a par 70 as well so they you know they cut down there's
three par fives when they set it up for the Houston open there so yeah and like 3 800 yards from the tips
so i think it's definitely one of those things where like i don't recall i mean maybe it's just
because the pace of play is so bad week to week anyway on both tours.
They're like, I don't recall any pace of play massive nightmares from men's perspective,
but also they're not setting this up to really challenge these guys like a major championship.
It's a warm-up event for the Masters.
So if they do, you know, really push it on the women's side, it could slow it down like crazy.
It slows up on 16 on the men.
A lot of people waiting on 16 to hit their second.
shots in there and then 17 same thing like if they have it up or if the wind's helping a little bit
just because he can throw it all the way up to the left and have it run down to the green um
that's the only spot that really sticks out from watching the the main pGA tour's coverage um
but i agree sally um i don't know let's what do you guys think of 72 versus 70 do you think the l pGA
tour went through that thought process at all of bringing it down or or truly like it's just a number
doesn't matter i i wish i knew like specifically more details about the course to be able to say well i mean
if you change the par on three like you know the third hole is designed to be a par five and for this
reason alone i maybe i can answer that by the end of the week uh cody but i'm i you know where i'm at on camp on on on
on the actual par like it doesn't it doesn't really actually matter but i i guess maybe countered
what i've been saying like maybe that is again a bit of an encouraging sign of how difficult they
might plan to make it knowing they don't probably want 20 under to win with the five the five
par fives maybe they lean a little harder uh into into the setup and into the challenge of it that's
that's a hope i think because i mean there's we saw that with the men's this year like there's some
pins like that pin i think was on the fourth hole where everybody was having a mess but you can make some
difficult pins on this golf course. It's probably not going to be Thursday, Friday. They've got to get
everyone through on that level, but over the course of the weekend, I think they can make this
a pretty decent challenge. Do you guys know, famously, because on the PGA tour, they're trying to
use it as a setup for Augusta. And so there's not like much rough to speak of. Cody, have you heard
anything on like will there be i assume we'll see more rough this week right will the will the
will the grass and the course look different uh i believe it said that the rough's going to be a two and a
half inches and maintained it two and a half so not not a lot of rough at all everything's basically
it's cut tight all the way around and then uh run run off into that first cut i think it was two inches maybe
but not what you'd think of.
There's no going to be any long rough.
But then again, big, as we know from, you know,
being out at LPGA tour events and things like that.
They don't really miss a lot of fairways.
That's true.
Cody, has it been dry, like super dry in Texas too?
And windy.
Yeah.
So it's one of those things too.
Like I think.
Like that.
I think you'd almost rather have a ponderance of short grass that is going to just
for sure make for a bunch of weird short-sided stuff.
Yeah, I think, you know, it was a weird year for us because we didn't get very much rain at all from like November through the beginning of January when when rye overseated rye really needs moisture to keep going. So it's kind of a later like growing for the rye, which has been interesting to watch around here just courses battle because you can definitely see the like the overseed now is struggling because the temperature is up.
you're struggling to maintain it, but at the same time, like, you just have, like, the gnarly
Bermuda coming through, like, trying to choke it out. So you could see some very, very interesting,
you know, pitches and chips and stuff like that, which I think is perfect. That's how Memorial Park
should play. So we'll see how it plays out. All right. We've stretched it out. That was 12
storylines plus the golf course. It is time. We are done beating around the bush. It is time to make our
picks who will win who will not win uh i i i don't know if i've done this yet like i i made i made this
agenda i don't know if i have my pick uh in place i might have to play off some of your guys so i'll
start with you randy uh who's your pick to win and who will not win all right let me start
with who won't win god this kills me to say i'm going to take gno for won't win i just her
form hasn't been great i just don't have a ton of confidence this week
unfortunately. So she is my pick to not win, trying to fly close to the sun there.
My pick to win, oh, God, I'm stuck between my head and my heart. My heart obviously would be
LC. What a great moment that would be. I'm going to be born. I think it's Nelly. I think,
God, she's played such good golf. She's had really good success in this event. I know it's a new course,
but everything points to her being in contention Sunday,
and I'll take, I mean, it's not much of a stretch here,
but I'll take Nelly quarter to win.
Brave, brave, man.
It's fine to take Nelly if you take G-Node not to win.
I think that's still a brave take.
Cody, you're next.
That's very well said, Big.
You literally took my picks.
I don't know what else to do.
Maybe I'll go out on the limb here.
And no, I'm not.
Nellie's going to win this tournament.
I love the fact that she's not playing this week
and getting a bunch of practice in.
I think it sets up very, very well for her
and her style of game,
but also she's like going to absolutely feast.
Gary Woodland-esque,
like totally utilizing her power and distance
and is just going to eat that golf course apart.
Gino ain't going to win.
Nellie's going to bring it.
Jeez.
T.C.
Yeah, I was going to,
Gino's my pick not to win.
So, cool.
God.
But, and I was thinking about getting cute with Austin Kim or Hannah Green or Yamashita,
especially with Mao Saigo is going to get her champions dinner.
Hopefully Thomas Keller is the chef again this year.
Last year, it was Nellie.
And they had a, you know, caviar, tuna tartar, cream mushrooms.
soup, Snake River Farms Filet, a really proper, proper meal. And I hope this year there's a nice
Japanese inspiration element to it. But all that said, I'm going to go with Lydia. I think Lydia,
all the stuff we've talked about just with regard to kind of precision with your iron play
and navigating some tricky greens and obviously can put lights out when she's on. And it's,
It's one of those things. I think she's got all the shots and she's got the wisdom, the patience
to kind of tackle a pretty strategic, pretty dried out test for the most part.
That'd be awesome. Can you imagine a Lydia Nelly duel? I mean, that would be amazing.
Sorry, Sally. You know, I'm going to pick it in what I teased here. I'm going to take Lauren.
It's a homer pick. I'm going to go with it. I was. I've, I've, I'm going to go with it.
I want to take Nellie not to win just for the fun sake,
but I think she will finish minimum like top three.
So it's probably not a smart thing to say.
If you're to take Lydia,
I'll say Lydia will not win,
D.C.
I do not,
I'm not feeling Lydia this week.
And I'll,
and I'll do a big Randy here.
I feel confident.
Gina's not going to win also.
I'll put two names in the bucket.
That's four for four on Gina.
Come on,
Gina.
That's tough.
Yeah.
Yeah,
make it like,
I like,
Chino now.
All right.
Not of the highlight of the pod.
There's going to be a pool
near the 18th green
that the winner
the winner is going to be jumping
into. This was heavily circulated
on the social medias
over the last several weeks. Randy, I'm curious
your opinion on this
attempt at moving a transition of Poppy's
pond to
the lake, the alligators
and now a pond,
a pool, whatever it is that they've
installed here next to the 18th green of their municipal course yeah um truthfully when i first heard
it i thought it was the dumbest thing i've ever heard i thought you know why this is not where we need
our focus and attention prior to this championship we get some course flyovers please yeah let's let's
nail the setup let's nail the broadcast like that's where i really want the attention to be um
I think this I think the jump means more to the players than we realize.
And so I think if the players are saying like, hey, this is a good tradition and one we want to keep going.
Like, does the pool ultimately have any bearing on this will be a good championship or not?
like I don't think so. So I think it's largely like a fun story, a dumb story, but not a super important
story. And I guess I net out like if the players want it, great, do it. Where I'm a little bit
more reserved is like turning this pool into like a giant pond and really messing with
the idea of the design and like what what this course is. But if
If they want to have a temporary pool during championship week, great.
And I, you know, there are some pictures floating around.
Like it looks very bad right now, but there's going to be hospitality build up around it.
Like I think when we actually see it tournament week, it's not going to like look as weird as it does.
So I'm kind of on the fence here.
I wish I could get more worked up about it than I can.
I just, yeah.
If they nail the broadcast and they nail the setup, like jump your heart out.
Let's all jump in the pool.
Honestly, I feel like we'll all have won.
And Randy, I got to admit I have like a slightly different opinion of this since going to the Masters last week as we're recording this of like walked around there for three days, practice rounds.
All anybody cares about during the practice rounds is the skip it shot.
Like it's like the thing.
All right.
It's skip it.
All the players are skipping over the water.
I saw a caddy hit a shot.
He skipped it over.
It's all anybody on the grounds is talking about.
And there is an appeal for like a casual fan, a, a, a, a, something.
Yeah, something to be known by.
Like, is this, is this thing designed for, you know, the people that are going to go an hour
and a half on a preview on a podcast of the main?
Like, it's not.
Of course not.
And it's silly.
It's very silly.
It shouldn't be the top priority.
Like, again, if they're nailing all the other stuff, that's fine.
But there is, and I've evolved on this since it happened.
I really thought it was the dumbest thing ever, but now I'm like, all right, if you are trying to, like, keep, like, the tradition of this tournament, I like this better than the lake at Chevron. That should have never happened. Like, that was silly.
That's dangerous.
Poppy's pond was like a little manmade. It was almost like a hot tub anyways.
Bobby's pole was too shallow. Right. So a catty broke his leg jumping into it at one point. But so I think this is better than better than the pond. I think the pond would be a disaster to put in on 18. I'd rather than keep the pool than that did install a huge.
huge pond for, you know, for players to jump into. So there is, if you want to grow,
galvanize the community a little bit, giving like just a little something to know the tournament
by of like, oh yeah, the winner runs and jumps in the pond is not the worst,
jumps in the pool, not the worst thing you could have. So yeah, they're taking a beating publicly.
Again, I think that has more to do with the idea of installing a pond for like municipal golfers
short right of the 18th green, which like was.
not in Tom Tokes architectural plans when he redid this golf course.
So I'm closer to being okay on this one with understanding it's not for me.
I have no idea where T.C. is going to go with this.
No, I think that's where I'm at.
I'm not going to feign any outrage here.
Very similar evolution of my thoughts first too, of like, oh, like that is so stupid.
We're going to mess with, you know, architectural integrity of this.
not only Tom Doak, but Brooks Kepka design.
Okay.
And the great man, John Bredemus, the original guy.
Yes.
You know?
And, yeah, but all that said, I think Cody raised some interesting questions.
No, I'm going to get there.
Don't, don't steal Mike.
Come on you up.
He's asked.
Holly, I do have some questions here.
Okay.
First of all, I agree.
If this is what the players say, they,
They love the fact that the Dinosaur, the Nabisco, the A&A, you know, any name that we want to call it,
if we want to stick with tradition and the jump is what sticks to them.
I'm all for it.
And yeah, it looks super goofy and the internet's going to internet.
And, you know, we've already seen updated pictures and it looks a heck of a lot better with, you know,
some buildout and stuff around that.
But as T.C. said, I do have some, like, concerns because this is a municipal,
run facility. I think that you know, part of this tournament is it's happening. And if you listen to
the Chevron recraps the last like three years, I said in every single one, why don't we just move
this tournament out of Carlton Woods to Memorial Park? So I feel like if I'm anti-Memorial Park,
or if this doesn't go good, a lot of this is on my shoulders. And listen, I'll carry that weight with me.
But it's a public run facility. First of all, it seems like they constructed this a little quick. I'm a
concerned with the codes permitting issues uh i don't know if the if the size of the wall
they might have some insurance things coming on because it's not that deep so you mentioned
it people have broke their legs before jumping in out in california i think this one's only like
four feet deep troubling because it's also a public swimming pool on on city on ground is does
there have to be a lifeguard around like does it have to be manned i i feel like there's
Again, insurance and coding concerns that are going on.
To the great man, Jim Crane and the Astros Foundation,
I feel like instead of making this temporary pool this year,
we could have went down and just rented a dunk tank for the year
and put some, you know, a banner or something like to add around it.
Again, Roger Clemens to throw.
We could have saved some money.
Of course, T.C.
There just seems like there's so many more options.
if you're telling me that this pool that's just to the right of the sand trap on the right,
you know, the right front portion of that green that's going to be done.
And I, you know, I just don't know how this pool is going to hold up with like,
we got nothing but rock in the ground around there, you know, is the earth going to start
to push this, this pool back out?
And, you know, that's not going to make Doeck happy at all.
He's going to have to come back and redo the 18th hole.
So I don't know, a bunch of silliness there.
But in all honesty, I don't care because if it's a tradition that they want to keep,
as Big said at the top of the show, great on them.
People are going to get their jokes off and that's fine.
But I respect and I appreciate it.
For sure.
It brings more attention to the tournament on that front.
And then if they're getting the important shit like the broadcast and the set up, right?
And people are going to stick around and become fans.
It's just a little bit more pressure to get the other stuff right, where it's like, oh, you went through the trouble of putting in this pool, but like the broadcast sucked or the setup sucked. You know, it's like they're putting a little bit more pressure on themselves.
I'll say this in the history of the Chevron. There's never been more pre-tournament chatter about the Chevron than this year. So it's doing something. Yeah. Will this pool be red-staked? Is it part of a TIO grandstand? I'd.
We'd love to see a shank into it, you know.
People in hospitality gets it, like, could you jump in the pool if you're, if you're a fan or if you're,
is this reserved only for the, for the players?
It is very close.
You think it's going to be open for like, is that like a VIP area?
You know, there's two, there's, there's, there's, there's, there's, there's, there's,
I don't know if they still have one out in Arizona, the diamond back stadium.
I think there.
I did ask if it was open for sponsorship.
They said this already been sold.
So before you pose that to you, Randy.
I think if they open it up to hospitality, we should think about getting some path.
Like we should be in the pool for a tournament say.
It's like how Windham does the Windham Championship has that beach out there with the big castle.
Like they should just lean all the way into it and have a big tiki bar.
bar sitting out there and all right that is the major more than a tiki bar and fake beach but i love it
that is it for our chevron preview everyone enjoy the tournament we myself cody and big will be live
this upcoming sunday uh to recap the tournament uh come join us on on sunday evening we're gonna
have a lot to talk about i'm sure so thank you roving for tuning in and we'll see you here on
on Sunday.
Crack on.
Cheers.
