Nascar Racing  » Mercedes Championships: PGA 2006 Begins

Mercedes Championships: PGA 2006 Begins

Right, Max. Hawaii, Max.

It`s not just that California`s had a run of really wet weather

lately (possibly forecasting the rain-delayed 2005 West Coast

swing that revivified the age-old debate about indoor golf),

it`s that the famous line from Annie Hall---"California, Max",

as in, "if we lived in California, we could play outdoors every

day, in the sun"---doesn`t apply this week because the PGA Tour

kicks off the 2006 season with the Mercedes Championships at the

Plantation Course in Kapalua, Hawaii, where the usual weather

event comes in the form of trade winds, not steady drenching

rains.

Every year I talk about what a great tournament this is: TV

cutaways to and fro, commercial breaks of beautiful vistas, sun

and sea from the course`s tall hills; a solid field of last

year`s Tour winners; 400-plus yard drives on the last hole; and

the possibility of long money on quality golfers in a small

Jeremy Church is a documented member of the Professional...

field. Because Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson, Retief Goosen and

Padraig Harrington are not playing (or Ernie Els, by the way,

who didn`t win in his injury-shortened 2005) and because there

were so many low-ranked winners on Tour last year, this week`s

Mercedes is a smaller (28-player), more bargain-filled field

than normal. Mickelson and Goosen didn`t do the Silly Season

tour like Woods and Harrington, and the latter`s decision to not

play in Kapalua is curious as he`s never played in the

tournament. Hawaii`s a long flight from anywhere, fine, but it`s

a guaranteed paycheck. And I have to figure the islands are

sunnier than Ireland this time of year. Hawaii, Padraig.

There`s always the flipside to the strength-of-field approach.

Maybe the favorites---Vijay Singh, Jim Furyk, David Toms and

Sergio Garcia---do look more likely to win than 50-1 shots like

Jason Bohn, Jason Gore and Ted Purdy. But given that there`s no

cut, the pressure is off slightly, and so is the intimidation

factor, which is significantly less a factor anyway because

Tiger isn`t playing. Even if the world #1 was playing, though,

I`d still look at other golfers. Bart Bryant, an unknown, won

twice last year: the Memorial and season-ending Tour

Championship where he held off guess who? Purdy won the Byron

Nelson last May, fending off Singh.

As for the course, there are the peaks and valleys of Kapalua,

and those trade winds (which are almost always at the players`

backs on the last hole, yielding those 400-500-yard drives). The

greens can be slick, which might be a factor for the favorite,

Singh. Two months doesn`t account for much of an offseason; who

can say if Vijay`s come to a happy place with his putter?

Jeremy Church covers Nascar for Brian Gabrielle Sports

About the author:

Jeremy Church is a documented member of the Professional

Handicappers League. Read all of his articles at www.procappers

.com/Jeremy_Church.htm