Today's publish is short but it is a subject that doesn't get pointed out very a great deal, even though it trips up even the best golfers. It affected numerous gamers on the Evian on Saturday but it became maximum substantial with Minjee Lee and Morgan Pressel.
That problem is how unpredictable wet rough can be. Both Minjee and Morgan drove their balls in the rough on 18, then inexplicably tried to go for the green despite seeing a huge pond fronting it. As a result, both posted double-bogey 6s.
As Judy Rankin said during GC's broadcast, those are shots the girls could probably have made without a problem if the rough was dry. But a lot of rain got dumped on the course very quickly, much of it while they were playing, and those normally routine shots became dangerous risks.
What precisely passed off? Even though each players are pretty strong -- and Morgan has a reasonably upright swing aircraft that shall we her dig the ball out of the difficult better than most -- the greater water in that thick rough made it almost not possible to make proper touch with the ball.
When rough is moist, the ball does not behave as you may typically count on:
- In thick rough that's dry, you worry that the grass will wrap around the hosel of the club and flip it over. When that happens, the ball can duck-hook pretty quickly and will often travel farther than the player expected.
- But in thick rough that's wet, the hosel may slide right through the grass (because wet grass clumps together) and leave the clubface open. Combine that with thick wet grass that gets between the ball and grooves and prevents the ball from spinning, and you end up with a knuckle ball -- a low-flying shot that shoots out like a push and drifts even farther away from you.
And not like Minjee, who become aiming at the pin and idea she ought to deliver the water, Morgan became aiming AWAY from the pond. Her plan turned into to go away it quick and to the left of the pond, starting up the inexperienced for an simpler pitch shot. But the ball squirted out low and right anyway, curving into the water and leaving her a tough pitch throughout the pond to a pin set close to the water.
The safest play when your ball is laying in thick wet rough is to pitch it out safely into the fairway, on the short grass where you can get a clean clubface on the ball... and that's true whether you're a weekend player or a Tour pro. Don't try to be a superhero and expect to play the shot as if the grass was dry. It just ain't gonna happen, no matter who you are.
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