A New Englander's Take on Golf
July 2, 2025
Walking golf courses in search of vantage points from where you can stand or sit to watch the competition has been a livelihood for years. Perched on a bridge, as these folks are at Fields Ranch East at Frisco, now ranks high on my list.

What would meet with universal agreement is the opinion that flight delays are insufferable and instant mood-changers. No one likes them. When you factor in the change of gate, even if it’s going from D25 to D24 to D21, the experience of waiting and waiting and moving and moving is exponentially gnawing.

Root canals would be a better option.

Unless, that is, you start talking golf with a complete stranger. Then the interior switch is turned from painful to joyous in a heartbeat and even the incessant announcements looking for that last passenger to board a flight to Grand Forks don’t disturb you.

Haphazardly is the way in which the best golf discussions begin with strangers. It might be a glance at a shirt logo that prompts conversation – “That’s a cool course” or “Where’s that?” or “A friend of mine has a friend who is a member there” – but when golf talk starts rolling my antennas go up. Bring it on. Inside, floodgates are opened instantly, so patience flows freely and warmly and the connecting points are plentiful.

Told that the trip to the Dallas area was to report on the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship at the home offices of the PGA of America in Frisco, a light went off. That he knew of this still-young Fields Ranch East golf course that hosted the championship meant one thing: We were now entering “golf-talk” mode and what ensued was the shortest and least painful 35-minute flight delay my years of travel have ever met.

To get into stuff like “compressing a golf ball” and “club speed” on those deft chip shots to make balls “check” – a skill that PGA Tour players have on command but not as much the LPGA competitors or the huge majority of amateurs – is to acknowledge you’ve found a soulmate.

Some of our discussion involved this first-ever visit by the women to play Fields Ranch East and the thoughts and comments that connected us were apparent. Indeed, “golf-talk” is real and it is widely embraced.

Asked how the championship was, what he heard were an array of viewpoints and personal preferences – that it was what a major championship should, meaning only three players broke par for the week, and how sweet it was to watch pro golf competition where scores between 69 and 74 kept you in the hunt, where 68 was utterly brilliant and where 76 meant you didn’t lose a ton of ground.

He offered that it probably caused "moans and groans," further proof that we spoke the same language. He speculated that players complained about “golf course design” and “course set-up” and when he heard an emphatic, "yes," there were laughs back and forth.

Sharing a quote that was provided to me years ago by Brad Faxon – “The players who play well usually don’t complain about that stuff” – the gentleman laughed some more. (Well into the flight home there arose a tinge of regret when it occurred to me that another memorable quote was overlooked. “These golfers would bitch about ice cream,” said Ed Dougherty one day, after being told that competitors found issues with a Donald Ross gem, Salem CC, in advance of the 2001 U.S. Senior Open.)

Back to the flight-delay conversation. Expressing personal choices for when he plays golf – putting everything out; keeping your commitment to play without using heat or rain or wind as an excuse to beg out; rounds with his son were the most rewarding – the gentleman asked rhetorically, “Didn’t players complain like this at Oakmont just a few weeks ago?”

Bingo.

Given some research time on the flight, numbers were examined and crazy how similar was the golf at the U.S. Open at Oakmont, which ended June 15 and the KPMG Women’s PGA at Fields Ranch East, which got underway June 19. Some samples:

At Oakmont, only one player broke par for 72 holes, J.J. Spaun, who finished at 1-under. Three players broke par at the KPMG with Minjee Lee triumphing at 4-under.

In all, 36 sub-par rounds were posted at Oakmont, 43 were recorded at the KPMG.

The average golfer at Oakmont posted a round of 4.180 over par. At Fields Ranch East, the average woman was 3.596 over par per round.

The winning score at Oakmont was 279; at the KPMG, it was 284.

The cut numbers? It was 7-over at Oakmont, 7-over at the KPMG.

At the end of 72 holes, if you shot 4-over you were top 10 at Oakmont. A score of 4-over earned you a top 10 at Fields Ranch East, also.

By the time these numbers were entered into a notebook, we had gone our separate ways. But everything about our 30-minute chat told me that the fellow golfer would have understood that the numbers proved that both the U.S. Open and the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship had delivered major tests.

On hugely different golf courses, of course, but that’s another story for another day.

The biggest takeaway from the KPMG is that one of the most awe-inspiring ball-striking performances of the year had gotten overshadowed by endless complaints about “golf course design” and “course set-up” that led to high scores and rounds in the neighborhood of six hours.

(As an aside, many rounds at Oakmont tickled six hours and at the AIG Women’s Open last summer rounds routinely went for six hours at The Old Course. In other words, old news.)

So it was pleasing to know that during our chat, cheers had been offered for the delightful Minjee Lee and what she did to win a third major. The gentleman had applauded the fact that Lee had beaten the field average by 6.577 strokes in Round 1, by 4.013 strokes in Round 2, and by a whopping 7.065 strokes in Round 3.

Ah, yes, he knew his golf, my new friend did; from logos on shirts to what made golf special to knowing that the headline story of the KPMG Women’s PGA was the way Minjee Lee had ball-struck and scored brilliantly in a major championship that provided a major challenge. My goodness, there were persistent 25-30 m.p.h. winds and never did she yield.

We agreed that players would get over it; that things would return to a sense of normalcy with the majors in the rear-view mirror. Sure enough, birdies and softer touches are upon us. The Travelers and the Rocket Classic were, as expected, birdie-fests. Case in point, in Sunday’s fourth round of the Rocket Classic alone there were 68 (out of 86 golfers) sub-par rounds whereas there were only 36 for the entire championship at Oakmont.

As for the women, they are headed to the Evian Championship in France, a major championship without a major challenge. Last year, 19-under won and a ho-hum course allowed 50 competitors to finish under par. It was 14-under in ’23, 17-under in ’22, and 18-under the year before that.

As for that passenger being sought for the flight to Grand Forks, sadly, we lost track. The conversation was so comfortable we never did hear whether he had made the flight or not.

 

I have a passion for playing golf that is surpassed only by my passion for writing about people who have a passion for playing golf, for working in golf, for living their lives around golf. Chasing the best professional golfers around the world for The Boston Globe, Golfweek Magazine, and the PGA Tour for more than 20 years was a blessing for which I’ll be eternally grateful. I’ve been left with precious memories of golf at its very best, but here is a takeaway that rates even more valuable – the game belongs to everyone who loves it. “Power Fades” is a weekly tribute with that in mind, a digital production to celebrate a game that many of us embrace. If you share a passion for golf, sign up down below for a free subscription and join the ride. Should you have suggestions, thoughts, critiques, or general comments, pass them along. And if you’d like to support “Power Fades” with contributing sponsorships or advertisements, you can contact me. Jim@powerfades.com

1 – We need a movement

Bring back the days when players took drops over their shoulders.


2 – Just sayin’

Ben Hogan, Jack Nicklaus, and Tiger Woods didn’t use analytics.


3 – Confoundment

So, putting a small bunker in the middle of a wide fairway to force golfers to make a decision off the tee is considered bad form by a large audience of golfers who fancy themselves amateur architects. Ah, but a golf course where on one hole you have a cross-bunker the size of the Sahara in the middle of a fairway, then on another you have to drive it over the corner of a hotel is not only OK, it's worth paying hundreds and hundreds of dollars for the opportunity. Tell me we’re not a fickle and contrary bunch.


GOLF COURSE SIGNS -- The passion we have for golf is contagious. So, too, is having an eye for those unique signs that are displayed at courses throughout the world, all of them demonstrating a profound respect for the game. Longtime friend from NEPGA days, Dave McAdams, snapped a shot of this beauty at the St . Andrews Links clubhouse that overlooks No. 18 at The New. Submissions are always welcomed. Email to jim@powerfades.com.

4 – She’s a fun show

If we could bottle and sell Leona Maguire’s spunk we’d make a fortune.


5 – He’s back . . .

Should you be keeping score at home, Sergio Garcia has been given an exemption into the upcoming Open Championship so he’ll be in position to add to his rather inglorious major championship tally. In 27 major appearances since winning the Masters in 2017, Garcia has missed 16 cuts and shot a cumulative 128 over par for 76 rounds.


6 – Way better than heads or tails

How old am I? My generation came before rock-paper-scissors-shoot became a thing. We just did buck-up.


7 – All over the map

Pretty neat that temperatures are taking after my golf scores these days. One day mid-high-90s, two days later low 70s. Then into the mid-80s. (Yeah, yeah, the numbers don’t match but you get the point.)


8 – Reading putts and providing laughter

“Aye, laddie, you see that steeple way out in the distance?” I told my caddie I couldn’t. “Aye, that’s a shame, ‘cause that’s your line.” I asked him what I should do. “Get glasses, laddie.” No, I mean for right now, on this tee box. “Just play your fade. It’s the only shot you brought.” I’m telling you the entertainment went on like this for 18 holes one glorious day in Ireland.


9 – Name games

The R&A has announced that in 2026 it will hold a “last chance” qualifier the Monday of Open Championship week at Royal Birkdale. Twelve players will compete over 18 holes for the last spot into the field. Good idea, methinks, but will “Final Qualifying” two weeks earlier be remained “Penultimate Qualifying” or perhaps “The Qualifying Stop Formerly Known as Final?"


 

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