Saturday, February 12, 2011

Thompson Climbing Up the Leaderboard at Pebble Beach


By Randy Roberts and Roz Roberts III

Michael Thompson posted a scorching five under par 67 today at the Spyglass Hill Golf Course. The 67 was the third best score of the week at Spyglass, which is averaging 72.613, and it resulted with him vaulting up the leaderboard 41 spaces into a tie for 18th.

For the second day in a row, his play was highlighted by making Greens In Regulation (14 of 18 today) for an impressive total of 31 of 36 GIR so far in the tournament. That type of consistent play meant he was rewarded with plenty of birdie and eagle opportunities. Yesterday, the birdie putts weren't falling but he made up for it today with 7 birdies total. He did particularly well on the par fives, birdying all four of them.

Three golf courses are used this week and the cut will come after the third round so that each player has a chance to play every course. The famed Pebble Beach Golf Links is up next for Thompson where he has a 9:06am PT tee time from hole #10. The Pebble Beach course has been averaging 71.933 for the tournament, so he'll have quite a challenge tomorrow. However, if he can stay in the fairways and keep making those GIRs, he'll have a good chance to make some more noise on the leaderboard over the weekend.

For those of you following along on the Internet, tomorrow's round comes with  an extra bonus:  the Pebble Beach course is covered by shot Tracker, so we'll all get a chance to follow the round in more detail.  Also, Pebble is the featured course for the television coverage so you might want to program your DVR now!

The round 3 links of interest are here:

Michael Thompson Shot Tracker
Michael Thompson Scorecard

Friday, February 11, 2011

Keeping It In the Short Grass


by Roz Roberts III


Michael Thompson had his best day driving the ball as a PGA Tour professional yesterday at the AT&T Pebble Beach national Pro-Am.  He hit 12 out of 13 fairways and had a driving distance of 297.5 yards.  He also hit an amazing 17 out of 18 greens in regulation.  He finished the round at the Monterrey Peninsula Country Club at even par which puts him into a tie for 59th after the first 18 holes.

Thompson starts the second round today at 10:01am PT at the Spyglass Hill Golf Course.

If you're going to follow Round 2 online, here are the links:
Michael Thompson Scorecard

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Thompson Tees It Up at Pebble Beach


by Roz Roberts III and Randy Roberts


Michael Thompson has started the first round on the latest stop on the PGA Tour, the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am. The Pebble Beach Pro-Am is a unique event on the PGA Tour and was originally known as the Bing Crosby National Pro-Amateur, or just the Crosby Clambake. This event is known as one of the more fun events on tour since the field for the event is comprised of 156 professionals paired with 156 celebrity amateurs in two person teams. The tournament is played on three different courses: Pebble Beach Golf Links, Spyglass Hill Golf Course and the Monterey Peninsula Country Club. Unlike most other tournaments, the cut is made after 72 holes and is applied to both individuals and teams. The low 25 teams plus ties will play Sunday at Pebble Beach as will the low 60 professionals plus ties.

First Round Tee Time
Michael tees off at 8:22am on the tenth hole of the Monterey Peninsula Country Club. He is teamed with Robert MacDonnell (on the board of directors of Vons) and they are in a group with Hunter Haas and Paul Hazen (Chairman of Accel-KKR, Former Chairman/CEO of Wells Fargo). The group will be playing Spyglass on Friday and Pebble Beach on Saturday.


Useful Links
Here are the usual helpful links to follow Michael this week.
Tee Times

Television Coverage
Television coverage will be carried on the Golf Channel and CBS. The coverage schedule is listed below, check your local listings.

Day
Date
Network
Time
THU
2/10
GOLF
3 - 6 PM ET
FRI
2/11
GOLF
3 - 6 PM ET
SAT
2/12
GOLF
1 - 2:30 PM ET
SAT
2/12
CBS
3 - 6 PM ET
SUN
2/13
GOLF
1 - 2:30 PM ET
SUN
2/13
CBS
3 - 6:30 PM ET

Michael Thompson's First Magazine Cover


by Randy Roberts


Tucson native Michael Thompson is the feature story in the Feb-March issue of Southern Arizona Tee Times Magazine. The article has some nice photos, some quotes from Thompson and his swing coach Susie Meyers, and celebrates the completion of his boyhood dream to make it onto the PGA tour. You can read it online at sattmag.com or pick up a free copy if you live in Southern Arizona.

I guess we can file this as #6 on the "Signs you made it onto the PGA Tour".

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Hangin' With the Caddies

Michael Thompson and his caddie Victor Velasquez
by Roz Roberts III

A couple of weeks ago the Thompson Tide crew were lucky enough to get to hang out at the Farmer's Insurance Open at Torrey Pines to watch and cheer on Michael Thompson. While we were there, we learned one very important thing: if you need something at a PGA tournament, go ask a caddie.

I managed to get my tickets for the week stolen on Tuesday - a near catastrophic event but with the help of Michael and his caddie Victor Velasquez we were able to salvage the situation. Victor told Randy "They call me 'Peoples' because I always take care of my peoples!" Good thing he adopted us so that we became some of his peoples too. He was able to tap his network of friends and scrounge us some tickets. Victor has been a caddie for 23 years and has caddied for the likes of Stewart Cink and Seve Ballasteros. He knows everybody out on tour and he is so nice and likable that there's no wonder his network of contacts is so vast.

In addition to scrounging tickets for us, Victor performed another really important role for Michael for the week: he basically kept us out of Michael's hair. While Michael was busy with the business of golf, which included finalizing clothing deals and getting some practice in, Victor was more than willing to entertain us with food, drink and stories.

While out at Torrey Pines I also met Danny Neil. He caddied for Michael at the Sony Open in Hawaii. Danny is a professional PGA Tour "Looper" and provides caddie service to players whose regular caddies can't make it to certain events. Like Victor, Danny is a really likable outgoing guy who's more than willing to share stories and entertain you for as long as you have the time. If he's not caddying for a touring professional, he caddies during pro-ams and helps out with TV coverage as an on-course spotter. Have you ever wondered how the television announcers know what club a player is using on a hole that they can't see? The spotter is either radioing in the details to the television truck or they are using hand signals to let the on-course color commentator know yardages and club selection for each player in a group.

After a round is over, the PGA Tour players are typically grabbing food at the Player's Club House while the caddies head out to the traveling "Caddie Trailer" which is an RV modified into a diner. The prices are low and the food is good. Your typical diner food can be had: tuna melts, chicken sandwiches, hamburgers, turkey sandwiches etc. {Thompson Tide Note: Try the banana pudding. Yummy!} The caddie trailer offers the guys a place to put the bag down, surf the web, hang out and eat at one of the plastic tables outside, or grab a booth inside and watch ESPN or The Golf Channel on one of the two small flat screen TVs.

The caddies usually have to pay for their own food but at Torrey Pines, PGA Tour pro Robert Garrigus paid for all of the working caddies' food for the week. Randy and I ate lunch in the traveling "caddie shack" with Victor who was nice enough to buy lunch for us.

Once a tournament starts winding down on Sunday, the Caddie Trailer, along with all of the equipment trucks, start packing up and heading to the next tournament. In a lot of ways, the PGA Tour is like a traveling circus with huge amounts of equipment and facilities to move every week to a new location, with lots of hard working men and women working behind the scenes to make it all happen.

If the PGA Tour swings by an area near you I highly encourage a visit. Unlike a lot of professional sports, you can get very close to the players and most of them are willing to sign autographs and say 'Hi' during practice days or on tournament days at the end of their rounds. I personally witnessed Bobby Gates and Michael Thompson sign things for every single person who wanted an autograph after their rounds on Saturday. You don't see that sort of thing going on in a lot of other professional sports. And if you go out to a PGA Tour event, don't forget to say "Hi" to the caddies - you're sure to get a friendly response and maybe even a "behind-the-scenes" tour story or two.