Seven under after 36 holes at Shinnecock Hills doesn’t just raise eyebrows, it raises the bigger question: what do we actually want the U.S. Open to be? We’re watching the best players in the world pick apart a course that’s supposed to bite, and we dig into the setup choices that change everything, especially when greens don’t feel firm and fast enough to demand real imagination around the targets. We want teeth. Michael wants fangs.
We also start with the future of the game, because it’s arriving faster than most people realize. Miles Russell making the cut is a jaw-dropper, and he’s not alone. Junior golf and college golf development have leveled up, and NIL plus world-class facilities are turning top programs into legitimate tour prep. We talk through why staying in school can be the smartest path for many players, and what that says about how competitive professional golf is becoming.
Then we bring it back to your game with practical takeaways: the real distance gap between amateurs and tour players, why launch conditions matter as much as raw speed, and how wind demands different shot shapes and trajectories. We also unpack a common TrackMan driver fitting mistake, copying PGA Tour rollout-based numbers when you play on soft fairways where carry is king. Finally, we hit the hot-button topics: distance, rollback, spin, and the money incentives that quietly steer the sport.
Subscribe to the Measured Golf Podcast, share this with a golf buddy who loves a good setup debate, and leave a review so more players find us. Where do you land: should the U.S. Open punish mistakes more aggressively, or is this just the modern game?
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