An interview with:
BRUCE LIETZKE
RAND JERRIS: Pleasure to be joined by Bruce Lietzke, Bruce
a 71 to follow up on your 69 yesterday. If you can take a moment
to talk about your playing conditions this afternoon particularly
after yesterday's rain.
BRUCE LIETZKE: The fairways were a little wetter, the golf
ball was not my golf ball. I hit a real high shot, so my tee shots
were not really releasing in the fairways like they had been this
week. I played with Gil Morgan and Larry Nelson
and they have a lower ball flight and their balls were chasing
on out there pretty good, but from a high-ball standpoint my tee
shots weren't going as far, the greens maybe were a little softer,
and I didn't think the green speed had changed very much. I think
they were very similar to yesterday morning. But that was about
it. There was more wind today than we had yesterday morning. That
was -- probably the biggest factor was the heavier winds that
we had to work with today.
But all in all it was a much nicer day temperature-wise and
easier to get around the golf course. And it seemed very playable.
I don't think -- whatever amount of rain they had just didn't
seem to affect the playability too, too much. I would say the
only guys that were really affected were the ones that hit the
ball high like I do.
RAND JERRIS: Can you walk us through birdies and bogeys.
BRUCE LIETZKE: Yes, started off on the back nine. My first
birdie of the day came on No. 12 and I hit a 7-iron about ten
feet from the hole. I made that for a birdie.
I parred around until 17. And I missed the green to the right.
The second shot with a 4-iron, missed the green to the right.
I chipped to probably 14 feet pin-high and I left my first putt
about a foot short and I tapped in for bogey there. So I believe
that's an even par. No? Was that for birdie? That was even par.
RAND JERRIS: Yes.
BRUCE LIETZKE: Okay. I didn't miss anything.
Most of the excitement happened on the front 9. No. 1, my
10th hole, I hit a 7-iron to about six feet from the hole. I made
that for birdie.
No. 3, I hit a 5-iron to ten feet, made that for a birdie.
No. 4, I hit a driver off the tee, my first driver of the
day and I hit a 3-iron to about 12 feet from the hole. I made
that for birdie.
No. 5, a tee shot in the fairway then I put a 6-iron
into the creek just short of the green, chipped up close to the
hole. At one time it was about three feet from the hole and then
it came back off the green and I 2-putted from the fringe for
a double bogey ^ 6. Actually I 1-putted; I putted from the
fringe.
I was in the fringe in 4. Putted from the fringe a foot up
from the hole and tapped in for a double bogey.
And I parred the next three holes and No. 9 missed the fairway
with a tee shot. My 3-wood off the tee ended up in the right rough.
I hit an 8-iron second shot that found the right rough near the
green and I chipped poorly to 14 feet and I 2-putted from 14 feet
for a closing bogey.
RAND JERRIS: Thank you. Take some questions out here, please.
Q. First off on No. 5 how far did you come back
to drop there?
BRUCE LIETZKE: 70 yards.
Q. 70 yards. And everybody, a lot of the players earlier
in the week were talking about if it rains everything changes
out here. You mentioned the greens really didn't change; did that
surprise you much that they maintained their speed after a half
inch of rain in like two hours or whatever it was?
BRUCE LIETZKE: See that's the surprising thing; I didn't
know how much rain there was. At my hotel --
Q. Between 4/10ths and a half inch they say?
BRUCE LIETZKE: That's more than I expected. But the way,
the USGA really had the golf course very dry when
we came in here on Monday or Tuesday and I think they were expecting
that or that maybe they were going to add some water if these
rains didn't come. I think the golf course was ready to soak up
some water. The greens had been very dry. At least from Monday,
I didn't play Monday but I heard the guys say they were very dry
and fast then. I would say the golf course was ready to take on
some water and it must have soaked up that half inch pretty quickly.
And it did affect some of my iron shots into the green. I spun
the ball off the green today and that was not the case and probably
not possible yesterday. But you know, there was no sign of any
extra moisture or anything like that.
Like I say, I thought they putted about the same. So that's
really more rain than I thought that they had received.
Q. If you were to have two par rounds and you were to
end up at 2-under do you think that would be good enough to win
right now?
BRUCE LIETZKE: Not knowing what the weather is going to be
I would say no.
RAND JERRIS: Any other questions?
Q. I heard you mention in the flash area about putting
some chips in your pocket and having to spend them. In an open
course is it easy for you not to get to excited about birdies
because you know what can happen? I mean does it keep you on an
even keel?
BRUCE LIETZKE: Yes, and I am not very excitable anyway but
I know going into a USGA event or Senior PGA or
any of the real extremely tough setups that bogeys happen whether
you've hit perfect golf shots or beautiful golf shots or your
strategy has been exactly the way you wanted it. Bogeys still
show up on these kind of golf courses when the golf courses are
set up this way. I'm a very even-keel person all the time and
especially here I know, I just want to make sure I get my share
of the birdies because I know I'm going to make my share of bogeys
and everybody else is going to make their share of bogeys, you
definitely try to avoid the doubles and triple and quadruple bogeys
that can really knock you out of a golf tournament. But there
is nobody in the field that is going to go -- nobody in the field
will go this weekend without making at least five bogeys. Everybody
in the field will make at least that much. So I just wanted to
get my share of birdies to offset those mistakes.
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