The internet has lost its damn mind over Bernhard and Jason Langer’s victory over Tiger and Charlie Woods in the PNC Championship on Sunday.

Ever since Team Woods has become a fixture in the parent-child event, it’s been under the microscope, in a good way. All eyes on golf in the middle of December, on the same weekend as the College Football Playoff and NFL Week 16, is a win for our sport.

But with that extra attention comes a flurry of the hottest of hot takes in regards to where Langer, who is 67 years old, was hitting from. There are four sets of tees in the two-person scramble event—a 7,106-yard, par-72 set for professionals 53 and younger, a 6,576-yard set for professionals 54 to 65 and LPGA members and family members 14-55, a 6,035-yard set for professionals 66-72, LPGA members 50 and older and 13-year-old juniors and family members 55-66, and, lastly, a 5,484-yard set for professionals older than age 73, juniors 12 and younger and family members 67 and older.

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Langer, who just won the Charles Schwab Championship in November for his 47th PGA Tour Champions victory, teed it up from the 6,035-yard set, which makes sense given his age. But, as some pointed out, Langer still hits it a long way for an older guy, making the 1,100-yard advantage over Woods, who he was playing with, that much more noticeable. The internet wasn’t having it, which is to be expected when Woods is in contention for any sort of victory:

If Team Langer had taken down Team Duval in a playoff, absolutely zero people would have batted an eye at this grave injustice. The fact it was Team Woods had folks dissecting every move Langer made like the Zapruder film. Take, for example, people pointing out that Langer placed his ball on a perfect little hill in a bunker so he could get a driver on it. This, of course, is 100 per cent allowed in a scramble:

Wild times. It’s nice to be arguing over the actual golf again, though, as opposed to purse sizes and field strength (or lackthereof) or TV ratings or mergers or any of the other distracting nonsense we’ve all argued over for the last few years. Of course, the “actual golf” in question here is a two-person silly-season scramble event that ultimately means nothing.

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