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Last week, Scott Piercy and Billy Horschel won the Zurich Classic of New Orleans, the PGA Tour's first tentative step towards the kind of innovation we've seen on the European Tour of late, and it's fair to say it wasn't particularly exciting despite the narrow margin of victory.
The decision to tweak the format of that event in just its second year probably didn't help, with Sunday's foursomes producing fewer fireworks than the four-balls of 2017, but ultimately the issue remains that they've not mixed things up enough. If you're going to take a week out of regular stroke play - and there is definitely room in the calendar to do so - then you might as well go the whole hog, which certainly appears to be the view of European Tour chief exec Keith Pelley.
Enter GolfSixes, also in its second year having been a massive hit in 2017, even if some thoroughly dull purists may baulk at the idea of pyrotechnics, loud music, shot-clocks and any kind of unabashed merriment in what's supposed to be an oh-so-serious sport.