Here's a quick way to improve golf telecasts. Give fans something, anything, to yell besides "You da man!" and "Get in the hole!" During Sunday's WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship on NBC, two fans were in such a hurry to shout "Get in the hole!" after Tiger Woods hit his tee shot, they screamed it in unison. Fans should be free to boo or cheer whoever they want. But fans are now screaming "Get in the hole!" when Woods, Phil Mickelson and others tee off on par-4 and par-5 holes, ESPN's Jim Rome says. "If you're saying these things, stop doing it immediately," Rome said during Friday's Jim Rome Is Burning. "The players hate you, other fans hate you and, most importantly, I hate you. You're bringing everybody down, and you're embarrassing yourself." TV networks can't edit out the screams without losing audio of player reactions and conversations with their caddies, NBC spokesman Brian Walker says. "You can't stop the gallery, you can only contain them," he jokes. After Woods thumped Stewart Cink with an 8-and-7 victory Sunday, NBC's Roger Maltbie nailed Cink with a pretty tough question: "What's it like standing on the first tee when you know your opponent is better than you, he knows he's better than you and everybody else knows he's better than you?" Cink admitted it was "a tough task." Best documentary: HBO Sports' new documentary, Joe Louis: America's Hero … Betrayed, premiered Saturday night. Replaying several times this week on HBO and HBO2, it's a must-see. The show explores Louis' fights with Germany's Max Schmeling that took on racial and political overtones on the eve of World War II. Schmeling's victory over Louis in 1936 made him a darling of Adolf Hitler's Nazi regime. Louis regrouped, beat James Braddock for the heavyweight crown in 1937, then knocked out Schmeling in the first round of their rematch in 1938. Today's pro athletes think they're under the microscope. But as Louis' friend Walter Smith recalls: "He had more pressure than any fighter ever had in his life. Because he was carrying the country." As comedian/activist Dick Gregory says: "This was probably the first time and the only time in the history of America that a black man ends up being a white hope." The rest of the documentary chronicles Louis' decline and fall. While he served four years in the Army and raised money for the war, the Internal Revenue Service hounded him for years over back taxes. Louis' son, Joe Louis Barrow Jr., recalls, "He wasn't running from his debt. He was just trying to deal with it in a civil fashion, in a responsible way, and they just dogged him forever." Most boring: The brief clips of Louis' classic bouts blew away HBO's telecast of the Wladimir Klitschko-Sultan Ibragimov fight Saturday night. How dull was it? Even Klitschko's trainer, part-time HBO analyst Emanuel Steward, pleaded with him between rounds: "You can't knock him out if you don't throw punches." Best game: ESPN did a nice job Saturday night letting the non-stop action tell the story in Tennessee's thrilling 66-62 men's basketball victory against Memphis. There was Memphis' Derrick Rose bent over on the court and gasping for breath. On the Volunteers sideline, viewers saw a trainer using ice bags to massage the leg cramps of an exhausted JaJuan Smith. "It's physical. These players are just giving it their all out there," reporter Erin Andrews said. Analyst Dick Vitale agreed. "That's why I love college basketball," he said. "The kids play with such passion." ESPN repeatedly mentioned that Peyton Manning, Priscilla Presley and other celebrities were in the house. Not necessary. This game sold itself. Most prescient: NBC's Johnny Miller on his prediction a then-amateur Woods would win at least 50 tournaments, including 10 major championships: "All the Tour guys said, 'Miller, you are the stupidest guy. Nobody will ever win that many again.' All those guys who said that, eat crow." Best lines: Asked by TNT's Cheryl Miller about his Mohawk hairdo during Thursday's Portland Trail Blazers-Seattle SuperSonics game, Blazers injured rookie Greg Oden said, "I felt like I needed to lose some weight." TNT's Charles Barkley countered, "That's exactly what happens when you've got millions of dollars and you're bored and have to sit out the season." Conversation guidelines: USA TODAY welcomes your thoughts, stories and information related to this article. Please stay on topic and be respectful of others. Keep the conversation appropriate for interested readers across the map.