KEN BROWN, BBC COMMENTATOR AND FORMER RYDER CUP PLAYER: I was out on the course really early on the Sunday morning. At the time the wind was blowing around 30 miles per hour. It was really tough. Grant Moir of the R&A was out there. I asked him if the pin positions were going to be a little easier. He said they weren't quite sure what the wind was going to do, so yes, they were. If you look at the pin sheet for that day, I don't think there were any less than four yards from the edge of any green. Compared to most Opens, they were "easy." Which made perfect sense. Had the wind stayed as it was and the pins had been really tough, the players might still be out there. Then, of course, the wind died down, so the course played easier than it could have. None of which is meant to demean the way Stenson and Mickelson played. They were magnificent. No one else played the way they did that day. As a result, we had an Open that everyone was talking about. It was fantastic. So you have to wonder why they don't do that every year. Why do they deliberately set up the course so that it's less enjoyable for everybody?