The Phoenix Open doesn’t apologize for being loud. It charges $150,000 per skybox for the privilege. Pierceson Coody found that out Thursday morning on the par-3 16th when his wedge missed the green, and the boos arrived immediately. It was his first time experiencing this, and his reaction wasn’t outrage but rather acceptance.

“It’s really cool. It’s hard for it not to feel like just a little bit more than some other events,” Coody told the media. “Hit a really bad wedge on 16 and missed the green, so I got booed my first time there. It was still fun.”

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Matt Fitzpatrick operated from the same playbook. When asked whether early tee times offer refuge from fan intensity before the crowd gets “too lost in the sauce,” he dismissed the premise entirely.

“No. I don’t think there is any advantage there,” Fitzpatrick said. “Realistically, it’s two or three holes that you might get a bit of abuse on, but it’s all good fun. I love this week. I think it’s my fifth time, so I’m always happy to be here.”

Five appearances at this event have taught Fitzpatrick that resistance is futile. Chris Gotterup went further, turning acceptance into performance. After making a birdie on 16, he tossed his ball into the stands and leaned fully into the theater.

“Yeah, it’s impossible not to,” Gotterup said when asked about embracing the atmosphere. “Even if you hate it, you have to embrace it. They’re on top of you. There is no way to escape it, so there is only, you know, you have to embrace it. It’s a cool atmosphere. It’s something we get once a year. To make a birdie on that hole to get the crowd going, we had a couple in our group, so it was a lot of fun.”

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Joel Dahmen tested the boundaries differently—his shot fell off the green, the boos rained down, then he put on a Seattle Seahawks helmet, and the boos intensified. He chipped in from 45 feet for a birdie, threw hats into the crowd, and turned the hostility into celebration within 90 seconds.

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