We just completed another great Open Golf Championship.
(Hint: If you call it the “British Open” instead of just “The Open” you will be
labeled an ignorant knave and you cannot set foot in Great Britain ever again.)
For two days over 36 holes Phil Mickelson and Henrik Stenson
battle each other and the golf links at Royal Troon producing the greatest
match in Open history since the dual in sun at Turnberry between Tom Watson and
Jack Nicklaus.
Finally, Stenson took a two stroke lead with three holes to
go to become the first Swede to win the gold medal. (Yes, there’s a claret jug involved but the golfer
gets to keep the gold medal.)
With all that excitement it occurred to me, can anyone name a
great US Open golf match? For the life of me I can’t remember one.
I believe there are distinct reasons for this starting with
the types of golf courses used in The Open Rota.
Without exception all of these golf courses are links style
courses. Links courses are almost always
placed on the sea in the area above the mean high tide and the “useful” land. It
is typically scrub land that is only good for grazing sheep. In other words, perfect for a pre-20th century golf course.
These courses typically have three defenses; rough, pot
bunkers and wind. Typically, the fairways are narrow with deep rough and pot
bunkers down the sides. Pot bunkers ring most of the greens and they usually
play hard and fast.
Links courses put a premium on accuracy and experience
rather than distance. Like the greens, the fairways play hard and fast and you
can get quite a bit of roll out with your drive. Sometime more than you want,
as more often than not a drive finds a pot bunker in the fairway. That’s why you see pros use a 2-iron or
3-wood rather than a driver.
It’s no coincidence that this year’s champion is in his
forties and he just barely defeated another past champion in his late forties.
The real wildcard however is the wind and the weather. There’s
always a stiff breeze by the sea and the British weather is well, British
weather. Sometimes the sole determiner
of whether you compete for the championship is the weather and the luck of the
draw.
All of these factor however an experienced golfer can take
into account. And while the rough and the pot bunkers may be a challenge they
are not unduly punitive. If the
experience golfer finds a fairway bunker or the rough on his tee shot, he can
still scramble for par.
The R&A (Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews, governing
body for British Golf) puts a premium on competition when they set up a golf
course. There is the right mix of difficult holes and risk/reward holes.
The USGA on the other hand, puts a premium on a punitive
golf course setup. Their goal is to protect par rather than promote great
competition. They favor parkland courses with sand bunkers and deep punitive
rough. The last two venues; Oakmont and Chambers Bay was ridiculously punitive.
Chamber's Bay was nothing more than a test
to find the best hiker in golf while Oakmont punished even good shots from the
fairway.
Punitive golf course setup does not encourage great
competition it encourages cautious, defensive, and boring golf. Until the USGA changes their tournament philosophy,
we will not see great golf in the US Open.
1 comment:
Given all of the depressing news over the weekend I kinda like this post.
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