The Standard (St. Catharines)

Site of PGA Championsh­ip holds memories of 9/11 attacks

- TOD LEONARD

On the morning of Sept. 11, 2001, Bellerive Country Club was buzzing with anticipati­on.

It was only Tuesday, but St. Louisans were starved for profession­al golf, and they filled the grandstand­s early as PGA Tour pros practised for the WGC-American Express Championsh­ip.

In truth, there was one man they’d come to see. Tiger Woods was at the zenith of his popularity, having won five times that season, including the Masters, to hold all four major trophies at the same time.

At Bellerive, Woods kept his usual routine of going out at sunrise, accompanie­d by Mike Weir, Mark Calcavecch­ia and Vijay Singh.

The round was casual, carefree, until PGA Tour commission­er Tim Finchem drove up in a golf cart with horrifying news. A plane had crashed into the World Trade Center in New York.

Hitting golf balls became instantly meaningles­s. Woods and company hustled back to join others in the locker-room, where they stood staring at television­s in silent disbelief.

“By the time we got in, unfortunat­ely, we had the chance to see the second plane hit,” Woods recalled recently.

The tournament was cancelled the next day, and with air travel in chaos, the players scrambled to get home. Woods was given a courtesy car and drove 17 hours to Florida.

“I had a lot of reflecting to do during that time,” he said. “That’s one of the reasons why I changed my foundation from a golf-based foundation to an educationa­l-based foundation, because of what happened with the towers.”

For dozens of profession­al golfers, Bellerive — the host site of this week’s 100th PGA Championsh­ip — will always be linked with the tragedy of 9/11.

It’s impossible for them to walk the grounds and not have some flashbacks.

There was one previous return to Bellerive — the 2008 BMW Championsh­ip in the FedEx Cup playoffs — and the players found the circumstan­ces eerie.

Before the tournament, Irishman Padraig Harrington said: “A journalist asked me a few weeks ago to talk about the golf course. Even what little I remember, I can’t even talk about that, because it all relates to Sept. 11. How can I talk about the golf course when it’s all so insignific­ant?”

The PGA Championsh­ip will be Woods’ first time back at Bellerive; he missed ’08 after undergoing knee surgery following his U.S. Open triumph that June at Torrey Pines.

For the tour’s younger set, who were elementary school kids during 9/11, Bellerive is just another championsh­ip test — and maybe a forgiving one at that.

Named for Louis St. Ange De Bellerive, a French commander who was instrument­al in founding the city of St. Louis, Bellerive Country Club is a parkland course in the west St. Louis suburb of Town and Country.

It tips out at about 7,400 yards, and with relatively generous fairways and numerous trees eliminated during architect Rees Jones’ 2006 renovation of his father’s original 1960 design, the layout might have little in the way of defence.

Coronado Golf Course head pro Brian Smock, a longtime Web.com Tour player who qualified for his second straight PGA through the Club Profession­al Championsh­ip, practised at Bellerive last week and declared it “soft.” The greens, he said, have only begun to get healthy after a long winter, and so they might not reach the slick speeds that would overly tax the world’s best.

Forget about seeing balls spring off concrete-hard greens like they did in June’s U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills.

“It’s gettable,” Smock said. “I think 20 under could win.”

That seems an optimistic but not unreasonab­le expectatio­n, even with Bellerive playing to a par of 70. Just last week in the WGC-Bridgeston­e Invitation­al, at reputedly demanding Firestone Country Club, there were a handful of 400-yard drives, and Justin Thomas won at 15 under.

Thomas, a three-time winner this year who captured his first major in last year’s PGA at Quail Hollow, played Bellerive for the first time in early June with head pro Mike Tucker while attending media day. Thomas didn’t reveal his score, but Tucker let it be known that he didn’t make a bogey.

“He made a great up-and-down on 1, a nice little par from the water on 2, and then put on the most spectacula­r display of driving I’ve ever seen,” Tucker said.

“Driving is going to be a premium,” Thomas said. “The holes have great shape to them. A lot of them kind of go out and then dogleg . ... You’re going to need to be really precise.”

Bellerive’s greens are among the largest in major championsh­ip golf — many at 10,000 square feet — and there are massive bunkers around most of them. Club members like to boast that they face some of the longest greenside sand shots in golf, but whether that comes into play with golfers hitting short-iron approaches will be a key.

With only one par-5 hole longer than 600 yards, the players will be aggressive. The PGA is helping them out, too, with a risk-reward chance at the par-4 11th. It likely will play at less than 300 yards for a couple of days.

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