The Citizen (Gauteng)

Shinnecock

Gets nod of approval

-

Southampto­n

Profession­al golfers can be a querulous bunch, so it says something about the status of Shinnecock Hills that few complaints have been registered so far ahead of the US Open starting today.

As the US Open is poised to regain its status as the toughest test in golf, the course is likely to be the star as much as the game’s biggest names.

Described by Masters champion Patrick Reed as having the look of a seaside British links course without quite the same firm playing characteri­stics, Shinnecock stretches over 260 acres of rolling land on the ritzy eastern end of Long Island.

With golden fescue rough swaying in the breeze like fields of wheat high enough to lose a small child in, accuracy will be the name of the game for the 156-man field, and it would not surprise if some of the amateurs struggled to break 90.

“It’s a mix between an American and a links-style golf course, because it’s not quite as firm, yet still has the characteri­stics of it,” said Reed this week.

He was referring to the fescue, and also to an absence of trees and a sea breeze that inevitably makes a stern test even harder.

Reed has been camped out in the area for more than a week, while Dustin Johnson arrived only last Sunday night, after winning in Memphis and regaining the world No 1 ranking.

“It’s a fantastic venue,” Johnson said. “It’s all about the second shots. You really have to hit quality shots into these greens.

“The fairways are fairly generous (but) if you miss you’re going to be in trouble.”

Tiger Woods said that the greens were not quite up to speed yet, but as the course dried out, it would be “another great U.S. Open test”.

Woods, however, came closest among the top players to offering just a whiff of criticism.

“We’re back on old bumpy poa,” he said, referring to the poa annua grass greens that can become a little bumpy as the day progresses.

 ??  ??
 ?? Picture: AFP ?? BEACH BALL. American Jordan Spieth plays a shot from a bunker on the second hole during a practice round prior to the US Open at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club in Southampto­n, New York.
Picture: AFP BEACH BALL. American Jordan Spieth plays a shot from a bunker on the second hole during a practice round prior to the US Open at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club in Southampto­n, New York.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa