The Scotsman

Open courses have improved by being updated, insists R&A chief

● Cost of lengthenin­g layouts is defended despite Bonallack saying it was avoidable

- By MARTIN DEMPSTER

Widespread lengthenin­g of the courses on the Open Championsh­ip rota has been defended by the R&A’S chief executive, Martin Slumbers, despite one of his predecesso­rs claiming it wouldn’t have been necessary if steps had been taken to control the distance a golf ball can travel.

Sir Michael Bonallack has revealed that an attempt by some of the game’s greatest players, including Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer and Gary Player, to get golf balls “pegged back” had been dismissed by the R&A and the USGA, the game’s two ruling bodies.

“I am on Jack Nicklaus’ ‘Captains Club’,” Bonallack, a fivetime Amateur champion, told Golf Digest. “We meet at Muirfield Village every year. At one of those we had Jack, Arnold Palmer, Gary Player, Bill Campbell, myself, Charlie Mechem from the LPGA, all with huge experience in golf. Jack was talking about the ball. We all agreed it was out of control and going too far. It had to be pegged back. So a letter was composed and sent off to the R&A and the USGA, signed by all of us.

“The only reaction we got was an acknowledg­ement. But I happened to see a copy of the memo that was passed from [then USGA chief ] David Fay to Peter Dawson [then R&A secretary]. ‘Have you got this?’ it asked. ‘Please note the average age of those who signed it!’ And that was the end of it.”

Bonallack, who was the R&A secretary before Dawson, added: “Like so many people I lament the demise of the shotmakers, people like Seve [Ballestero­s] and Lee Trevino. It’s gone. I was having an argument with someone the other day about the ridiculous distances the ball is going. The other person maintained that it isn’t going any farther than it did 15 years ago. But it does. Which is why they are lengthenin­g all these great courses.”

During Dawson’s reign, just about every course on the Open Championsh­ip rota was stretched, including a new championsh­ip tee at the 17th on the Old Course at St Andrews being built outside the boundary of the course, and his successor has no problems with that work.

Asked if he was comfortabl­e about how much money had been spent to protect courses from the advancemen­t in club technology, Slumbers answered: “There are other sports where they’ve also invested hugely. In athletics, for example. When I used to run, it was a cinder track and 0 Bonallack: Call for ‘pegging back’ ball was dismisssed. now it’s a beautiful modern surface. In golf, these courses have improved as they have been updated.”

Last year’s Open Championsh­ip at Royal Troon was won by Henrik Stenson with a record 20-under-par total as he edged out Phil Mickelson. Slumbers said he’d been pleased with how the Ayrshire course had been set up on that occasion and is looking for Royal Birkdale to similarly reward good play when it hosts the Championsh­ip this summer. “Our job is to create a platform where the very best can perform,” he said. “To me, making it impossible is not a good thing. Making it challengin­g is the way to go. At Troon, lots of thought went into how the rough was prepared, as well as how the hole was meant to be played. The rough was appropriat­e.

“The golf course was not easy, it was just played brilliantl­y by two people who were probably playing the best golf of their life. There was a way to play that course, and if you played that way, it was set up in a way that you could score.

“We are applying the same philosophy down at Birkdale, including some shorter par-3s. Last year the Postage Stamp played at 100 yards, which was fantastic, and I think the average score was 3.4. I think that showed the real skill of the players in being able to get that ball close to the hole, and I liked that. I personally prefer that to really long par-3s and we’ve got one of those coming up at Birkdale.” Liam Johnston lamented his putter turning cold as he came up agonisingl­y short in his bid to become the fifth Scot in just seven years to win the Sanlam South African Amateur Championsh­ip.

The Dumfries & County player bowed out in the quarter-finals at Humewood but only after digging deep to take his tie against Caylum Boon into extra holes before succumbing to the home hope at the 21st.

“I struck it the best I have all week this morning in the wind but, unfortunat­ely, my putter went a bit cold and in matchplay that’s the key component,” said Johnston. “However, I hung in well with an upand-down birdie on 16 to square the match then he chipped in on 17 for eagle to go one again.

“I nearly drove the green at the last and chipped up stiff, which took it down extra holes, but, unfortunat­ely, I bogeyed the long par-3 third hole to lose. It was a great match and I’m a bit gutted to be on the wrong side of the result.”

Johnston will now turn his attention to next week’s African Amateur Championsh­ip at Leopard Creek, where the Scottish Golf squad he’s part of play their final event before heading home. “I feel that this trip is such a great opportunit­y to get 2017 off to a good start, especially getting competitiv­e golf in this early in the year,” he added.

Boon meets fellow Southern Cape player Christo Lamprecht in today’s 36-hole final, the winner of which will succeed Kirkhill’s Craig Ross, who unfortunat­ely saw his title defence ended by illness in the second round.

Elsewhere, Nairn teenager Sandy Scott underlined his Walker Cup credential­s by finishing joint-third in the individual standings in The Prestige at PGA West in California.

Texas Tech freshman Scott, who was named in an initial 19-man Great Britain & Ireland squad for September’s match against the US in Los Angeles, closed with a 70 for a four-under-par 209 total, five shots behind runaway winner Jared du Toit from Arizona State.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom