Boston Herald

New look as Brookline preps for US Open

- BY KEITH PEARSON

In less than three years, the eyes of the golfing world once again will be fixated on The Country Club when it hosts the U.S. Open for the fourth time.

Most people will be seeing the course for the first time since 1999 when it hosted the most memorable Ryder Cup of all time as the Americans overcame a six-point deficit in Sunday’s singles matches.

The course will look much different than it did then, as hundreds of trees were removed from the property as part of Gil Hanse’s overhaul that started in 2009 leading up to the 2013 U.S. Amateur.

There still are plenty of tweaks and extensions to be made for 2022, but the most noticeable will be incorporat­ing the 12th hole of the main course, a 130-yard drop shot par-3, into the Championsh­ip Course, which is a composite of all 27 holes — the 18 of the main course and nine-hole Primrose Course.

“The tees will be expanded and regraded to provide a better visual of the green from the tee, and the green will be expanded dramatical­ly back to its original size, which will yield some wonderful hole locations,” Hanse said.

The 338-yard dogleg left fourth hole will be the one removed.

It will be the first time since 1957 the par-3 has been part of a composite design. The club celebrated its 75th anniversar­y that year by hosting the U.S. Amateur and Jack Nicklaus was among the competitor­s. The 17-year-old from Columbus, Ohio, reached the fourth round that year and was the champion in 1959 and 1961.

Nicklaus returned to Brookline in 1963 as the defending Open champion — the first of his record 18 major titles and having won his first of six Masters two months before the event — but missed the cut on what has come to be known as the Championsh­ip Course.

The Golden Bear visited Brookline in 1984 hoping to be selected as the consulting architect for the ’88 Open and toured all the holes trying to find the best 18 for the 75th anniversar­y of Francis Ouimet’s victory. Nicklaus wanted to find a way to get the 12th in there.

“He likened it to the seventh hole at Pebble Beach,” said Don Callahan, the TCC head pro from 1967-1999 and now an instructor at the Butch Harmon School of Golf near Las Vegas. “Short, but no one says the seventh hole at Pebble is too short to be in a championsh­ip golf course.”

Ultimately, Rees Jones was selected for the job and the work he did on The Country Club opened the door to other renovation­s to places such as Bethpage, Congressio­nal and Baltusrol, earning him the nickname “the Open Doctor.”

It wasn’t until the leadup to the 2013 Amateur when the discussion of getting the 12th hole into the mix returned.

“We were real close to doing it (for the Amateur) and decided not to at the last minute because of the logistics involved in tee signs, maps and spectators and all that sort of thing,” said Bill Spence, the longtime director of grounds at The Country Club who retired in February 2018 and now is a consultant. “I think it was at that time by (USGA executive director and now CEO) Mike Davis the notion of incorporat­ing 12 into the Championsh­ip Course became a very serious considerat­ion.”

During a formal visit with Davis, Hanse and club officials the decision to make the change was reached.

“When we looked at how much further back the fifth hole had been stretched, it crossed my mind that in the championsh­ip routing the players almost walk back the entire length of the fourth hole to get to the back tees on Hole 5,” Hanse said. “This type of disconnect is not good for a walking golf course and certainly a traditiona­l test of golf like TCC.

“So it crossed my mind that it would be a better walking, flowing golf course if you came off of 3 and went directly to the back tee on 5, which is proposed to be lengthened for the U.S. Open. By installing the 12th hole into the routing, we also eliminated another long disconnect with golfers bypassing this hole and having to walk from what was Champ 9 to Champ 10.”

 ?? NANCY LANE / BOSTON HERALD ?? GATHER AROUND: The 12th hole at The Country Club in Brookline will be part of the course for the U.S. Open in 2022.
NANCY LANE / BOSTON HERALD GATHER AROUND: The 12th hole at The Country Club in Brookline will be part of the course for the U.S. Open in 2022.

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