Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘Birdies and train wrecks’

PGA Tour returns to Minnesota via 3M Open at TPC Twin Cities

- BY DAVE CAMPBELL

BLAINE, Minn. — The most recent gathering of the world’s greatest golfers in Minnesota led to a truly seminal moment when the United States recaptured the Ryder Cup for the first time in eight years in front of raucous galleries at Hazeltine National Golf Club near Minneapoli­s.

The big-hitting Brooks Koepka calmly won three of his four matches. Phil Mickelson leaped into the air after a birdie putt on the final hole of his singles match. Patrick Reed followed his clutch shots with fist pumps, arm waves and a hand cupped to his ear to cajole a home crowd hardly needing more encouragem­ent.

“That atmosphere was so cool,” Koepka said.

Three years later, the stakes won’t be nearly as high, the list of stars is a little shorter and the setting at TPC Twin Cities will be a bit more subdued. Still, it’s a nice moment for the PGA Tour as the inaugural 3M Open, which tees off today, marks the top-tier circuit’s first regular stop in Minnesota since 1969.

“I have just a lot of fond memories here, and it fit really well into the schedule,” Mickelson said after playing in the proam event Wednesday. “I’m looking to this tournament to get a little bit of momentum heading into the summer stretch.”

One of the first prominent players to commit to the 3M Open, Mickelson recalled his first experience in Minnesota as a 20-year-old amateur at the U.S. Open at Hazeltine in 1991. That course by famed designer Robert Trent Jones on rolling farmland in Chaska, about 25 miles southwest of downtown Minneapoli­s, also hosted the PGA Championsh­ip in 2002 and 2009 and then the Ryder Cup in 2016. Two weekends ago, the Women’s PGA Championsh­ip was held there.

For a state with one of the shortest golfing seasons in the country, Minnesota has long fostered a passionate community surroundin­g the sport.

“They’re just really nice people,” said Mickelson, who at No. 28 is one of seven players ranked in the world’s top 30 in the field for the 3M Open.

Said Koepka: “I can’t believe how many people are out on a Wednesday.”

They will take on a course designed by Arnold Palmer and built on a former sod farm in Blaine — about 20 miles north of Minneapoli­s — that is heavy on water hazards and has been considerab­ly lengthened and narrowed from the layout used for the PGA Tour Champions event it hosted from 2001 to last year.

Under the renovation direction of Tom Lehman, who with fellow Minnesotan Tim Herron received an exemption to participat­e this week, TPC Twin Cities will play as a par-71 layout at 7,468 yards. The goal was to produce a classic risk-reward setup with tight fairways, thick rough and fast greens.

The 3M Open, which has a seven-year contract with the PGA Tour, will present four par-3 holes and three par-5s.

“We want birdies and train wrecks,” said Hollis Cavner, the tournament’s executive director, adding: “We feel very comfortabl­e that this golf course is going to play hard and fast. It’s going to play long. If we get wind, it’s a game-changer.”

Koepka, No. 1 in the World Golf Ranking, has been joined in the 156-man field by Bryson DeChambeau (eighth), Tony Finau (17th), Jason Day (18th), Reed (25th), Mickelson and Keegan Bradley (29th). The purse is $6.4 million, with the winner getting $1.152 million and 500 FedEx Cup points.

Also in the field are all four Baylor School graduates on the PGA Tour: Harris English, Stephan Jaeger, Luke List and Keith Mitchell, who is the highest-ranked of the quartet at 62nd, with List eight spots behind him.

Koepka entered this week trailing Matt Kuchar by 89 points for first place in the FedEx Cup standings in this newly condensed season that concludes with the Tour Championsh­ip and culminatio­n of the FedEx Cup playoffs in late August. The 3M Open landed in the sweet spot between the U.S. Open and the British Open, an additional attraction for players eager to not only move up in the standings but to tackle a new set of tee boxes and pin placements.

Nate Lashley, who won the inaugural Rocket Mortgage Classic in Detroit on Sunday, going wire-to-wire for his maiden victory on tour, is among the 3M Open participan­ts.

“It’s fun to play different golf courses,” Koepka said. “You never know what you come across, what you might like.”

“We feel very comfortabl­e that this golf course is going to play hard and fast. It’s going to play long. If we get wind, it’s a game-changer.”

– HOLLIS CAVNER, THE TOURNAMENT’S EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

 ?? AP PHOTO/ALEX KORMANN ?? Golf fans are reflected in a water hazard at TPC Twin Cities as Phil Mickelson practices on Tuesday for the 3M Open, which starts today in Blaine, Minn.
AP PHOTO/ALEX KORMANN Golf fans are reflected in a water hazard at TPC Twin Cities as Phil Mickelson practices on Tuesday for the 3M Open, which starts today in Blaine, Minn.
 ?? AP PHOTO/JERRY HOLT ?? Brooks Koepka plays in the pro-am for the 3M Open in Blaine, Minn., on Wednesday.
AP PHOTO/JERRY HOLT Brooks Koepka plays in the pro-am for the 3M Open in Blaine, Minn., on Wednesday.

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