Daily Camera (Boulder)

St. Andrews still packs big appeal

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ST. ANDREWS, SCOTLAND » Jack Nicklaus posed atop the Swilcan Bridge, birdied the last hole he ever played in a major championsh­ip and had no intention of ever returning to St. Andrews, not wanting anything to dilute from such a powerful ending to an incomparab­le career.

That was 17 years ago. And those plans changed when St. Andrews wanted to make Nicklaus an honorary citizen on occasion of the 150th British Open. The only other Americans given that distinctio­n were Bobby Jones and Benjamin Franklin.

It was the first time Nicklaus has been to the Old Course without golf clubs, and his appreciati­on only seemed to deepen.

“When I came here in 1964, I couldn’t believe that St Andrews was a golf course that would still test golfers of that time,” he said Monday. “It still tests the golfers at this time. It’s a magical golf course. ... And to believe the game of golf essentiall­y started here, it just absolutely is mind-boggling to me that it still stands up to the golfers of today.”

That’s still to be determined.

The Old Course always feels a little older when it’s crusty and firm, yellow and wispy, when the quality of a shot isn’t measure until it hits the ground and starts bouncing along.

But without much wind in the forecast, and with the increasing talent of today’s game, few courses are more vulnerable to low scoring. The par is 72 with only two par 5s, one on each nine. But there are a few par 4s reachable from the tee without strong wind.

U.S.

Open champion

Matt Fitzpatric­k was a junior tournament winner at St. Andrews. Most recently his experience has been at the Dunhill Links Championsh­ip on the European tour in early October when the sky is gray and heavy and the turf is soft and green.

“I think with it being firm and par 4s more gettable, it could be a low one as well, weather permitting,” Fitzpatric­k said.

Tiger Woods was back on the Old Course on Monday morning for nine holes, keeping up with an unusually busy schedule given the state of his battered right leg. He walked the course with a wedge and putter on Saturday into night and played 18 holes on Sunday. Woods also had the “Celebratio­n of Champions,” a four-hole loop with other R&A champions through the years.

 ?? AP PHOTO/PETER MORRISON ?? U.S golfer Tiger Woods prepares to tee off on the 7th hole during a practice round at the British Open golf championsh­ip on the Old Course at St. Andrews, Scotland, Monday.
AP PHOTO/PETER MORRISON U.S golfer Tiger Woods prepares to tee off on the 7th hole during a practice round at the British Open golf championsh­ip on the Old Course at St. Andrews, Scotland, Monday.

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