Las Vegas Review-Journal

USGA striving for ultimate test

Shinnecock scores will show if course set up to play tricky

- By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press

SOUTHAMPTO­N, N.Y. — THEU.S. Open wants to be the ultimate test in golf, and sometimes that leads to a series of trick questions.

One of them was 14 years ago at Shinnecock Hills.

A year after Jim Furyk tied the

U.S. Open scoring record at Olympia Fields, the 2004 U.S. Open was so bone dry and lightning fast that only three players broke par on the weekend, none on Sunday. Fans having to move to the side because of a golf ball rolling toward them is not unusual, except when the player hit the shot with his putter from the green. Tee shots that landed on the seventh green rolled off the putting surface and into a bunker.

One year after Rory Mcilroy broke the U.S. Open scoring record at Congressio­nal, no one broke par at Olympic Club in 2012 when Webb Simpson won.

Moments like this lead to criticism that the USGA overreacts. Justin Rose sees it another way.

“When everything is in balance, it’s kind of boring,” he said. “And I

think in life, the closer you get to the edges, that’s where the excitement is. So I would say the USGA is not reactionar­y. It’s counterbal­ancing. So if you go too far one way, you’ve got to come back the other way. You don’t want to fall off the edge.”

That’s the question going into the 118th U.S. Open that starts Thursday.

Might the USGA lean toward going easy on players because of what happened the last time at Shinnecock Hills? Or will it make it tougher on them because of the record scoring last year at Erin Hills? Brooks Koepka tied the record to par at 16 under, and six other players finished 10 under or lower.

“We’re confident this should be a marvelous test,” said Mike Davis, the chief executive of the USGA who has been in charge of setting up the courses for the U.S. Open since 2006 at Winged Foot, when the winning score was 5 over.

Davis believes Shinnecock Hills is right where the USGA wants it, even with a light, steady rain on the final day of practice.

Wednesday is never the measure of how a golf course presents itself.

Mcilroy is among those who likes what he sees. It’s not a U.S. Open if players are not complainin­g, but it’s been a quiet three days ahead of competitio­n. The biggest question is whether the fairways are narrow enough.

They are tighter than last year at Erin Hills, for sure, and an average of 15 yards wider than in 2004.

“Honestly, I think they’ve got it right,” Mcilroy said. “It presents guys with options off the tee. You have to make a decision basically on every tee box what you’re going to do. I’m obviously not that old, but when I watched U.S. Opens on TV and saw these long, narrow corridors of fairways and thick rough, that’s what I was used to at a U.S. Open. … If you look at the venues that are coming up, they’re very traditiona­l venues like Oakmont, Winged Foot, Pebble Beach.

“Maybe you’ll see more of what we perceive as a traditiona­l U.S. Open setup.”

 ?? Julio Cortez ?? The Associated Press Australian Adam Scott, a former UNLV golfer, works at refining his putting stroke Wednesday in a U.S. Open practice round on the first green at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club in Southampto­n, N.Y.
Julio Cortez The Associated Press Australian Adam Scott, a former UNLV golfer, works at refining his putting stroke Wednesday in a U.S. Open practice round on the first green at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club in Southampto­n, N.Y.

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