Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Erin Hills in the spotlight

USGA has much at stake as young course debuts

- By John Cherwa Los Angeles Times

ERIN, Wis. — It’s somehow fitting that Erin Hills was a golf course sculpted by colliding glaciers about 20,000 years ago.

Because, from all known predictors, the pace of play in the 117th U.S. Open could mirror those giant ice masses.

Five hours may be considered a lightning round as 156 golfers traverse around 7,700 yards of undulation­s and unpredicta­bility.

Balls that don’t hit the unusually large fairways are at risk of being lost in the giant fescue that seems to grow exponentia­lly with each rain, which it did on Monday and Wednesday. More rain is expected on Friday and Saturday.

Fourteen of the 18 holes have blind or semi-blind shots.

The bunkers have been set up as punitive, deep and unforgivin­g.

And this course is brand spanking new to all but a handful of golfers who have played this course that opened just 11 years ago.

“If you have a lost ball that’s going to wreck pace of play,” said FOX analyst Paul Azinger, a former pro that won 12 tournament­s including one major. “You can’t see the ball coming, so the marshals are handcuffed. Some of that fescue is so deep, it’s not going to hop an inch.”

On Tuesday, the fescue was cut down to about four inches on four of the holes.

The USGA, which runs this tournament, has a lot at stake after two problemati­c Opens.

Two years ago, a new Open course at Chambers Bay in Washington state was pilloried for its architectu­re, spectator acces-

sibility and mostly its condition. The greens were in the kind of shape that television viewers were no doubt wondering if the red and blue on their monitor wasn’t working.

Last year, eventual winner Dustin Johnson’s ball accidental­ly moved on the fifth hole of the final round, creating a thunderclo­ud of uncertaint­y as the USGA didn’t announce its rules decision until after the round. He did them a favor by winning by three strokes making the stroke penalty moot. There are a new set of rules in place for instantane­ous decision making this year.

Some players, in muted golfspeak, are less than thrilled with a new course two of the last three years.

“I probably do prefer the more traditiona­l ones,” said Justin Rose, who won the U.S. Open in 2013. “Just because there is a lot of history involved in those. … I definitely see the big picture of why new venues are important. But I think the rotation from now on is incredibly stellar and incredibly traditiona­l.”

Even Andy North, who won two U.S. Opens and is an unofficial golf ambassador for Wisconsin, was a little cranky over the Erin Hills choice.

“To have it in our state is awesome,” North told Teddy Greenstein of the Chicago Tribune, “but to me, the U.S. Open is Medinah No. 3, Oakmont, Oak Hill, Oakland Hills, Pebble Beach. Historic traditiona­l golf courses.

“I truly believe that a big part of the U.S. Open is the history of it. And it’s hard to have that history when you come to new courses.”

The next five U.S. Opens are at courses that have previously hosted the event. In 2023, it goes behind the previously secretive doors of L.A. Country Club for the first time.

The course has a traditiona­l par 72, the first time since 1992 when it was at Pebble Beach. The usual form is to take the easiest par five and make it a par four. But not here.

The starting and finishing holes are par fives, also something very unusual.

The prospect of going for an eagle on the 637-yard 18th could make for an exciting finish on Sunday.

“I think most people would agree that if you have an option for an eagle, then you’ve got an option for a six,” said Jordan Spieth, who won this tournament in 2015. “I think the 18th hole here can produce both.

“It’s a very difficult green with the prevailing wind because it’s so flat on the green. It actually pitches from the middle of the green to the back. And downwind, if the greens are firm … it leaves an almost impossible shot if you’re outside 120 yards just to hold the green.”

The last six majors have been won by someone who had never won one, but that is more of a statistica­l anomaly than anything else.

One person without a major is 22-year-old John Rahm, who last year was the low amateur in the Open.

“It’s like a links golf course on steroids, everything is a little bigger,” said Rahm, who won the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines earlier this year.

The one person routing for bad weather is Phil Mickelson. He plans to attend his daughter’s high school graduation in San Diego on Thursday, then hop a plane to try and make a 2:20 p.m. tee time.

It’s a long shot, and by his estimation, he needs a fourhour weather delay, but that might be some gamesmansh­ip. Others have calculated that with a strong tailwind and a Gulfstream V cranked to the max, he could do it with only a 90 minute to two hour stoppage.

If the rain is heavy overnight they may push back the morning round to let the course dry out. But if that happens, there will be those that say the USGA is rigging the system to let him play.

Not how the USGA wants to start the tournament, with another controvers­y.

 ??  ?? Azinger
Azinger
 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP/AP ?? Length will be at a premium and defending champion Dustin Johnson figures to benefit as play opens today.
DAVID J. PHILLIP/AP Length will be at a premium and defending champion Dustin Johnson figures to benefit as play opens today.
 ?? JAMIE SQUIRE/GETTY IMAGES ?? Former champion Jordan Spieth plays a bunker shot at Erin Hills.
JAMIE SQUIRE/GETTY IMAGES Former champion Jordan Spieth plays a bunker shot at Erin Hills.

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