The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Nasty links of Carnoustie will host seventh Open

- By Doug Ferguson

Carnoustie is known as much for the calamity it causes as the British Open champions it crowns. Any mention of Carnoustie immediatel­y brings back that image of Jean Van de Velde, equal parts tragedy and comedy, standing in Barry Burn on the 18th hole with water up his shins and rising. He made triple bogey to lose a threeshot lead, and then completed as great a collapse as can be found in a major championsh­ip by losing in a three-man playoff in 1999. Just don’t get the idea Van de Velde owns all the rights to bad endings at Carnoustie. Jose Jurado was the first victim. He had a three-shot lead going into the final round in 1931 and was still two shots clear late in the round until coming undone in the brutal closing stretch, topping one shot on the hole 17th into the burn. He lost out to Tommy Armour. More recently was Padraig Harrington, only it worked out well for him in 2007. Playing the 18th with a one-shot lead, the Irishman hit his tee shot into the Barry Burn. He took a penalty drop and then hit his next shot into the wind- ing stream. Harrington managed the best double bogey of his him life. It got into a playoff when Sergio Garcia made bogey from the bunker, and Harrington went on to win his first major. Of the six previous Opens on these menacing links, Ben Hogan is the only winner to hold a 54-hole lead. For most everyone else, Carnoustie always seem to dish out its share of carnage. Rod opened Pampling once with a 71 and had the lead. He and followed with an 86 missed the cut. Phil Mickelson still hasn’t seen a weekend at Carnoustie. Garcia made his major debut as a profession­al at Carnoustie. He shot 89. “That’s a brutal course,” Bernhard Langer said. He speaks from experience in 1999, when Langer had his third-highest score of the 23 Opens he completed. He shot 297, and he tied for 18th that week. The first time Tiger Woods went an entire round with- out birdie a in a major was in 1999 at Carnoustie. “I think I made one birdie on the weekend and I finished three or four back of the playWoods said. “That was ridiculous how hard it was.” One month after Shinnecock Hills was punishing as ever in the U.S. Open, golf ’s oldest championsh­ip doesn’t figure to be much of a reprieve. Scotland has been going through a warm, dry patch of weather, which figures to make it firm and bouncy. Mickelson, who played Car- noustie a week before the Open, said unlikely it was he would even carry a driver. “I’m either going to carry a that driver or hot 3-wood, but there’s only two or three holes — there’s actually only two holes I plan on using it, both par 5s. I have a low 1-iron that I’ve been putting in the bag and ... it’s very low. Gets on the ground quick. I’ll hit that on probably the last ten holes, almost every hole.” Carnoustie in any conditions is regarded as a beast, with a reputation as the toughest links in the world. Sir Michael Bonallack, the former might R&A secretary, have sized it up the best when he said, “When the wind is blowing, it is the toughest course in Britain. And when it’s not blowing, it’s probably still the toughest.” In recent Opens, it has picked up a nickname: Car- nasty. For so much of the field, it will be a new experience. Only two players from the top 10 in the world have played a British Open at Carnoustie — Justin Rose and Rory McIlroy, who was an 18-year-old amateur in 2007 and imme- diately showed his potential when opened he with a 68. He tied for 42nd that week. Only 33 players in the 156man field have played an Open at Carnoustie, and only 12 have played it twice. Defending champion Jordan Spieth only knows it from television. He was 13, just starting to blossom as a junior, and he watched the Open from home as Garcia and Harrington tried to survive the finish. “I remember ... how good of a score par was on that hole and will continue to be for Opens going forward,” Spieth said. one “It’s of probably the toughest closing holes in the Open Championsh­ip anywhere, and that creates some drama when it comes down to Sunday, as we’ve seen. And I don’t think it will be any dif- ferent this year.” Carnoustie gets its mean streak from the way the course was set up in 1999, with narrow fairways and high grass. But its strength comes the from wind, like most links courses, and this course near the North Sea is particular­ly exposed. It measures 7,402 yards, which is 19 yards shorter — yes, shorter — than it was in 2007, the last time the Open was at Carnoustie. Spieth become will try to the first player in 10 years to repeat as British Open champion, and he’d right now simply settle for a chance. Since his closing 64 at the Masters to finish third, Spieth has finished at least 12 shots out of the lead in four of his seven tournament­s. He missed the cut in the other three. Woods is happy to get another crack at it. Carnoustie was his first experience with links golf in 1995, when he was still at Stan- ford over and came for the Scottish Open at Carnoustie ahead of the British Open at St. Andrews. He opened with a 69, closed with a 78 finished 48th. “Carnoustie is an unbelievab­le driving golf course,” Woods said. “You have to drive the ball well there, but also it’s not your traditiona­l in (and) out golf course. It’s a lot of different angles, so a lot of different crosswinds. I have to be able to maneuver the golf ball both ways there efficientl­y. You just have to hit the golf ball well.”

 ?? AP FILE ?? Jean Van de Velde (bottom center) stands in Barry Burn on the 18th hole with water up his shins. He made triple bogey to lose a three-shot lead in 1999 at Carnoustie.
AP FILE Jean Van de Velde (bottom center) stands in Barry Burn on the 18th hole with water up his shins. He made triple bogey to lose a three-shot lead in 1999 at Carnoustie.

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