The Bakersfield Californian

Restored to glory, Southern Hills ready

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TULSA, Okla. — Matt Kuchar was flopping shots out of the rough during his practice round at Southern Hills on Tuesday when he chunked one so fat that it came up several yards short of the hole, teetering precarious­ly on the edge of the green.

“Knock that back to me,” Kuchar told playing his partner, Dustin Johnson, who replied simply: “I don’t think I have to.”

Just as he predicted, the ball began trickling back off the green, finally stopping at Kuchar’s feet some 20 yards away.

It’s the kind of thing that could happen on any number of holes during the PGA Championsh­ip this week, hilarious to fans and maddening to players.

But it’s also what famed golf course architecte­d Perry Maxwell had in mind when he first laid out the venerable course near downtown Tulsa nearly 90 years ago, and what Gil Hanse and Jim Wagner tried to restore when the club’s membership asked them to take it back to its roots in time for its next major championsh­ip.

“It’s a sweet place,” said Justin Thomas, who has always preferred classic courses.

“You know, big fall-offs and runoffs on the greens, and the Bermuda grass makes it very difficult to chip, so it puts a premium on having different techniques and different styles around the greens, and also puts a premium on ball-striking to where you can hit the green.

“I think,” Thomas said, “this is an unbelievab­le major championsh­ip venue.”

It’s been a popular one, for sure, the first to host five PGA Championsh­ips and one of the few to have hosted it along with the U.S. Open multiple times.

But the course where Tiger Woods won the PGA in 2009, and Retief Goosen the U.S. Open in 2002, is far different from the one that Jordan

Spieth, Scottie Scheffler and everyone else will face this week.

It’s more like the one where Tommy Bolt triumphed in the 1958 U.S. Open.

The course had changed over the years. It had grown and evolved. Entire creeks that were once in play had disappeare­d amid thick stands of trees.

And those greens, with their trademark “Maxwell’s rolls,” had lost their original character, turning into saucers that welcomed poorly hit approach shots rather than subtle mounds that rejected them.

It was up to Hanse and Wagner, fresh off a similar restoratio­n of Los Angeles Country Club, to peel back the layers of time.

They got help from Southern Hills club historian Clyde Chrisman, who provided photograph­s and other material from when the club was establishe­d in 1936, along with superinten­dent Russ Myers, who had worked with them on other projects.

 ?? CHARLES KRUPA / AP FILE ?? Tiger Woods walks down the fifth fairway during the final round of the PGA Golf Championsh­ip at the Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Okla. in 2007.
CHARLES KRUPA / AP FILE Tiger Woods walks down the fifth fairway during the final round of the PGA Golf Championsh­ip at the Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Okla. in 2007.

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