The Oakland Press

U.S. Open heads to Boston amid revolution­ary battle in the sport

- By Doug Ferguson

The U.S. Open returns to its roots at The Country Club, a location steeped in history.

It is one of the five founding clubs of the U.S. Golf Associatio­n. Its first U.S. Open in 1913 is what first put golf on the front pages of American newspapers when 20-year-old amateur Francis Ouimet took down a pair of British titans.

Beyond the ropes, it’s worth nothing the Boston area was the birthplace of the Revolution­ary War, only fitting for these times.

That’s what it feels like golf is going through at the moment.

More than a dozen PGA Tour players, a few big names that include a trio of U.S. Open champions, are defecting to a Saudi-funded rival league and the PGA Tour is telling them they are no longer welcome. The battle lines are unlike anything this genteel game has experience­d in its 162-year history.

And it’s enough to steal some of the attention away from the U.S. Open, the second-oldest championsh­ip known as the toughest test in golf.

“It’s a weird time in profession­al golf,” Rory McIlroy said. “And I said it a couple weeks ago, we’re just going to see how this season plays out.”

The U.S. Open is in

Brookline, Massachuse­tts, for the fourth time on June 16-19, and it already features a few subplots that could be considered surprising.

Tiger Woods will be sitting this one out.

After making the cut in the Masters and the PGA Championsh­ip, Woods decided his right leg that was battered from a February 2021 car crash needs more time to heal and strengthen. He wants to be ready for the British Open next month at St. Andrews.

Phil Mickelson will be playing a major for the first time this year.

Lefty was recovering from a foot-in-mouth injury from published comments about the Saudi league that managed to offend both sides. He said he wasn’t ready to play the Masters or the PGA Championsh­ip, making his return at the LIV Golf Invitation­al outside London.

The USGA takes the name of its championsh­ip —”Open” — seriously enough to honor any player who earned his way into the field.

“Should a player who had earned his way into the 2022 U.S. Open, via our published field criteria, be pulled out of the field as a result of his decision to play in another event? And we ultimately decided that they should not,” the USGA said in a statement.

Fourteen players who qualified for the U.S. Open were in the first LIV Golf event, a group that includes past champions Dustin Johnson and Martin Kaymer. Another U.S. Open champion, Bryson DeChambeau, joined the Saudi league on Friday.

Mickelson, most famously, never has won the U.S. Open. Imagine if he were to finally win the major that has haunted him throughout his career, those record six runner-up finishes keeping him from the career Grand Slam.

“I don’t know how others will receive it but I would be quite favorable with it,” Mickelson said.

How others would perceive it is to be determined. For years among the most popular figures in golf, Mickelson has been viewed as the chief recruiter for Greg Norman and his LIV Golf series that has paid enormous sums just for players to sign up.

Mickelson would know from experience how passionate a Boston crowd can be. It will be Mickelson’s first time playing on American soil since Jan. 28 when he missed the cut at Torrey Pines, and the reception could be far different from 2007 when he won the Deutsche Bank Championsh­ip at the TPC Boston.

“Northeast fans are passionate and vocal,” Justin Thomas said. “Stuff you wouldn’t hear at Memphis or Greensboro.”

 ?? ALASTAIR GRANT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Phil Mickelson, left, stands on the tee before the first round of the inaugural LIV Golf Invitation­al at the Centurion Club in St. Albans, England, Thursday. He is banned from PGA events due to his participat­ion in the LIV, but can play in next week’s U.S. Open.
ALASTAIR GRANT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Phil Mickelson, left, stands on the tee before the first round of the inaugural LIV Golf Invitation­al at the Centurion Club in St. Albans, England, Thursday. He is banned from PGA events due to his participat­ion in the LIV, but can play in next week’s U.S. Open.

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