USA TODAY US Edition

COURSE SEES MAJOR REVAMP

Golfers welcome Quail Hollow changes ahead of PGA Championsh­ip

- Steve DiMeglio @Steve_DiMeglio

As the final group in the final round of the 2016 Wells Fargo Championsh­ip made the turn at Quail Hollow, a small army of maintenanc­e workers began an aggressive offensive on the front nine.

By the time James Hahn beat Roberto Castro in a playoff, the battalion and its chain saws, bulldozers and other high-powered gardening weapons had started reshaping the course for the 99th PGA Championsh­ip.

In fewer than 90 days, all 18 greens were stripped of grass to deal with an imperfec- tion in the surface in the greens, all the sand was removed from the bunkers and some 900 trees were cut down. The putting surfaces were replaced with a different type of Bermuda grass from Texas called G-12, and the bunkers were filled with the same type of sand used at Augusta National. The fairways are Bermuda, and the rough is Bermuda instead of rye.

And there are essentiall­y four new holes. The opening hole is now a 524-yard par-4 dogleg to the right, ending on the old No. 2 green. Thus, with the eliminatio­n of the old second hole, a new par-3 was built — the 184yard fourth hole. The old par-5 fifth is now a dogleg-right par-4 of 449 yards. And the green of the par-4 11th was moved back and the hole now plays 462 yards.

The course, now playing at 7,600 yards and to a par of 71, presents a different set of challenges from the one the players were familiar with during the Wells Fargo Championsh­ip.

“Obviously, they made it harder, which I like; it’s longer,” world No. 1 Dustin Johnson said. “But the golf course, it’s in fantastic condition. Perfect greens, perfect fairways. I really do like the changes so far.”

The course was long enough, but with rain having already softened it and the forecast calling for more precipitat­ion, Quail Hollow will play very long. It also will play very differentl­y. Bermuda greens pose a challenge because of the grain. Unlike bentgrass, where

putts roll on a true line, the grain of Bermuda will influence the ball. The ball will break in the direction the grain is growing, meaning downhill, down-grain putts will be very fast, and uphill into-the-grain putts will be very slow. The grain can affect even 3foot putts.

Bermuda rough is a challenge, too, as players will have to determine whether the ball will jump out of the rough, thus producing a flier where the ball goes much farther than anticipate­d. And Bermuda rough tends to deliver more difficult lies.

“It’s not the same course,” said Rickie Fowler, who won here in

2012. “The start is a bit tougher. No. 1 used to be a nice way to ease into the round, but that’s not the case anymore. But the changes are good. The course is in great shape. The greens are perfect. And I think the greens will hold up a lot better through the day.”

No one has had more success at Quail Hollow than four-time major winner Rory McIlroy, who won the Wells Fargo in 2010 and

2015, lost a 2012 playoff to Fowler and has three other top-10 finishes. He wouldn’t have minded if no changes were made, but he doesn’t really mind the changes.

“It used to be you got through the first five holes here at 1- or 2under par and that was a decent start, and now you get through the first five holes at even par and that’s when the golf course starts to open up for you,” he said. “I still feel like the golf course gives you plenty of chances. ... It will probably play a couple of strokes harder than it used to play, especially with the par going from 72 to 71. But for the most part, 15 of the 18 holes are pretty much the same. I like it. Have always liked it. I just feel good around here.”

One thing the overhaul didn’t change is the Green Mile, the three closing holes that got their nickname from the 1999 prison movie starring Tom Hanks. It is

1,225 yards of nasty: the 508-yard

par-4 16th with the green bordered by a lake; the 223-yard

par-3 17th with the green guarded by a lake; and the 494-yard

par-4 18th, where a creek protects the left side of the fairway and green.

All in all, the alteration­s add to the pressure of winning a major.

“I think the changes have turned out incredibly well, because it’s actually made the golf course a little bit tougher, but it’s done it in a very subtle way, rather than overdoing it,” said Phil Mickelson, who has nine top-10s at Quail Hollow but no wins.

“The beauty and the challenge of the golf course has come out. You’ve got a major championsh­ip that a score very close to par is going to end up winning.”

 ?? ROB SCHUMACHER, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? “For the most part, 15 of the 18 holes are pretty much the same,” Rory McIlroy, left, says of the changes at Quail Hollow.
ROB SCHUMACHER, USA TODAY SPORTS “For the most part, 15 of the 18 holes are pretty much the same,” Rory McIlroy, left, says of the changes at Quail Hollow.
 ?? ROB SCHUMACHER, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? With lots of rain having fallen recently and more in the forecast, Quail Hollow likely will play very long for the PGA Championsh­ip when it begins Thursday.
ROB SCHUMACHER, USA TODAY SPORTS With lots of rain having fallen recently and more in the forecast, Quail Hollow likely will play very long for the PGA Championsh­ip when it begins Thursday.

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