Montreal Gazette

NEW DATE, NEW IDENTITY FOR CANADIAN OPEN?

- JON McCARTHY

The RBC Canadian Open’s new date is a clear winner. Its new identity is a work in progress.

Thursday at Hamilton Golf and Country Club, the third oldest tournament on the PGA Tour — after the U.S. and British Opens — will tee off with its strongest field in a generation. Rory McIlroy makes his Canadian debut alongside major championsh­ip collector Brooks Koepka, defending champ Dustin Johnson, Justin Thomas, Bubba Watson, Sergio Garcia, and every Canadian golfer you can name plus a few you can’t.

The bump in field strength has plenty to do with next week’s U.S. Open at Pebble Beach. After years of giving top players a great reason not to come to Canada — holding the tournament the week after the British Open — the RBC Canadian Open is much more attractive, especially for top players looking to compete the week before a major.

The increased star power is great for the tournament’s relevance and the new date in early June attracts fans at a time of year that optimism for sunshine reaches its peak.

If the struggle for relevance is in the rear-view mirror, the hunt for an identity is slightly more complicate­d. There has always been a contingent of golf fans and analysts that want our national open to play like, well, a national open. Make it hard, make it fast, grow the rough. But would players come to Canada to get their brains beat in the week before having their brains beat in at the U.S. Open? Probably not.

Koepka, who will be shooting for a three-peat at the U.S. Open next week, seems to have both eyes trained on the season’s third major.

“You know, it doesn’t really matter about the result,” Koepka said of his trip to Canada. “I could care less what happens. I just want to feel good going into next week.”

Terminator 2019 doesn’t mince words. Koepka said he picked up a club Tuesday for the first time since last month when he won the PGA Championsh­ip at Bethpage Black. He played nine holes at Hamilton on Wednesday and will see the back nine for the first time during Round 1.

Four-time major champion McIlroy is also known for his brutal honesty, and also will head into the first round having only played Hamilton’s front nine. Both players said what they have experience­d on the course — tight off the tee, lush rough, firm greens — will be a good warm-up for Pebble Beach. The Irishman, however, sees the RBC Canadian Open in a kinder light.

“Obviously this isn’t just a preparatio­n week,” McIlroy said. “This is a very prestigiou­s tournament, one of the oldest tournament­s in the world that I would dearly love to be able to add my name to. I’m fully focused on this week, but knowing that if I play well here, this week, and have good control of my ball and my distance control, that will serve me well going into next week.”

McIlroy has a knack for national opens, having won the U.S. Open, British Open, Irish Open and Australian Open. On Wednesday, the 30-year-old walked and took notes for a few holes on the back nine with a putter and a couple wedges before a heavy storm soaked the course and chased him off.

For Canadians in the field, this week is a different animal. There are few tournament­s in the world that would rival what a win on home soil would mean to Adam Hadwin, Corey Conners, Mackenzie Hughes or any Canadian.

“You could almost make an argument that it might be more valuable than even a PGA (Championsh­ip) to a Canadian,” Hadwin said, before explaining that may be changing now that the PGA also has a new and improved date. “Certainly might be more valuable than a WGC event for sure.”

Hadwin said he was inspired watching Brooke Henderson win the CP Women’s Open in Saskatoon last year.

So, what have we learned? Depending who you ask, the RBC Canadian Open is either a rising PGA Tour stop, a warm-up event, a prestigiou­s national open, or the Holy Grail.

The new date means we are squarely in the shadow of our big neighbour’s national open, but the great field suggests there are benefits in that. By moving away from a relatively uninspirin­g Glen Abbey to Hamilton and St. George’s for four of the next six years, the RBC Canadian Open is putting its best foot forward.

None of this clears up the tournament’s identity but it sounds quite Canadian.

 ?? ANDY LYONS/GETTY IMAGES FILE ?? Rory McIlroy has won the U.S. Open, British Open, Irish Open and Australian Open, and is teeing it up at the Canadian Open, being held in Hamilton, for the first time this week.
ANDY LYONS/GETTY IMAGES FILE Rory McIlroy has won the U.S. Open, British Open, Irish Open and Australian Open, and is teeing it up at the Canadian Open, being held in Hamilton, for the first time this week.
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