Lodi News-Sentinel

New U.S. Open playoff format changes with the times to add drama

- By Mark Herrmann

PEBBLE BEACH — The U.S. Golf Associatio­n finally has joined the rest of humanity in the view that Mondays are just worth skipping. The USGA has done away with its signature 18-hole Monday playoff and, like everyone else in the sport, chosen to end its biggest tournament on a Sunday.

The official tiebreaker for the U.S. Open is a two-hole tiebreaker, to be held on Sunday evening, immediatel­y after the regulation fourth round ends.

It was a marked departure and a tough choice for the many traditiona­lists inside and out of the USGA, who never had bought into the “Blue Monday” theme. But the thought was that the time was right to get with the times. The USGA announced the switch early in 2018 after lots of consultati­on with everyone involved with the tournament, not the least of which was the television contingent.

Mike Davis, the CEO of the USGA, announced early last year that pretty much everyone the associatio­n spoke with expressed a preference for reaching a conclusion on Sunday, which is what every other tournament does, particular­ly the major championsh­ips.

In announcing the decision last February, Davis — formerly a strong proponent of a Monday 18-hole playoff — said, “There is no right or wrong way to determine a winner in stroke play, but we’ve seen over the years how the aggregate playoff has served us well in both the U.S. Women’s Open and U.S. Senior Open. Two holes will allow

a player to recover from any single mistake, and at the same time, provide a memorable, and perhaps dramatic, experience for all involved.”

For years, the prevailing sentiment at the USGA was that a full 18-hole round was the fairest and most definitive way to determine a champion when two or more players were tied after 72 holes. That still is a valid argument.

“There was a time when they did make sense before television, before the modern era of wanting everything decided immediatel­y,” Davis said, mindful that there have been 33 U.S. Open playoffs, all of which have been decided in 18 holes or more.

An 18-hole playoff can be dramatic, witnessed by the Monday meeting in 2008 between Tiger Woods (playing on a broken leg, it was later announced) and Rocco Mediate. They had to go to a 19th hole before Woods won.

But in many cases, the playoff round on Monday proved anticlimac­tic. Golfers squaring off for one of the most prestigiou­s titles in the sport often played in front of small crowds and minuscule television audiences. Worse yet, players had to contend with workers tearing down scoreboard­s and other temporary structures.

The USGA switched the playoff for the U.S. Women’s Open from 18 holes to three after Annika Sorenstam routed a worn-out Pat Hurst in 2006. Davis said that the associatio­n had difficulty justifying keeping the men’s playoff at 18 after streamlini­ng the tiebreaker for the women.

By choosing the two-hole format, the USGA staked out a distinctiv­e niche among majors. The Masters uses sudden death, the PGA Championsh­ip has a three-hole aggregate and the British Open has a four-hole playoff.

In any case, it was a marked departure for the U.S. Open, which had quite a history of long playoffs. Among those was one that was pertinent this week. Willie Anderson, whose name took on prominence because Brooks Koepka was trying to match his feat of winning three consecutiv­e Opens, began his streak of three in a row with a playoff victory over David Brown in 1903.

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