Texas Two-Step

Chambers Bay LogoThere were only five guys who have won The Masters and the U.S. Open in the same year….until yesterday when Jordan Spieth shot 69 and outlasted the field to win the U.S. Open at Chambers Bay. He joins the heady group of Craig Wood, Ben Hogan, Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, and Tiger Woods who have done this Two-Step….pretty sassy moves for a 21-year old Texan.

The week began with a litany of guys complaining about the course style, conditioning, and set-up as inappropriate for a U.S. Open Championship. This reached a fever pitch when Gary Player went into a diarrhetic rant blaming the USGA’s decision making picking Chambers Bay for everything from killing The First Tee Program to Global Warming.

How short are the memories of these critics and touring pros? Torrey Pines 2008 Tiger and Rocco epic duel was played on sketchy greens, Congressional 2011 Rory’s domination was on mushy renovated greens not close to ready for prime time, or Justin Rose at Merion two years ago deftly managed to win on rock hard landing strip fairways between stifling Bluegrass rough. Pick any venue that Open Doctors Robert Trent Jones Sr. or Rees Jones prepared over the last 50 years and you have ample fodder for player complaint. It is a tradition, U.S. Open venues are sadistic and torturous set ups meant to protect par.

Chambers Bay seemed other worldly to some……..

Embed from Getty Images

.

Truth be told the course came through with flying colors….albeit most of them brown tones not green….in providing a stage of compelling drama until the last putt didn’t fall. For all the carping, Sunday yielded over 20 scores in the 60’s. The USGA should be commended for flexible decision making in the course set up the last two days. Holes 15 through 18, two par threes, a reachable par four, and a wicked risk/reward par five, gave at least six guys a credible chance to capture the flag.

Plenty of red numbers on this final scoreboard

Embed from Getty Images

.

Dustin Johnson did what Dustin Johnson has done three times before grabbing a major by the throat with accurate long driving and adept short iron approaches. An opening round 65 put him in control of his own destiny and 18 birdies over the four days should have been enough to bring him his first major. But as we have seen with Dustin before mediocre putting, four three-putts in the last nine holes, led to his demise and another major championship slipped from his grasp.

The last one hurt the most…..

Embed from Getty Images

.

The real crowd pleaser was Jason Day who showed courage on a Ken Venturi scale as he battled Benign Postural Vertigo trekking up and down the severe elevation changes of Chambers Bay. With an unsteady gait and lots of deep breaths to refocus Jason made five birdies in the last nine holes on Saturday putting him in the final group with Dustin on Sunday. But five bogies and a double in the last round squelched the anticipated fairy tale ending.

Jason Day’s steely resolve in the face of adversity….

Embed from Getty Images

.

Branden Grace, a South African with six wins on the European Tour-two this year, was rock steady for four days using a boring driving trajectory and solid lag putting to adeptly manage the links layout and conditioning. Chugging along nicely down the stretch one untimely errant railroad track swing on the drivable par four 16th on Sunday led to double bogie and put the kibosh on his hopes.

For Branden Grace the one that got away on 16…

Embed from Getty Images

.

Possibly the best story of them all was Louie Oosthuizen who gave three shots back to par on the front nine Sunday apparently killing his chances, making the turn at 2-over par. He then reminded us that South Africa produces players who are not afraid to go low running off 6 birdies in the last seven holes to shoot 29 on the back side in the final round of a major. Maybe only Johnny Miller understands what that feels like. After opening 7-over par on Thursday Louie simply shot 66-66-67 to set the bar at 4-under in the clubhouse for the others to shoot at.

Louie O was going low on the back nine…..

Embed from Getty Images

.
In the end it was Jordan, with the patience and perseverance of a cagey veteran, wrapping two birdies around a potentially disastrous double bogey on 17 to post a 5-under score that proved good enough to get the silver.

Putting the double bogey behind him Jordan’s confident approach into 18…

Embed from Getty Images

.

His bounce back driver/three metal on 18 to set up his finishing birdie was Brett Farve-ian clutch. A friend of mine observed “He has the ability to simply wipe it out and live and act in the present..it’s as though he made that double on the front nine in the opening round, it simply is part of his score going forward..perhaps it is merely the exaggerated ego of youth; perhaps his coal mine/Central Pennsylvania DNA …but whatever it is, it is the rarest quality in a golfer and it will serve him well for as long as it lasts.”

Jordan get used to seeing your reflection in these….

Embed from Getty Images

.

Now the anticipation begins, can young Jordan continue this major’s streak at St. Andrews next month. The only other player in history to win The Masters, U.S. Open, and British Open in the same calendar year was Texan Ben Hogan. Fire up the band.. this could be the seldom seen Texas Three-Step in the making?

June, 2015

U.S. Open Sectional Qualifier 2015

Woodmont LogoFor 28 out of the last 29 years our place, Woodmont Country Club in Rockville, Maryland, has hosted the 36-hole final stage men’s U.S. Open Sectional Qualifying. The USGA has even thrown in a few Women’s Sectional Qualifiers along the way for good measure.

.

Open Venue Flags and USGA Thank You Citations ring the rafters of our golf shop

OpenQualifyingMemorabilia 1Our members have been blessed with the opportunity to see some of the best players in the land play up close and personal on the home turf. Over the years tour champions like O’Meara, Stadler, Freddie Boom-Boom, Larry Mize, Bubba (apparently there is a spooky connection between Woodmont qualifiers and success at Augusta), Corey Pavin, Tom Kite, Fred Funk, Curtis Strange, Billy Andrade, as well as many of the top amateurs of this era have found their way to the U.S. Open Championship through our neck of the woods. Walking with them…no gallery ropes…watching them play shots on a championship course we are totally familiar with has afforded us a unique opportunity to appreciate the awesome talent level of these guys.

The goal is to reach the masterpiece of Chambers Bay on Puget Sound

Embed from Getty Images

.

This year’s field of 56 pros and amateurs were vying for 3 spots at Chambers Bay in two weeks. I had the opportunity to walk and score the final 18 holes for the USGA. Wireless Galaxy tablet in hand we provided the USGA with semi-live hole-by-hole scoring of the final round to populate their web portal with developing scores throughout the afternoon. Pretty awesome experience when you realize that the competitors themselves, as well as interested parties across the country, are hanging on the accuracy of your scoring to keep up with the action.

My Bernard Darwin/Francis Ouimet moment penciling the strokes as we went

HoleByHole WorksheetMy group included Denny McCarthy, who along with PGA Tour pro and ex-Navy officer Billy Hurley III, took medalist honors at 6-under par after two trips around our North Course in blustery and hot D.C. summer conditions. The final spot went to Timothy O’Neal who won a three-hole playoff over Joshua Persons-both had finished at 2-under.

McCarthy is a true hot-shot amateur. Born and raised in this area he built an impressive golf resume as an All-Met schoolboy star playing for Georgetown Prep. He has been a stand out on the University of Virginia golf team the last four years, reaching the semi-finals in last year’s U.S. Amateur at the Atlanta Athletic Club. His familiarity with Woodmont’s North Course from his high school days certainly helped him in today’s winning performance.

McCarthy’s Cavalier head cover was laying out and enjoying the sun all day

Whats In The BagAfter a 2-under par round in the morning McCarthy was two-back of the qualifying number when he teed off on the 590-yard Par 5 tenth hole to start the afternoon round. He promptly put a swerving hook left-of-left near the 18th tee but showed his survival instincts sewing a low recovery through the trees to about 100 yards out. Wedging to 20 feet he promptly sunk the putt to make an unlikely birdie. The next eight holes was a collection of wayward tee shots and brilliant recoveries as he made eight pars to reach the turn at 3-under in fourth place-one back from a qualifying playoff.

Informed by his caddie at the turn of where he stood you could see Denny’s bulldog resolve take over as he birdied 4 of the first 5 holes on our front nine to take the bull by the horns. The most impressive of the lot was a rope 240 yard long iron into a Clark Kent phone booth pin position on our arduous par three second. The five footer hit the bottom of the tin and he was in full birdie gallop at that point. His final birdie on the Par 5 fifth was three wood, long iron to 30 feet, perfect lag leaving a tap in birdie to take the lead at 7-under.

Playing the next three on steady cruise control Denny took no gambles giving himself birdie putts on every green but accepting pars as his friend trying to get to the house with the lead.

Rock solid finish all the way to the end to secure his spot

Denny McCarthyOur ninth is a 485-yard behemoth Par 4 from the tips with OB right and lots of tree trouble left, scorecard wrecking double-bogies lurking for those without judgment. Three wood to 220, long iron safely to the front left apron, a pitch and a couple of putts Denny smartly accepted a dropped shot to finish at 6-under tied with Billy Hurley for the top spot of the day.

Hurley 66-72, McCarthy 70-68 punch their tickets to Chambers Bay with 138

Scoreboard 1Scoreboard2

After the cards were signed and the scores were posted I ran into McCarthy’s father milling with his supporters near the scorer’s tent. He was talking on his cell phone when my comment to him “Making hotel reservations in Tacoma for next weekend?” generated a knowing wry smile.

Who knows if this is the beginning of big things for McCarthy over the next year. But given what his contemporary Jordan Spieth has done recently you never know. All I know is that I witnessed a gifted young player producing 18 holes of his best golf in a pressure-packed situation. It was the stuff of a champion and a great thing to see first hand.

(Click to see the full scoring list of the Sectional Qualifier at Woodmont Country Club)

June, 2015

Birdseye View of Chambers Bay

Chambers Bay LogoThe USGA has gone all-in on the technological possibilities in presenting the visit of this year’s U.S. Open to Chambers Bay. From this link on their website you get a thorough and interactive view of what the players will experience when they tee it up at Chambers Bay for this year’s next major.

Chambers Bay is a very linksy styled course on Puget Sound manufactured by Robert Trent Jones Jr out of a cavernous pit left by an abandoned sand and gravel mine. It is almost a cross between Pacific Dunes and Whistling Straits given that it took an estimated 100,000 truck loads to move 1.4 million cubic yards of dirt and sand to create the dramatic playing topography confronting the players. The USGA providing a full HD quality view of the detail of the course is enthralling and informative.

Creative genius…..not the pure hand of nature…….

Embed from Getty Images

.

This will all be about playing tactics for the winner. Chambers Bay will confront the competitors with sweeping hard and fast sand based fairways confined by broken ground and massive sandy waste areas. Picking the proper club off the tee to get to the advantageous landing area based on the day’s wind influence and pin position will be key.

The green complexes are….how do I put this….complex. Fescue grasses on fairways and greens make discerning the green from the approach area very difficult. The orientation of the greens to the drastic topography and waste areas around them means that shaping the approach shot and using the ground as your friend will critical to getting birdie opportunities on undulating greens with well defined pin placement areas. This is not conducive to the hoist and stick it style of approach most professionals prefer.

With dramatic scale….

Embed from Getty Images

.

From the first page of the link dig into the detail of each hole through tabs for Hole Insights, Photo, and Flyover Video. The Hole insights looks like a yardage book map of the hole with an accompanying descriptive. The vivid photo is what will bait you into the Flyover Video. The video includes a knowing voice that explains the various tactical options the players will choose from. For the Millenial in you there is even a button for “Play This Hole” which is essentially a sophisticated video game that allows you to play the course. Very cool feature if you have youthful patience.

And stunning backdrops…remnants remain of it’s less glamorous mining days

Embed from Getty Images

.

Bringing the U.S. Open to a municipal facility with a sand based links style golf course was a bold move on the part of the USGA. This tool they have provided will prepare you for a fuller appreciation of what the players are complaining about when they step into the unknown at Chambers Bay for the U.S. Open Championship.

(Click to see this awesome course review at the USGA Chambers Bay website)

June, 2015