Sunday, September 19, 1999
Europeans, Americans to play on historic
primrose path at The Country Club
By MICHAEL BEZDEK
Associated Press
ROOKLINE, Mass. The club where European and American
golfers will compete next weekend for the Ryder Cup is about as
historic as they get.
It is called simply The Country Club, for it was one of the
first havens for wealthy Americans to socialize and play games,
and the one that gave the name country club to thousands
of other courses.
The Country Club, which lies in a parabola of colonial towns
outside Boston, also is one of the five founding clubs of the
United States Golf Association.
It is also well known for a U.S. Open playoff in 1913, when
a lanky kid who lived near the course and once caddied there ended
British domination of golf by defeating Harry Vardon and Ted Ray
of England, the worlds top players.
Americans ruled the game for decades after that victory by
20-year-old Francis Ouimet, until foreign players became stronger
in the 1980s and the Ryder Cup became the chief means to play
for trans-Atlantic bragging rights.
Now, the once sleepy tournament backed by English entrepreneur
Samuel Ryder, who made millions off the sale of seed packets,
comes to The Country Club, a very American course in history and
in design.
It is a place of narrow fairways, long holes, small to moderate
greens, and dense rough.
Even through a summer of unusual heat and dry weather, the
7,033-yard championship course is green and dense with grass.
Unlike the 1988 U.S. Open at The Country Club, in which American
Curtis Strange held off Englands Nick Faldo, the rough has
not been thinned by the harsh weather.
The deep rough, after a short step-cut of rough, is only 3-4
inches high, but it has become thick with the aid of a double-row
sprinkler system that works along the right and left sides of
every fairway.
Team captain Ben Crenshaw did not want the higher rough of
the U.S. Opens the host captain has a say in course modifications
for the Ryder Cup but the shorter variety is dense enough
to cause trouble for any errant shots. The course that has a slope
rating (degree of difficulty) of 147, among the highest in the
nation.
Frank Ellsworth, a member of The Country Club, said his handicap
went up five strokes this year, a considerable amount for a regular
player, largely because of the rough.
The club is called The Old Lady of Clyde Street,
and she is a subtly demanding dowager.
Since Ouimets time, the long par 4s have caused the most
noticeable exasperation. Chief among them is the 12th hole, 450
yards long with a dogleg over a steep plateau and into a cluster
of trees. The small green cannot be seen.
That hole comes after the difficult No. 11, a par 4 of 453
yards with a narrow landing area on a bend to the hole between
some rocky ledges, with a road and then a pond behind the green.
And the 12th is followed by a tricky downhill par 4 of 433 yards.
There are several holes the professionals might jump on, most
notably the little par-4, 312-yard 6th hole, although in the 1988
Open only a handful of golfers believed a driver would give any
advantage over a precise iron.
Precision is a major key all over the course, and in the 1988
Open even the seemingly simple 185-yard, par-3 second hole rated
fourth hardest, behind the 12th, the 201-yard, par-3 7th and the
11th. It was the small green at No. 2 that caused the problem,
sometimes kicking off slightly long shots into a clump of trees
and bushes just behind the green.
I think the key to this Ryder Cup is going to be the
wedge. Players are going to miss greens, said Don Callahan,
golf director at The Country Club.
The championship course was not around in Ouimets time;
it is derived from the basic layout played by the members and
the addition of some holes from another nine called the Primrose
course.
The most historic hole is the only one on the back nine under
400 yards, the par-4, 381-yard 17th hole. A simple little dogleg
left, it is looked upon as a birdie hole now.
But it has one problem, a bunker at a bend in the fairway that
for 86 years has been called the Vardon bunker after it ruined
his chances against Ouimet in 1913. It is the same bunker that
kept Jackie Cupit from winning when the Open returned 50 years
later.
Few changes, except for some tidying up of bunkers, have been
done for the championship layout since architect Rees Jones made
some alterations and restoration a few years before the 1988 Open.
The course will be new to almost all of the Europeans, but
six of the Americans competed in the Open, including Steve Pate
and Mark OMeara, who finished tied for third, and Payne
Stewart, who tied for 10th.
Callahan said he likes to think the Americans will defeat the
Europeans by a point or so, but he notes that many of the holes
permit, and sometimes even encourage, run-ups that land just in
front of the green and then carry toward the flags. That is a
European specialty.
He also noted Europeans generally have more experience in the
foursome competitions, in which teams of two play off one ball
that are part of the Ryder Cup matches.
A lot of Americans think that a foursome is just four
guys playing regular golf, said Callahan, a professional
at The Country Club for 33 years, referring to a type of competition
that disappeared long ago in the United States in favor of individual
play.
The Country Club is a place to play golf the old-fashioned
way. Carts generally are allowed only for medical reasons, and
players are not allowed to smoke on the course, use a cellular
phone or carry a beeper.
The club has made some changes in recent years amid charges
of elitism, including the admission of several minority members.
But it has much the same ambience of Ouimets day, albeit
under the giant shadows of 59 corporate hospitality tents that
have sold from $250,000 to $500,000 each.
|