Tough usually starts with the golf course, and the North
course at Los Angeles Country Club figures to be every bit of that, even if
it’s a mystery to most. It has never hosted anything of national significance
except for the Walker Cup in 2017.
This will be the third time since 2015 the U.S. Open goes to
a course for the first time.
Tough for this U.S. Open is also just getting there. The
storied club is located between Wilshire and Sunset boulevards on the edge of
Beverly Hills. And if that doesn’t suggest big traffic, it’s about 5 miles off
the notorious 405 freeway.
“I’ve been to LA Country Club,” Masters champion Jon Rahm
said. “I remember when we were there — I think it had already been announced
that the U.S. Open would be there — and my first thought was, ‘How the heck are
they going to fit anything around here?’ And second, ‘How are we going to get
around the traffic in this place?’
“Golf course-wise, yeah, the golf course is high quality.
The golf course could host any event you want,” he said. “It’s just
logistically. To me, it was the hardest part to understand.”
And it’s tough on the USGA for personal reasons.
Instead of celebrating the first U.S. Open in Los Angeles in
75 years, it’s almost as though the USGA is having to remind everyone the 123rd
edition of the U.S. Open starts Thursday.
All that seems to be on anyone’s mind is the shock
announcement of a deal between the PGA Tour and Saudi Arabian wealth fund —
bitter adversaries turned partners — and more specifically what it all means
for rival upstart LIV Golf.
Chatter about the par-3 15th hole — it could play as short
as 80 yards for one round — has given way to whether players felt betrayed by
PGA Tour Commissioner Jay Monahan and whether LIV defectors will be welcomed
back.
It even overshadows the USGA proposal to roll back the golf
ball. Maybe it’s not all bad.
The USGA was inundated with requests for media credentials
over the last four days from outlets that ordinarily don’t cover golf (most
were denied), mainly because the interest in sport goes beyond golf right now —
even beyond the second-oldest championship in golf.
“We’re looking for a harmonious world of golf,” Justin Rose
said. “That’s not going to be overnight. Obviously, there’s a lot of players
that you guys want to watch — we all know who they are on LIV. They’ve got a
lot to offer the game of golf. I think just because they made a certain
decision doesn’t mean they’re outcasts forever.”
The Masters did so much in showing golfers can get along no
matter where they play or who pays them. The same was true at Oak Hill for the
PGA Championship, even with Brooks Koepka of LIV Golf winning his fifth major
and restoring his reputation as a beast in the majors.
Now?
There are 14 players from Saudi-backed LIV Golf in the
field, only slightly fewer than the previous two majors because of fewer
exemptions to an Open. But there is palpable consternation from the PGA Tour
side that LIV players took big Saudi money and might be able to return. No one
knows how that will play out. Then again, no one knows much of anything about
the deal among the PGA Tour, European tour and Saudi’s Public Investment Fund.
But there are hard feelings, as strong as ever.
“For the guys that did turn down significant amounts of
money, then that’s probably a tough one to swallow and I feel for them,”
defending U.S. Open champion Matt Fitzpatrick said.
Fitzpatrick won his first major last year at The Country
Club, one of the five founding clubs of the USGA that dates to 1882.
Los Angeles Country Club — commonly referred to as LACC —
isn’t too far behind. The club dates to 1897, and the members were among those
who shaped the economy in the city that became known for the stars. It moved to
its current location in 1911.
The club is not big on celebrities, even though the property
around it would suggest otherwise. Bing Crosby once had a house near the 14th
fairway and was never invited to join. Lionel Ritchie has a mansion on the
fourth hole. Hugh Hefner’s Playboy mansion is adjacent to the 14th tee.
“There’s some pretty expensive real estate there,” Scottie
Scheffler said. “It’s like a country club in the middle of town. But it’s a
world-class golf club, and it’s in Beverly Hills.”
And it kept largely to itself, a gem shown only to high-end
members and their guests. LACC hosted the Los Angeles Open five times between
1926 and 1950. It also held the 1930 U.S. Women’s Amateur and the 1954 U.S.
Junior Amateur.
But it otherwise wasn’t interested in showcasing the North
course.
Gil Hanse oversaw the restoration of the North course with
Jim Wagner and Geoff Shackelford, a modern touch while returning it to the
original design of George Thomas Jr. from 1921. It has five par 3s and three
par 5s, one more of each for a typical par 70 at a U.S. Open.
LACC held the Pac-12 Championship in 2013 — Max Homa opened
with a 61 and led Cal to the title, a field that also included Rahm, an Arizona
State freshman.
The U.S. easily won the Walker Cup — Scheffler was on that
team with Collin Morikawa, who went 4-0 for the week — and now it’s time for
the ultimate test.
This will be the first U.S. Open in Los Angeles since Ben
Hogan won at Riviera in 1948. The last major championship in LA was also at
Riviera, with Steve Elkington winning the 1995 PGA Championship.
Scheffler and Rahm have been battling for No. 1 all year.
Rahm’s four wins include the Masters. Scheffler has two wins, including The
Players Championship, but his consistency has been so remarkable that he has
yet to finish out of the top 12 all year.
World ranking aside, Koepka is right there with them.
LIV Golf doesn’t get world ranking points except in the
majors. Koepka had the 54-hole lead at the Masters (he tied for second) and won
the PGA Championship. Another big week and he takes his place in the
conversation, ranking or not, if he’s not already there. -AP