Jenkins Tribute

The USGA hosted a salute to Dan Jenkins on the eve of his 200th major. Well attended, festive and fun (uh, were SI guys barred?), they handed out his latest book and DJ bobbleheads courtesy of Golf Digest.

Jerry Tarde saluted Dan and only slipped in twice that we were in the presence of a future Hall of Famer. Of course, what they're waiting for, no one knows!

David Fay thanked Dan for his service and shrewdly pointed out that this is Dan's 201st major, if you count the 1942 Hale America Open. You may recall Dan has lobbied for that 1942 playing of the Open to count, not because his boy Hogan won but because it was the rebranded U.S. Open in a war year.

Dan finally took the microphone atop the interview room podium, and proceeded to take us through his round in tour drone fashion. "Hit in the left rough on one." Press room joke. Had to be there.

My favorite was a Dave Marr story. Dave was asked what were the top three things Bruce Crampton did wrong. "He was born. He came to America. He stayed in America."

Butch Going Pink

I'm sure if you told Butch Harmon ten years ago that he would be discussing his pink belt with Phil Mickelson on the eve of the U.S. Open, he'd have told you to go jump in front of a train.

And yet that was the scene Wednesday at Bethpage where he's outfitted in pink in tribute to Amy Mickelson. Here's Phil's press conference, where I posted a few Tweets.

"I've seen lots of rules written down on the first tees but I've never seen warnings."

The 17th hole during Tuesday's practice round (click on image to enlarge)Just a few clippings heading into Wednesday at Bethpage.

Mark Soltau has a nice overview of player comments from Tuesday. Rocco's press conference makes for a pretty fun read.

Bob Harig on the fans and how they may play a role at Bethpage, reminding us of Sergio's battles last time the Open was played here.

Steve Elling talks to folks about the 18-hole playoff concept and you might be surprised by Kenny Perry's answer.

David Shefter interviews Matt Nagy about his amazing journey to Bethpage. You won't believe what had to happen for him to get there. Thanks to reader Rob for catching this.

Mark Lamport-Stokes hears what Geoff Ogilvy has to say about the long slog that is Bethpage.

"This is probably the only golf course with a warning at the first tee," former champion Ogilvy told reporters at Bethpage State Park on Tuesday. "I've seen lots of rules written down on the first tees but I've never seen warnings."

Bill Pennington reports that fans are treating Ogilvy like a defending champ due to his win at Winged Foot.

And just a reminder, I'm filing updates on Twitter and will post live from the USGA press conference as well as the media center toast to Dan Jenkins on the eve of his 200th major.

Letter From Saugerties, 2009 U.S. Open Questions

Former USGA Executive Director Frank Hannigan dropped this letter in my email box on the eve of the USGA's annual press conference.:

 Dear Geoff:

We are on the verge of what should be a primary golf-media happening - the annual press conference of the USGA on the eve of the US Open Championship,.

Unfortunately, the affair seldom lives up to its potential. Most of those bearing questions think that Tiger Woods invented golf in 1997. On the answering end, the USGA president is not a threat to Barack Obama when it comes to being informative and amusing.

Alas, I will not be present for purposes of incitement. But I herewith offer, without request for compensation, a series of potential questions to lend a spark to the occasion:

Q. Mr Vernon, Bethpage is a wonderful site, but are you not concerned that the USGA has alienated its other New York area Open clubs - Shinnecock Hills, Baltusrol and Winged Foot?

Q. You pay a rental fee for Open courses. How much have you paid the State of New York to use Bethpage?

(follow-up). Since both you and New York are public entities, how you can you refuse to divulge financial dealings?

Q. You have praised the USGA for taking the Open to public courses. Can you name public courses that have been built anywhere as a consequence?

Q. The USGA spent $25 million to revise its Museum in Far Hills, New Jersey and then began to charge admission. What has been the paid attendance this year?

Q. Next year you will change the rules to bar U grooves on the Tour and in the majors. Will the average scores rise accordingly?

Q. There seems a good chance golf will be voted into the Olympics next week. Will the patronage jobs go to the PGA Tour, the USGA or the R&A?

(follow-up) Mr. Vernon, who won the gold medals in tennis in the last Olympics?

Q There has been a dramatic turnover among the USGA staff in the last few years - firings and resignations.
Why is that and does it bother you?

Q. A few years ago the USGA began to lease a corporate jet. Did you fly here commercial or did you use that jet?

Q. Golf Digest magazine reports that the salary of your executive director is $725,000. Are you kidding?

Frank Hannigan

Overheard On The LIRR, Day One

I'm a novice Long Island Railroad passenger. How else to explain my expectation that a printed schedule of the U.S. Open trains would not actually be accurate? I see 6:48 train. I figure there will be one.

Thankfully the 7:03 on the schedule arrived and when the logo clad gallery saw the track number flash on the screen, a mad dash ensued. You'd think a free Adams putter was offered the way the loudly-dressed mass of Bethpage spectators, club reps, volunteers and in my case, lowly blogger, ran to get on a train with plenty of seats.

Conversation was muted as one would hope in the morning hours. Or at least, I hoped after yesterday listening to the stereotypical debate over Pacino's best film in full Saturday Night Fever accents. The only thing missing were leisure suits and jabs at Gerald Ford.

Tried to pass off my New York Post to the gentleman seated next to me. Judging by the look on his face, you'd think I was handing him a pipe bomb.

In the Post I read Mark Canizzaro's depressing account about just how soggy the course is, with warnings of low scores possible. Brace yourselves people. 10-under could win.

The LIRR is catering to the U.S. Open fans with special announcements and reminders about catching the buses. And there was this call for etiquette from the conductor: "Keep your cell phone conversations brief, keep your feet off the seats."

"The intriguing thing about all this is that there have not been any low scores accompanying the high praise for Davis’s setups."

Larry Dorman on Mike Davis's role in transforming the Open.

Geoff Ogilvy shot five over par to win at Winged Foot in 2006. Angel Cabrera shot five over par to win at Oakmont the next year. And Tiger Woods and Rocco Mediate each shot one under to tie last year. They then each shot even-par 71 in an 18-hole Monday playoff, won by Woods with a par on the first hole of sudden death.

“A lot of that had to do with the weather we got,” Davis said. “Oakmont and Winged Foot were dry and we had breeze. Had it been soft and there hadn’t been breeze, I really think you would have seen under par win both those. So much of it truly has to do with what Mother Nature gives you.”

True. But there are many pieces to the setup puzzle, something the final arbiter on the length of the rough, the speed of the greens, the width of the fairways and the positions of the holes knows well. The temptation that accompanies a decent lie in the rough may, on the whole, be hard to resist.”

2009 U.S. Open Coverage

Via GolfDigest.com, my Twitter page and this page, I'll be covering the Open in a variety of ways.

Starting Wednesday, I'll be filing a daily golf course musings, images and impressions with--weather permitting--previews of the following day's possible setup touches. I hope to take you inside the ropes to show how the setup is impacting the outcome and offer a few tips on what to look for during the telecasts.

Via Twitter and this site, I'll do my usual reports from the grounds about the experience. Since I'm taking the train from New York City this week, expect  some posts about that experience and maybe a few non-golf posts about certain expensive new ballparks in the area that I may take the time to visit.

While we won't be able to do the live blog this week, I will have a daily post inviting your observations of the event as well as--feed function permitting--easy to find Twitter text and photo updates.

And in between I'll try to get up a few key clippings from the media coverage.

Special thanks to Tom Naccarato for the New York City banner to liven up the page this week. Extra points for those who can spot the landmarks and folks embedded inside the letters!

2009 U.S. Open Preview Stories

It's not easy to preview the U.S. Open's return to a course that so recently hosted and which has been so exhaustively profiled. But, the working press did their best and here are just some of the stories I enjoyed.

First off, just a note: Golfweek.com offers a one-stop location for all of their latest news, previews, qualifying scores and the latest WD's (two Sunday). And of course I've also will add to my links list on the right as the week goes.

Jason Sobel offers his traditional Weekly 18 with plenty of U.S. Open info, including some nice ideas for picks (and those who should be doing a rain dance).

Bob Harig takes us back to last year and asks people where they were when Tiger birdied 18 Sunday. With the story, ESPN.com offers a video feature that recaps the epic 08 Open. Golf.com's coverage is frozen in time.

Karen Crouse catches up with Rocco. While Connell Barrett organizes reader questions for Rocco.

The USGA Museum has posted their Tiger Woods scrapbook with much from last year, but the really great stuff is from his early career and an interesting interview with Earl. Love the bucket cap!

Cameron Morfit talks to Mike Davis and also predicts a storybook ending for Phil Mickelson Sunday afternoon. Tim Rosaforte explains the odd dichotomy of California boy Phil Mickelson returning home to Bethpage.

Michael Foley asks what's wrong with Padraig Harrington who inexplicably continues to talk about making swing changes after winning two majors. That's my nice way of saying I would not make him a pool pick.

Chris Berman explains how he does his best to drive people bonkers during the opening rounds of ESPN's U.S. Open telecast.

Rich Lerner delivers hooks and cuts from the LPGA Championship and previews the U.S. Open.

Dave Shedloski reminds us why the 2002 Open was so memorable despite the awful setup and finishing in the dark.

Bill Fields considers why no one has broken the 63 barrier. Now with Bethpage being soft, the setup actually reasonable this time and those greens so flat, maybe this is the week? Oh I shouldn't have dared to think such a dreadful thought.

Peter Williams looks at Doug Batty's improbable run as a qualifier.

Christian Red uses the 10th anniversary of Payne Stewart's tragic death to check in on all of the families of those who died aboard the private jet. Thanks to reader Tim for noticing this impressive bit of research and writing.

Erik Peterson does the Bethpage walk-up car line thing and lives to tell about it.

Ron Kroichick contemplates the impact that the U.S. Open has had on the public course venues it's been played at. Check out those new Torrey Pines green fees.

Speaking of the golf course...

Greg Logan takes us back a few years and reminds us who the visionairies were who saw Bethpage's potential as a U.S. Open venue.

Bill Pennington explains the course changes and in this video segment, interviews Rees Jones and only subjects us to one Open Doctor groaner.

Alan Shipnuck compares Bethpage with Liberty National, home to this fall's Barclay's.

John Huggan talks to Mike Davis about his golf philosophy:

"Everybody seems to have this fixation – much more so in the US than in the UK – that, when someone is in the rough, the penalty has to be the same every time. Conversely, those same people think that, when a ball is in the fairway, you are always entitled to a good lie. So when they get in a divot they are looking for a free drop!

"None of that should be true though. There is some charm to getting a bad lie in the fairway or a great lie in the rough. That's golf. And leads to the potential for spectacular shots. How can that be bad?"

Mike Stachura says Bethpage may play a lot shorter this time around because of improved equipment, though with the recent rains and reports that the course is soggy, maybe not.

Well, first of all there will be more players using drivers that have a large area of the face that has a high spring-like effect. In 2002, that area of high ballspeed was a few square millimeters smaller. What's more, club designers today actually have to slow down the center of the face because it's so easy to engineer a single point on the face that produces the maximum allowed springiness.

But there's more to it than that. Players are better matched to the golf ball than they were seven years ago. To be sure, the majority of the field in 2002 had already switched to multilayer urethane-covered balls, but there were still a handful of balls in play that year with windings.

SI features a great gallery of artsy Bethpage aerial images by Fred Vuich. They also posted an aerial flyover page.

Ron Whitten reiterated his take on the design heritage of Bethpage, with other notes about the course setup possibilities in the current Golf World.

Bethpage was conceived by Robert Moses, the most powerful unelected public official of the 20th century, but owes its implementation to Joseph H. Burbeck. As manager of the Bethpage Corporation in 1934, Burbeck supervised the design and construction of the complex, at the start drawing upon the talents of design consultant A.W. Tillinghast, the legendary architect who candidly credited Burbeck with the ambition of making the Black Course as great and severe a test as Pine Valley.

Sadly, Tillinghast never viewed the finished product. Burbeck, however, became the superintendent of Bethpage State Park in 1937 and presided over the place until his retirement in 1964.

You can also read his controversial 2002 profile of Burbeck here.

Whitten also analyzes the Black Course's putrid finishing hole and the options Davis considered before sticking with it as a courtesy to the everyday golfers who want to play the entire Black as it plays in the Open.

And finally, Damon Hack says No. 17 was the place to hang out last time. I can't wait to check it out for myself.

Golfdom U.S. Open Coverage

I jump on the Q&A with Mike Davis bandwagon on the eve of the U.S. Open. In this session for Golfdom Magazine, I ask Mike how he sees his ideas impacting everyday course setup and maintenance. We also get into the groove issue, Bethpage's architecture, his post Oakmont memo to supers about excessive rough primping and the USGA's TruFirm device.

And in advance of Bethpage, editor Larry Aylward asks me a few questions for a special Golfdom podcast.

Golf World Cover Gives Scary Peak Into Future Of Golf Fashion?

I can hear Golf Digest stylist Marty Hackel now. Jim Furyk is putting on the oversized shoes and Marty's yelling, "Jim, red is your color. It brings out your freckles. And think of the leverage you'll get with those size 24's!"

As Furyk skeptically slips on the red nose, Marty: "First, it's how you wear it. And second, it'll give you SPF 200. No chance of a burn!"

Furyk: "But what about the puffy shirt?"

Marty: "It's veeeeerrrrrrrryyyyyy retro. You look fantaaasssstic."

There is actually a serious story to accompany Golf World's U.S. Open cover by John Hawkins too. But a Marty breakdown of the fashion would have been nice.

US Open Mobile Apps Now Available

You can read about them here. Just fooling around with the US Open app, it's essentially the same as the excellent IBM-crafted Masters phone app.

There is also a Twitter page for those who like getting their news that way. Hopefully the plugs for "tickets available" will end soon.

And if you haven't signed up for the USGA's Architecture Archive, you're missing out on a couple of new Bethpage aerials posted. Actually, the course looks very similar today. But it is fun to see the nuanced strategy of the old 18th hole. It wouldn't matter much in today's game, then again, neither does the current hole.