Rory McIlroy on Patrick Reed’s penalty: Some just want to ‘kick him when he’s down’

Rory McIlroy gave his opinion about the rules controversy surrounding Patrick Reed that occurred during the Hero World Challenge.

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Rory McIlroy believes Patrick Reed should be given the benefit of the doubt regarding the controversial two-shot penalty Reed incurred at the Hero World Challenge. But he thinks Reed has become an easy target for some critics.

“I think it’s hard because you try to give the player the benefit of the doubt,” McIlroy said during an extensive interview on Golf Channel’s Morning Drive on Monday. “He’s in there and he’s trying to figure out which way to play the shot. Obviously he’s moved some sand so it is a penalty. But I keep saying, I don’t think it would be a big deal if it wasn’t Patrick Reed. It’s almost like a lot of people within the game, it’s almost like a hobby to sort of kick him when he’s down.”

The live shot and slow-mo versions of Reed’s two practice swings at the Hero in the Bahamas have now been dissected millions of times. Upon reviewing the clips again Monday in the studio, McIlroy said, “I certainly don’t think there was intent there. … It’s very hard for me not to think he didn’t feel what he was doing. It’s a hard one. But again, I’d rather try to give someone the benefit of the doubt. And just say, look, it was a mistake, take your penalty and move on. And yeah, it’s going to make things difficult for him down in Australia this week.”

Under Rule 8, which addresses playing the course as the player finds it, a player is prohibited from improving conditions affecting a stroke.

Under Rule 8-1a, actions that are not allowed include the removal or pressing down of sand or loose soil. Reed did that twice, though the second movement is irrelevant.

The two-stroke penalty proved costly, turning Reed’s 72 into a 74 in the third round. He would go on to finish with a final-round 66 and in third place, two shots back of winner Henrik Stenson.

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U.S. holds off Internationals to win Junior Presidents Cup

The U.S. won the 2019 Junior Presidents Cup after holding off a furious rally from the Internationals to win 13-11 at Royal Melbourne Golf Club.

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MELBOURNE, Australia – U.S. Junior Presidents Cup captain Justin Leonard interrupted an interview with his opposing captain, Stuart Appleby, to congratulate him on his team’s furious rally, which came up just short. Team U.S.A. held on for a 13-11 victory over Team International at Royal Melbourne Golf Club, but not before giving them quite a scare.

“Your guys came out swinging today,” said Leonard, whose side entered the day with a 9-3 lead from the opening day’s Four-Ball and Foursomes sessions.

“Otherwise, your guys would’ve been skipping around after nine holes,” Appleby said.

“I’m glad you did,” Leonard said. “I told my guys it was going to be a lot harder than you think it is.”

The players on the 12-man teams experienced a very different Royal Melbourne, which flexed its muscle as a “hot northerly,” as the locals call it, blew in raising temperatures in excess of 100 degrees. Appleby compared the winds, whipping more than 40 mph, to the Santa Ana winds in California.

Ian Siebers earned the first point of the day with a 7-and-6 walloping of Chuan-Tai Lin – the shortest match in the competition’s history – but then the Internationals bounced back and won the next five matches. First, Jayden Schaper took down Jackson Van Paris 2 up and Kartik Sharma, a lefty whose mannerisms remind Appleby of Mike Weir, handled Stephen Campbell, Jr., 3 and 1. Andu Xu gained a big scalp with a 1-up victory over Maxwell Moldovan. When Bo Jin (3&2 over Benjamin James) and Jang Hyun Lee (5&4 over Jack Heath) tacked on wins to cut the deficit to 11-8, the possibility of an epic comeback started to become a reality.

“It was a great comeback,” Appleby said. “We needed to show resilience and they did. The headlines would’ve been ‘The Melbourne Massacre or The Sand Belting.’ We dug in. It was ‘Chariots of Fire’ on the beach stuff. We pounded down the beach and America turned around and saw us. That’s what I wanted. We made it a great fight. The only thing better would’ve been to have found one more match.”

Jackson Van Paris and Preston Summerhays of Team USA celebrate winning their match at the 2019 Junior Presidents Cup. (Photo by Con Chronis/PGA TOUR via Getty Images)

But the 9-3 advantage entering singles play was too much to overcome. Michael Thorbjornsen took care of Aussie Karl Vilips 4&3 before Alexander Yang, a two-time Rolex Junior All-American, put the red, white and blue on the brink of victory with a hard-fought 2-up win over Jordan Duminy to bring the U.S. Team’s total to 12 points. Yang never held the lead against Duminy until the 17th hole which he won with a par and then clinched match for the Americans after his rival got into trouble with an errant drive on 18.

“As a team, we fought back in the closing holes really well,” Yang said. “I was worried but I thought I could certainly win my match. It was kind of worry and confidence at the same time.”

Vishnu Sadagopan and Ian Siebers celebrate at the 2019 Junior Presidents Cupon December 8, 2019 in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. (Photo by Con Chronis/PGA TOUR via Getty Images)

It was all over when Vishnu Sadagopan of Pearland, Texas, clinched the winning point with a 2-up victory over Australia’s Joshua Greer. Sadogpan was the only player to win all three matches this week.

“It’s probably the best thing I’ve ever accomplished in my life,” Sadagopan said. “To win the winning point for my country is amazing.”

South Africans Samuel Simpson and Martin Vorster each won the final two matches to give The Internationals an 8-4 edge in singles.

“They can go home feeling proud that they nearly did it,” Appleby said.

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Presidents Cup at Royal Melbourne viewer’s guide

Check out where you can watch the 2019 Presidents Cup and the schedule of events for the week at Royal Melbourne.

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The 2019 Presidents Cup at the Royal Melbourne Golf Club officially begins Dec. 12 with the first round four-ball, but the festivities begin earlier in the week.

Beginning Dec. 8 and concluding Dec. 9, the Junior Presidents Cup will be held at Royal Melbourne. Practice rounds for both Presidents Cup teams will be held Dec. 9-10 with both teams holding additional practices on Dec. 11. The first round gets underway on Dec. 12.

The time in Melbourne, Australia, is 16 hours ahead of Eastern Standard Time, which essentially puts live golf in prime time for viewers in North America. The event times are listed locally. Further down, the TV times are listed for Eastern Standard Time.

TEAM USA: Meet Tiger Woods’ squad
INTERNATIONALS: Meet Ernie Els’ International team

Presidents Cup schedule of events

Sunday, Dec. 8

7 a.m. local time: The morning four-ball matches of the Junior Presidents Cup followed by afternoon foursome matches.

After play: Junior Presidents Cup Captains’ Pairings in the Media Center.

Monday, Dec. 9

7 a.m.: Final round of the Junior Presidents Cup with 12 singles matches.

5 p.m.:  Junior Presidents Cup Closing Ceremonies at Crown Riverwalk.

Practice round for Presidents Cup participants.

Tuesday, Dec. 10

8 a.m.: International Team practice rounds begins.

9 a.m.: U.S. Team practice rounds begins.

Following practice rounds: Captain’s Press Conference in Media Center.

Wednesday, Dec. 11

9:30 a.m.: U.S. Team practices.

10:30 a.m.: International Team practices.

4 p.m.: Captain’s Pairings for Round 1 announced.

Thursday, Dec. 12

9:30 a.m. Thursday local time/5:30 p.m. Wednesday EST: First round, four-ball.

Immediately following Thursday play: Captains’ pairings for Friday matches announced.

Friday, Dec. 13

11 a.m. Friday local time/7 p.m. Thursday EST: Second round, foursomes.

Immediately following play: Captains’ pairings for Saturday morning matches.

Saturday, Dec. 14

7 a.m. Saturday local time/3 p.m. Friday EST: Third round, four-ball.

10 a.m.: Captains’ pairings for Saturday evening matches

Noon: Fourth round, foursomes.

Immediately following play: Captains’ pairings for Sunday’s singles matches announced.

Sunday, Dec. 15

10 a.m. Sunday local time/6 p.m. Saturday EST: Final round, singles matches.

Immediately following play: Closing ceremony celebration

TV, streaming information

All times are in Eastern Standard Time.

Wednesday

5:30 p.m. – midnight, Golf Channel

Thursday

7 p.m. – midnight, Golf Channel

Friday

3 p.m. – 2 a.m., Golf Channel
2:30 – 6 p.m., NBC (replay)

Saturday

6 p.m. – midnight, Golf Channel
1 – 6 p.m., NBC (replay)

Fast facts

Dates: Dec. 12-15.
Venue: Royal Melbourne Golf Club.
Length: 7,055 yards. Par: 71.
Points needed to win: 15½.
Defending champion: United States.
Series: United States leads, 10-1-1.

Format: Nine matches of foursomes, nine matches of fourballs, 12 singles matches. Each is worth one point.

Last time: The Americans won for the seventh straight time, building such a big lead they only needed one point from 12 singles matches to secure the victory. They wound up with a 19-11 victory at Liberty National, where President Donald Trump attended the final round.

International team: Byeong Hun An, Abraham Ancer, Adam Hadwin, Sungjae Im, Marc Leishman, Haotong Li, Hideki Matsuyama, Joaquin Niemann, Louis Oosthuizen, C.T. Pan, Adam Scott, Cameron Smith.

U.S. team: Patrick Cantlay, Bryson DeChambeau, Tony Finau, Rickie Fowler, Dustin Johnson, Matt Kuchar, Patrick Reed, Xander Schauffele, Webb Simpson, Justin Thomas, Gary Woodland, Tiger Woods.

Tale of the tape: The entire U.S. team is among the top 25 in the world. The International team has only three players in the top 25.

Key Statistic: Only five players from the last American team are at Royal Melbourne.

Notable: Royal Melbourne is where the International team won for the only time in the Presidents Cup in 1998.

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19th hole: Only women can save the Presidents Cup

Making the Presidents Cup a co-ed event would give it a unique flavor while elevating women’s golf.

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It’s only a slight exaggeration to suggest that the Presidents Cup faces an existential crisis when its 13th edition gets underway Thursday in Australia, since the previous 12 playings have been about as competitive as a one-legged man in a butt-kicking contest.

There have been 10 U.S. wins, one tie, and one victory for the Internationals, their lone highlight now so distant that Stuart Appleby is the only member of that winning team still not eligible for the senior circuit. The International squad is awfully close to being golf’s equivalent of the ’76 Tampa Bay Bucs, which went 0-14 then lost the first 12 games of the next season too.

Several factors promise a more entertaining Cup this time: the majestic Royal Melbourne as a venue, Tiger Woods as a playing captain, and the likelihood that voluble Aussie fans will remind Patrick Reed of the game’s rudimentary rules. Even with that, will another U.S. victory sound a death knell for an event whose results are as lop-sided as the Christians-Lions battles in ancient Rome?

Not so fast, says Frank Nobilo, who played on three International teams and twice served as assistant captain. He points to how uncompetitive the Ryder Cup was for decades before the tide turned in the 1980s. “Look what it has grown into today,” Nobilo says.

“I think the Presidents Cup is going through a tender stage purely because of the lack of strength at the top of the ’80’s and ’90s,” he adds, pointing to an era when world No. 1’s didn’t hail from America or Europe, like Greg Norman, Nick Price, Ernie Els and Vijay Singh. “Those times will come again and it will be less fleeting when it happens.”

Nobilo also notes the value of the Presidents Cup isn’t measured simply in points won and lost, that it has a positive trickle-down effect to junior programs akin to Olympic golf and the Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship.

Defeat for Team USA may constitute a win for the Presidents Cup itself, much as how yachting’s America’s Cup grew in stature only after 1983, when the U.S. lost for the first time in 132 years. But is an International victory sufficient? Does even a more competitive Presidents Cup have an identity other than being not the Ryder Cup? It may be time to rethink the event, regardless of whether Woods or Els leads his troops to victory in Melbourne.

My two cents: make the Presidents Cup co-ed, adding the best women to the squads. It would give the event a unique flavor while elevating women’s golf. The LPGA Tour is a global circuit, but too many of its finest players are ineligible for the Solheim Cup, being neither American nor European. Let’s see an alternate shot format where Jin Young Ko plays off Adam Scott’s drives, and Tiger plays off Lexi Thompson’s.

A co-ed Presidents Cup would pair men and women in a genuine competitive setting, not a hit-and-giggle like the long defunct Wendy’s 3-Tour Challenge. It would also make real the prospect of superstar golfers playing for a female captain. Golf could use some optics like that.

It’s been 40 years since the Ryder Cup was resuscitated when the old downtrodden Great Britain & Ireland team morphed into a triumphant European squad, but the Ryder Cup also had the advantage of its dull decades coming long before the dawn-to-dusk TV coverage of every swing. The Presidents Cup enjoys no such luxury and won’t survive many more years of mundanity. It may be time to consider that its saviors may not be guys like Woods and Els, but women like Nelly Korda and Sung Hyun Park.

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Presidents Cup: What makes Royal Melbourne a great match play course?

The speed of Royal Melbourne’s greens make it hard to get close to the hole, especially when it’s windy.

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Golfweek’s Jay Blasi interviewed Michael Clayton, who is an Australian golf course designer, former player and caddie, about his impressions of Royal Melbourne. The club will host the Presidents Cup for the third time.

The course for the 2019 Presidents Cup is an amalgamation (12 holes from the West Course and six from the East).

Blasi: What makes a good match play hole or course from the perspective of the pro or top player?

Clayton: The key to match play is to pressure your opponent into thinking you are not going to make a mistake.The best courses – and Royal Melbourne is undoubtedly one – demand clear thinking and it’s not obvious where you should play. Alister MacKenzie loved The Old Course and he understood how to manufacture its perplexing choices onto wildly different looking sites including Augusta and Royal Melbourne. There is always temptation at Royal Melbourne, but the speed of the greens and the reality members never have to repair a pitch mark (because the greens are so hard and not because they are lazy!) makes firing straight at flags fraught with danger, but nonetheless tempting especially with a short iron.

Blasi: What makes a good match play hole or course from the perspective of  a top caddie?

Clayton: The key for a caddie is to make sure your player doesn’t commit the crime of hitting the wrong club and the wrong shot all at once. The wrong club or the wrong shot is recoverable, but the wrong shot hit with the wrong club is a disaster.

Blasi: What makes Royal Melbourne a great match play course?

Clayton: It’s a great course – full of brilliant holes. What makes the golf so interesting is despite the width of the fairway, the greens make it so hard to get close to the hole, especially when it’s windy and it usually is.
Unlike courses with softer greens you must land the ball in one place to have it finish in another, and the shot has to be hit on the right trajectory, with the right shape and spin and land in the perfect spot. Otherwise it’s going to finish far from the hole.

Blasi: Are there a few holes at Royal Melbourne that you think will be great match play holes? Can you explain why?

Clayton: 10 west, which will be 6 on the Presidents Cup Course, is the great short (285 yards) par 4 up and around the hill. It’s drivable but only into the wind. Downwind it’s almost impossible to keep the ball on the green and long is no good at all. It’s either a safe long iron to the right and a pitch or a driver or 3-wood straight at the green.

Blasi: What are some courses that you feel might make great match play venues?

Clayton: Augusta would be an amazing match play course, as witnessed by the great Masters which have turned into match play. Pinehurst is very much like Sandbelt golf with lots of short grass options around the greens. St. Andrew’s, even though it was stroke match play, there were some good ones in the old Dunhill Cup. North Berwick – with old equipment! Winged Foot,  which I haven’t seen, but those last four brutal finishing holes have uncovered a lot of nerves over the years and lead to some brilliant shots and finishes. NGLA (National Golf Links of America) would be fascinating because it asks so many great questions. Wentworth had many great matches over the years of the world match play, and those last 2 par 5s were a big part of it.

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Marc Leishman: Patrick Reed’s rules gaffe makes for ‘pretty good ammo’ for Presidents Cup fans

Australian Marc Leishman gave his tacit approval to fans to taunt Patrick Reed at the Presidents Cup over his recent rules gaffe.

MELBOURNE – Just days after Adam Scott said he didn’t want Australians to cheer for Tiger Woods at the upcoming Presidents Cup, Marc Leishman has given fans his tacit approval to taunt American Patrick Reed over his recent rules controversy at the Hero World Challenge.

When asked by the media after his round at the Australian Open on Saturday if fans should bring shovels to poke fun at Reed, who was penalized on Friday for moving sand during his practice swings, Leishman, who is representing the Internationals for the third time, said, “There are opportunities there, put it that way. Maybe not shovels, but I think he’s definitely opened a door there, that he’s brought on himself.”

Reed, who was tabbed Captain America for his impressive performance at the 2016 Ryder Cup, was one of four captain’s picks to represent the American side in the Presidents Cup when the biennial match begins on Thursday. If there’s any player who can shrug off being heckled by the galleries, it is Reed. The villain role comes naturally to Reed, who may have to reenact his infamous “shush” from the 2014 Ryder Cup when he raised his index finger to his lips and shushed the vocal Scottish crowd at Gleneagles, if Leishman has anything to do with it.

“As long as it’s not disrespectful, I think. You never want to cross the line, but I think there is some pretty good ammo there, isn’t there?” Leishman added.

Leishman did his best to duck questions from reporters on the topic, but eventually couldn’t hide his feelings on the matter. “Yeah, I did see it and it looked pretty ordinary, to be honest,” he said. “It didn’t look too good for him.”

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U.S. surges to 9-3 lead after Day One of Junior Presidents Cup

Sparked by a series of ferocious comebacks, the U.S. opened up a commanding 9-3 lead at the 2019 Junior Presidents Cup.

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MELBOURNE, Australia – In 2011, Karl Vilips lived 10 minutes from Royal Melbourne and remembers attending the Presidents Cup on a rainy day to trek after Tiger Woods. Seven years later, Vilips, 18 and ranked No. 1 in the Golfweek/Sagarin Boys Junior Rankings, who was born in Jakarta to an Indonesian mother and Australian father and raised by his dad, Paul, in Perth, is back representing his country in the Junior Presidents Cup.

“This is really an unbelievable experience to come home and play here with the grandstands just days before the competition,” said Vilips, who has spent the past seven years developing his game in the U.S and is a Stanford University commit.

The only thing that could have made it better was winning two points on Day One of the Junior Presidents Cup, but that was not to be. The Australian tandem of Vilips and Joshua Greer lost both of their Sunday matches 2 and 1, including in the afternoon session when American Benjamin James (pictured above) buried a 60-foot birdie putt on 17 to seal the deal.

“Not much you can do about that,” Vilips said.

The U.S. side won four of six morning Four-Ball matches and claimed five of the six afternoon Foursomes matches to surge to a 9-3 lead. Seven of the 12 matches concluded at the 17th hole, with the U.S. team winning five of them. Four American players won both their matches Sunday: James, Vishnu Sadagopan, Maxwell Moldovan and Preston Summerhays.

Team USA celebrates after Maxwell Moldovan and Brett Roberts secured a full point at 18 for a 9-3 lead. (Adam Schupak/Golfweek)

The U.S. rallied to flip several matches, including halving two of the final three matches of the morning session after being 2 down with four holes to play. Canon Claycomb and Jackson Van Paris combined to birdie three of the last four holes to halve their match.

“That’s really the difference,” said Justin Leonard, the five-time Presidents Cup U.S. team member and 12-time PGA Tour winner who is serving as U.S. captain.

In the afternoon, Moldovan and Brett Roberts teamed to win 1-up over South Africa’s Jayden Schaper and Martin Vorster after trailing 2 down with 4 to go.

This is becoming old hat for Moldovan, the AJGA’s Rolex Player of the Year, who has been tabbed the Matchplay Ninja, and for good reason. He won the Polo Golf Junior Classic and went undefeated at the Wyndham Cup, which are both contested at math play, advanced to the Round of 16 in the U.S. Junior and knocked off Stewart Hagestad at the U.S. Amateur before falling to eventual champion Andy Ogletree in 19 holes. What makes him so tough in a match-play format?

“He’s always in play, never gets out position and makes a lot of putts and he gets in guys’ heads,” said Roberts.

When Moldovan made a 10-foot birdie putt on 15 to cut the deficit to 1 down, it breathed new life into the American duo.

“One down with 3 to go on this course a lot can happen,” Roberts said.

Moldovan knocked his approach to five feet at No. 17 to tie that match and the U.S. secured the full point when Vorster drove into trouble at 18 and the International team had to take an unplayable lie.

It took a search committee to find Martin Vorster’s drive at 18, but it was all for naught as they lost the hole and the match to the Americans. (Adam Schupak/Golfweek)

There are 12 Singles matches on Monday; it takes 12.5 points to win the Junior Presidents Cup. Leonard knows there is work still to be done for his team to retain the trophy, but he was more caught up in the experience these young competitors will always treasure.

“How do these kids go from this, playing one of the best golf courses in the world, to that next high school or junior tournament? It is going to be a little bit of a letdown,” he said. “The only difference between this and the actual Presidents Cup is that the grandstands aren’t full. Christmas for these 24 kids started on Dec. 6 in Melbourne and it’s been going on for four days now.”

Moldovan echoed that sentiment. “It’s been the best experience of my life, for sure,” he said.

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Presidents Cup ‘advice giver’ can change when Tiger Woods tees it up

The burden of providing advice can be passed off (and reassumed) by Tiger Woods next week during his role as Presidents Cup playing captain.

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Tiger Woods has so far been coy about the number of matches he intends to play at next week’s Presidents Cup. Considering the form he has displayed at the Hero World Challenge – particularly in firing a bogey-free 66 in the second round – the playing captain would be wise to slot himself into the lineup frequently.

Woods is the first man to take on the role of Presidents Cup playing captain since Hale Irwin did it in 1994, the year of the inaugural matches. For the record, Irwin played three times that year, appearing in the foursomes lineup each of the first two days before going out in the lead singles match against Robert Allenby on the final day. His record was 2-1 (which included a singles victory over Allenby).

“I’m playing a minimum of two [matches],” Woods said Thursday with a smile. “Does that help you?”

There’s obviously much more to it than that, though.

Hero World Challenge: Best photos from Bahamas

Woods has brought on three assistant captains in Fred Couples, Steve Stricker and Zach Johnson (the former two being past Presidents Cup captains themselves). The question is how, exactly, they’ll fill in when Woods is on the course competing, particularly when it comes to giving advice.

The Presidents Cup rulebook states that when it comes to “any counsel or suggestion that could influence a player in determining his play, the choice of a club or the method of making a stroke, each team may appoint one person who may give advice to members of that team. Such person must be identified to the committee before giving advice.”

These stipulations reflect the wording in the Rules of Golf section that covers team competition (Rule 24) and the procedures regarding the creation of a local rule that allows for an “advice giver.”

A report by Golf Channel has cleared up some of the details about how much (and when, exactly) Woods’ assistant captains can take over while he’s competing. The PGA Tour sent this response to a Golf Channel inquiry:

“The captain needs to advise the chief referee before the start of each round who has the advice. The captain may switch the person during the round. For example, if Tiger is planning to play, he would need to advise rules before the matches start who has the advice. After he finishes, he could switch back if he wanted.”

Add those particulars to a long list of other details Woods must address as the captain.

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Presidents Cup host Royal Melbourne shines spotlight on world-class destination

A golfer’s education is incomplete without seeing Royal Melbourne and the courses of Australia’s Sandbelt. Many American golfers, softened by the primping of their home courses, love visiting classic British links for their rugged naturalism and the …

A golfer’s education is incomplete without seeing Royal Melbourne and the courses of Australia’s Sandbelt. 

Many American golfers, softened by the primping of their home courses, love visiting classic British links for their rugged naturalism and the ability to play a variety of shots along firm, fast-running turf that is exposed to the elements. British golfers, by contrast, sometimes tire of the vagaries of links golf and relish the high standard of greenkeeping present at many American courses, where the grass does indeed seem greener and the sun often shines brighter.  

What’s special about the courses of the Australian Sandbelt is that nearly every course in this concentrated area of the Melbourne, Victoria suburbs, whether humble or celebrated throughout the world, manages to achieve the best aspects of both British and American golf without the downsides of either, combining beautifully presented inland courses that look and play as though they would be at home on a rough-hewn, fast-running British links. 

Achieving this rare trick requires a combination of sandy soil on rolling terrain, the kind of land that provides excellent drainage and promotes the quality grasses that make courses bouncy while retaining a parkland feel. 

This chemistry produces a style of golf that led Victoria native Peter Thomson to feel at home in winning five Open Championships in the British Isles from 1954 to 1965. He felt unwelcome on squishy American courses that eliminated, in Thomson’s opinion, the essential third dimension of the game: the run of the ball. 

The greatest of these Sandbelt courses, Royal Melbourne Golf Club, hosts its third Presidents Cup in December and comprises two 18-hole courses (East and West), combined in various permutations through the years to form a Composite Course over which this year’s competition will be played. Yet Royal Melbourne is far from the only show in town.

If Royal Melbourne is, design-wise, to Australia what Augusta National is to America, sharing Alister MacKenzie as the co-designer of both, then surely Kingston Heath qualifies as that country’s Merion, a compact, beautifully routed championship course that requires shotmaking of the highest standard while being enjoyable for club-level players. 

No. 15 at Royal Melbourne (Gary Lisbon via PGA Tour)

Victoria Golf Club, just across the street from Royal Melbourne, produced Thomson, 1954 British Amateur champion Doug Bachli and 2006 U.S. Open champion Geoff Ogilvy. Even if not for its more-famous neighbor, people should get on an airplane to see Victoria’s distinctive bunkering and beguiling half-par holes. 

Yet, just as it is always better to ask a local for tips on finding the best pub around, I asked several Australian friends to share their thoughts on what makes Royal Melbourne and the courses of the Sandbelt so admired and what we might learn from them. 

What makes the Sandbelt distinct as one of the world’s great spiritual homes for the game?

Will Kay, a former member of Royal Melbourne: “With all of the best architects having their work on display in a 20-mile radius, it improves everyone’s standards accordingly. The unreasonable density of world-class courses is not seen anywhere else, and people in Melbourne don’t know how good they have it.” 

No. 3 at Royal Melbourne (Gary Lisbon via PGA Tour)

Lynne Claney Brown, 15-time women’s club champion at Kingston Heath: “A high standard of conditioning and year-round golf probably makes Melbourne an ideal location for high-quality golf. A temperate climate – not too wet in winter, no snow, moderate rain, warm and dry summers – is ideal for consistent golfing conditions year round. Mix in with that, majestic native trees and plants and constant birdsong make for pleasant environs for golf.”

Mike Clayton, touring professional and course architect at Clayton DeVries Pont: “The strategies are quite simple on most Sandbelt courses. There is always an easier shot from one half of the fairway – and it’s a side almost always guarded by a fairway bunker or some rough grass. It’s also the home of some of the greatest short holes – between 130 and 170 yards – in the world.”

How would other courses around the world, regardless of climate or geography, benefit from copying ideas found at Royal Melbourne? 

Neil Crafter, golf course architect, Crafter + Mogford Golf Strategies: “Dr. Alister MacKenzie and Alex Russell designed holes where width and latitude were given off the tee. But if the golfer was happy to finish anywhere on the fairway, he could face a very daunting and difficult approach over bunkers to a sloping green, if not positioned correctly.” 

Will Kay: “There is a lack of length from the members tees which makes it more appealing to the masses. A short course can be even more interesting and challenging than a long course, and this is often forgotten in today’s efforts at design. This should not be confused with it being known as an easy course, as these tracks in the middle of summer are as difficult as anywhere.”

No. 9 at Royal Melbourne (Gary Lisbon via PGA Tour)

Mike Clayton: “Mowing lines. There is no rough between fairways and the fairway bunkers, so the ball runs freely into them – and if you are good enough or lucky enough to skirt the edge, the ball is never held up by long grass. There is no attempt to make the rough uniform or to create ‘equity of punishment.’ Members never complain about ‘unfair’ lies in the rough.”

In addition to the well-known Sandbelt courses like Kingston Heath, Victoria and Metropolitan, what courses would you take a visiting friend to play?

Mike Clayton: “Alister MacKenzie never visited Woodlands for a day, but if he had it’d be much better known. Spring Valley was designed by Vern Morcom, son of the greenkeeper who built all the MacKenzie work at Royal Melbourne and Kingston Heath. Long Island was a struggling club with a terrific course until The National took control and secured its short-term (and hopefully long-term) future. With a little remedial work, it could be one of the best courses in the city.”

Lynne Claney Brown: “I always consider playing Woodlands an experience. Tight fairways and small, hard greens require a lot of skill. Spring Valley is often called the ‘hidden jewel’. It is a great design always in great shape.”

Will Kay: “Peninsula Kingswood has recently undergone some fantastic changes which line it up incredibly well against Royal Melbourne.”

Neil Crafter: “I would take them to Yarra Yarra, Commonwealth and Woodlands. That next tier of Sandbelt courses are brilliant and will give any visitor a wonderful sense of what golf in Melbourne’s Sandbelt is all about.” 

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Tiger Woods: Contending in Bahamas, prepping for Presidents Cup

As Tiger eyes a tournament victory this week, he’s also prepping 10 of the 11 guys he’ll take with him to Royal Melbourne next week.

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Tiger Woods trails his Presidents Cup captain’s pick Patrick Reed by six with two rounds to go in the 18-player Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas.

Woods shot a second-round 66 at the Albany Golf Club on Thursday but remains cryptic on how much he will play as the captain of next week’s Presidents Cup team.

He has to be pleased with how Reed is playing. And putting. Reed has opened up a three-stroke lead over Gary Woodland and his second-round 66 included just 23 putts, a day after recording 25.

But as Woods — and others — eye a tournament victory this week, he’s also prepping 10 of the 11 guys he’ll take with him to Royal Melbourne next week.

“We have some things that we need to run through the guys, some ideas and I’ll pick their brains a little bit,” he said after Wednesday’s opening round. “We just want to have a clear picture of what we’re going to do down there because obviously once we get down there, things roll pretty quickly.”

Woods went on to describe the tight schedule in Australia.

“We land there Monday, we don’t have a whole lot of time to get to the golf course on Monday. A few of us gotta go do a shootout on the river. Then dinner. Then the next day it’s a long practice round. Six guys gotta do interviews, (then there’s) a gala dinner that night.

“Follow the next day with another practice round, photos, plus six more guys have to do interviews. Pairings, and then we play. So there isn’t a whole lot of time. We gotta run through things now so that when we get there we have a clear picture of what we’re doing.”

The Presidents Cup action starts Thursday, Dec. 12, with the first-round four-ball format. Since Melbourne is 16 hours ahead of the East Coast, there will be live golf in prime time starting on Wednesday night in North America.

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