PGA Championship: Oak Hill partnered with Andrew Green to restore Donald Ross’s Golden Era architecture that had gone missing

Starting in 2015, the club decided to put the Donald Ross flair back into the course.

Nothing remains static on a golf course for long.

Grass grows, often in new places and in unexpected ways. Bunkers shift as sand is blasted out by players. Trees grow, blocking light, air and playing lines. Undulations shift on greens, which themselves often shrink over years and decades. Whether through intentional architectural efforts or natural evolution, every golf course changes in time.

Even those that host major championships. Consider Oak Hill Country Club’s East Course in Rochester, New York, site of the 2023 PGA Championship. The East ranks No. 12 among New York’s elite roster of clubs on Golfweek’s Best list of top private courses in each state, and it’s No. 42 on Golfweek’s Best list of classic courses in the U.S.

Opened in 1926 with a design by architectural legend Donald Ross, the East had undergone many changes over the decades, many of them in pursuit of additional challenge to the best players in the world. Among its many championships, the East has hosted three PGA Championships (1980, ’03 and ’13) and three U.S. Opens (1956, ’68 and ’89), with winners including the likes of Jack Nicklaus, Lee Trevino and Curtis Strange. Add to those events a rich history of amateur and senior events, plus the 1995 Ryder Cup, and Oak Hill’s rich championship history clearly ranks among the best clubs in the world.

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Oak Hill Country Club
The greens for Nos. 4 and 5 at Oak Hill Country Club’s East Course in Rochester, New York (Photo: Gabe Gudgel/Golfweek)

But the course had changed dramatically over the years, losing much of its Ross flavor. Robert Trent Jones tweaked the East in the 1950s and ’60s, including – in the name of spectator flow – the replacement of a par 4 considered by many to be among the best in the country.

In the 1970s, George and Tom Fazio further modernized the layout, redesigning three holes – the fifth, sixth and 15th – and moving the 18th green. While these changes were all implemented in the interest of increased difficulty for touring professionals, the club received criticism about eliminating too much of Ross’s original design.

Add in naturally occurring changes to the course over the years, and club officials knew it was time to make some changes.

“It’s just like owning a home in some regard. You always have to do some housekeeping, always have to do some updating,” said Jeff Corcoran, Oak Hill’s manager of golf courses and grounds. “And I think the progression of the game dictates a lot of the work you need to do, in some regards, if you want to be a golf course that hosts major championships.”

Starting in 2015, the club decided to put the Ross flair back into the course. It hired architect Andrew Green, who the club said worked with Corcoran; Jeff Sluman, PGA Tour professional and Rochester native; and an East Course Restoration Committee led by Tim Thaney and Jim McKenna. The club said its objectives were to add length where possible, create more forward tees for members, expand areas where cups could be cut into greens and to evaluate options for holes that had been changed over the years. Green used Ross’s original drawings and historical photos to determine the best course of action in restoring the layout.

“Donald Ross set the East Course at Oak Hill Country Club on a stunning piece of ground where the holes turn direction and flow over the property in an inspired fashion,” Green – who has established himself as a restoration expert with such work completed at Wannamoisett, Inverness, Congressional and several other such classic layouts – told the club at the outset of the restoration. “We will utilize every ounce of historic data to reflect the strategy, style and intent of Ross with a keen eye on the way the game of golf is played today. The results will protect the legacy of Oak Hill for decades to come.”

The newly renovated sixth hole at Oak Hill Country Club’s East Course in Rochester, N.Y. (Gary Kellner/PGA of America)

Work wrapped up in 2019, with each of the 18 greens having been rebuilt to U.S. Golf Association specifications with enhanced drainage to provide firm playing conditions. All the bunkers were rebuilt with improved drainage and some were relocated, and they are now more classically Ross in appearance. An overabundance of trees of was removed to improve playing conditions, open vistas and reestablish playing lines. More than 175,000 square feet of new bent grass was installed on the putting surfaces and approaches, the club said, and Green led the restoration of green sizes and sometimes the alteration of existing contours to reestablish classic hole locations that had been lost in time.

“The big thing people are going to see is a tremendous amount of variety in the daily setup, because there are going to be hole locations that members haven’t seen for maybe 40, 50 years,” Green said in a club video commemorating the restoration. “It’s going to add to the aura and how great a major championship venue that it is.”

Most important, the three holes that been altered by previous designers were rebuilt to better match the intent of Ross, even if it was impossible to rebuild them exactly.

“Nos. 5, 6, 15 and to a lesser extent 18 had been the three or four holes that have been the most vilified here at Oak Hill,” Corcoran said. “They are the holes that were redone prior to the ’80 PGA. As we were walking around, we were like, if we’re going to all this trouble on the East Course, shouldn’t we rectify this biggest perceived problem?

“It really came down to, if we were going to redo something, how would we redo it in keeping the original architectural intent that Donald Ross had envisioned of this property? Andrew is phenomenal at that.”

The newly renovated fifth hole at Oak Hill Country Club’s East Course in Rochester, N.Y. (Gary Kellner/PGA of America)

Green designed a new fifth hole, a par 3 named Little Poison, in the same spot that held a par-3 fifth for the 1968 U.S. Open. The new green is slightly elevated and surrounded by Ross-inspired bunkers, with a wide range of flagstick locations and assorted challenges for any player who misses the putting surface on approach.

The club said the new par-4 sixth “sympathetically represents” Ross’s original par 4. Named Double Trouble, the hole crosses Allen’s Creek – a prominent feature throughout any round on the East – and can be stretched beyond 500 yards in a championship.

The new par-3 15th hole, named Plateau, removes a pond introduced during the Fazios’ renovation in the 1970s and reintroduces a large swale aside the “Postage Stamp” style of green that is long and narrow.

“They just feel like they flow,” Corcoran said of the new holes. “When you used to go to the old fifth and sixth holes, you would get to those holes and go, it just doesn’t flow, it doesn’t feel right. Anybody who had a little bent toward golf course architecture could definitely see it.

“Restoring that architectural intent, there’s just something very satisfying about that and knowing that future generations are going to get 18 contiguous holes to play out here. That’s a pretty special thing.”

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Oak Hill member Jeff Sluman enjoyed the highlight of his career at the 1988 PGA Championship

“It was the first time ever in 95-degree heat that I had chills going up and down my entire body,” Sluman said of his hole-out eagle at 5.

Jeff Sluman didn’t lose a ball in the final round en route to winning the 70th PGA Championship, but he did lose a note from Jack Nicklaus.

The Golden Bear missed the cut at Oak Tree Golf Club in Edmond, Oklahoma, but stuck around to do television for ABC Sports and jotted a congratulatory note to Sluman, who not only won his first major but his first PGA Tour title 35 years ago.

“Here’s one of my all-time heroes saying how great I did,” Sluman recalled. “Your first win, they’re pulling you in a million directions, come over here and hold the trophy, do this interview. They physically gave me a check out of a checking book for $160,000. You had to sign the back of it. That’s one of the unique things I remember. Well, in all the hubbub, I lost the note. The following week I went up to Jack and thanked him for the note and said, ‘Jack, I hate to ask you this but any chance you remember what you wrote and would jot it down again?’ Kind of a unique request. I just wanted it for my personal scrapbook. He was very kind and did.”

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Sluman, a longtime Oak Hill Country Club member who estimated he’s played between 300-400 rounds at the host of the 105th PGA Championship, will be working on the broadcast team instead of playing. He was born in September of 1957 and raised in Greece – not the country but rather the town in Monroe Country and suburb of Rochester, New York. He still recalls his father taking him to a practice round for the 1968 U.S. Open at Oak Hill and parking on one of the fairways of the West Course before watching childhood favorites Al Geiberger and Roberto de Vicenzo and trail after Arnold Palmer, who his dad supported.

“I got out of the car and remember saying, ‘Dad, we’re parking on fairways that are better than the greens we play on,’ He said, ‘Son, this is what real golf is.’ We were muni players. It still actually exists; Oak Orchard CC, which was a 45-minute drive from where we lived, near Albion, New York.”

Jeff Sluman of Rochester, N.Y., reacts after holing out for an eagle at the 5th green during the final round of the PGA Championship at Oak Tree Club in Edmond, Okla., Sunday, Aug. 14, 1988. Sluman surged into the lead and went on to win the tourney. (AP Photo/Dave Crenshaw)

Sluman grew up playing golf at Craig Hill Country Club (now known as Deerfield) and quickly became known as one of the top junior athletes in the Rochester area. His father, George, and older brother, Brad, were also low-handicap golfers, and helped guide a young Sluman, who won the Rochester District Golf Association’s (RDGA) Boys’ Sub-Junior Championship in 1971 at Durand Eastman Golf Course. He was also an impressive bowler in his youth, having competed in Rochester Junior Bowling Association leagues.

At 14, he recorded his first hole-in-one at Rochester’s Ridgemont Country Club, and qualified for the 1975 U.S. Junior Amateur. Locally, Sluman won the Rochester men’s district championship in 1977 and the New York State amateur title in 1978. He attended Tennessee Tech for one year and Monroe Community College in Rochester for another before transferring to Florida State. He turned pro in 1980, won just $13,643 as a PGA Tour rookie in 1983 and lost his card before regaining it the following year. He can recount nights spent in YMCA’s in far-flung places such as Singapore for $4 a night.

“If I didn’t make it by 1984, I decided it may be time to throw in the towel,” Sluman said.

But he stuck with it and started to show promise, earning more than $100,000 in 1984. Yet he arrived at the 70th PGA Championship, held August 11-14, 1988, north of Oklahoma City, winless in six years on Tour. Sluman flew under the radar all week carding rounds of 69-70-68, three strokes off the pace set by Paul Azinger.

Those rounds were lost in the flurry of scoring records on the usually severe Pete Dye-designed course, which was weakened by soft greens and a lack of wind. Bob Gilder set a course record of 66 on the first day; club pro Jay Overton tied that, and Dave Rummells, a journeyman pro, established a new one with his 64 on Friday. Saturday, Azinger made a hole-in-one to take a one-stroke lead over Rummells going into Sunday’s round.

That week, Sluman stayed in the guest house of fellow pro Willie Wood, who lived across the street from the golf course. On Saturday night, Sluman turned on the TV in his room and watched the local telecast, which previewed the final round and failed to mention his name even though he was in the thick of the trophy hunt. Playing in the penultimate pairing on Sunday, Sluman went into the final round with a chip on his shoulder.

“I kind of sat there and just scratched my head and said, ‘Jeez, I’m sitting there in third. Not that they’re supposed to say anything about me, but they’re at least supposed to mention my name.’ I was a little honked off.”

“He’s a little mighty mite, but he could really play,” said Craig Harmon, Oak Hill’s longtime head professional, who began coaching Sluman when he was about 18. “He was driven by the fact that everybody thought he was too small. But he was a little bulldog.”

Azinger, who began Sunday’s round with a 10-foot birdie putt to expand his lead to three, never could get comfortable. After the first birdie, he missed the green on four of his next five holes and fell behind for keeps. The turning point of the championship came early in the final round at the fifth hole, a sweeping 590-yard par-5 completely bordered on the left by water and on the right by scrub trees. Here, Sluman smacked a driver and a 4-iron to within 115 yards of a tiny, peninsula green. He pulled out his pitching wedge, but put it back in favor of a sand wedge. He then lofted a shot that bounced twice and rolled in for eagle to vault him to 9 under.

“It was the first time ever in 95-degree heat that I had chills going up and down my entire body,” Sluman said.

Azinger made bogey at the same hole and the three-shot swing was the springboard to a career-defining win for Sluman. He hit his first 10 greens in regulation, picking up birdies on No. 10 with a 20-foot putt and No. 12 when he stiffed an 8-iron. His only bogey was on the 13th hole, and he came back with a crucial 15-foot par putt at No. 14 and posted a 72-hole aggregate of 12-under 272. Sluman threw the ball in the crowd but otherwise reacted just as he had all day—with a little right-fisted pump, a touch of his visor, a nod, a tight-lipped smile. His 65 equaled the record for low final round by a PGA champion, set by David Graham in 1979.

1988 PGA Championship
Jeff Sluman throws his golf ball to the crowd after sinking a par putt on the 18th green to win the 1988 PGA Championship at Oak Tree Club in Edmond, Oklahpma. (Photo: Steve Helber/Associated Press)

Sluman went on to win six PGA Tour titles in all and six more times on PGA Tour Champions after turning 50. In 2019, he joined a group of 21 players who’ve played in 1,000 PGA Tour events, with the likes of Arnold Palmer, Hale Irwin and Tom Kite. And he’s not done yet.

“I’m not playing full-time anymore. I’m doing 15 events. Did that in 2021 and this year,” Sluman explained in late 2022. “I played 100 events in a row at one point. I took a week off and everyone called me and thought I was hurt. I said, ‘No, I just got tired of hearing I had played in 100 in a row.’ ”

But of the more than the thousand times Sluman has teed it up in competition, none was sweeter than his win at the 1988 PGA Championship.

“You talk about Johnny Miller’s 63 at Oakmont to win the (U.S.) Open, or Jack Nicklaus’ 65 to win the Masters in ’86, but Jeff Sluman’s round today had to be one of the greatest,” Azinger said on that fateful day.

If ever the little bulldog needs a reminder of the peak of his greatness, all Sluman has to do is look at Nicklaus’s note, which he saved and framed, and he’ll know that he once played like a giant.

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No. 1 or not, Jon Rahm will head to the PGA Championship in prime position to capture another major

Should Rahm go on to win at Oak Hill, he’d be the first European to win the triumvirate of the Masters, U.S. Open and PGA Championship.

Jon Rahm couldn’t believe it when he first heard about the history he had achieved by winning the 2023 Masters.

In fact, when informed in the press room following his victory last month at Augusta National that he had become the first European player to win both a Masters and a U.S. Open, his initial response was, “Huh?”

As in, you’ve got to be kidding.

Once he was assured it was true and he let that sink in, he said, “I find it hard to believe. If there’s anything better than accomplishing something like this, it’s making history. So the fact that you tell me that, to be the first-ever European ever to do that, hard to explain (how I feel).”

Since the inaugural Masters was played in 1934, the European golfer with the most career major championship victories is England’s Nick Faldo with six (three Masters, three British Opens, never a U.S. Open or PGA Championship). Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy is next with four, but he has never won the Masters.

And then you have a list of European greats such as Rahm’s compatriots from Spain, Seve Ballesteros, Sergio Garcia, and Jose-Maria Olazabal, Germany’s Bernhard Langer, and England’s Tony Jacklin and Justin Rose who have a Masters or a U.S. Open, but not both.

Yes, Rahm is the first, though if you’ve seen him play since he debuted out on the PGA Tour in 2016, it really shouldn’t be a surprise that he’s the one making said history.

“I don’t know what to tell you. It is a pretty good duo of majors,” Rahm said. “Out of all the accomplishments and the many great players that have come before me, to be the first to do something like that, it’s a very humbling feeling.”

Apr 9, 2023; Augusta, Georgia, USA; Jon Rahm reacts on the 18th green after winning The Masters golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Rob Schumacher-USA TODAY Network

Obviously, should Rahm go on to win the PGA Championship at Oak Hill Country Club, he’d be the first European to achieve that triumvirate of major victories, and then the conversation would shift in a big way to the same one that has dogged McIlroy and American Jordan Spieth for several years.

Only five players in history have won all four major championships, otherwise known as the career grand slam. They are Americans Gene Sarazen, Ben Hogan, Jack Nicklaus, and Tiger Woods, and South African Gary Player.

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McIlroy won the 2011 U.S. Open, the 2012 PGA Championship and the 2014 British Open (he also won the 2014 PGA), so at the impossibly young age of 25 he stood only a Masters victory away from the career grand slam. It has proven quite elusive and when he missed the cut at Augusta in April, it was his ninth consecutive lost opportunity to join that exclusive club.

Spieth won the Masters and U.S. Open in 2015, and the British in 2017 when he was just 24, so when he arrives at Oak Hill, he will be trying for the seventh time to complete his career slam by winning the one he lacks, the PGA Championship.

Rahm is only halfway to the career slam, but when the 28-year-old takes aim at the East Course, he will do so as the favorite in the field, perhaps even the No. 1 player in the Official World Golf Ranking (pending Scottie Scheffler’s outcome at the AT&T Byron Nelson), and as a 21-time winner as a professional — 11 on the PGA Tour which ties him with Garcia for most by a Spanish-born player, and 10 on the European Tour.

Four of his PGA victories have come in 2023 as he won the Tournament of Champions at Kapalua (Hawaii) Golf Club and The American Express at PGA West in LaQuinta, California in January, and the Genesis Invitational at Riviera outside Los Angeles in February, prior to his Masters triumph.

More: Jon Rahm in photos through the years

There was almost a fifth, too. In late April, trying to defend his 2022 victory at the Mexico Open, Rahm shot 21-under-par including a 9-under third-round 61, but finished runner-up to Tony Finau. He’s been on a serious roll, and Finau knew that outlasting him was a big-time feather in his cap.

“Any time you can battle with a guy like Jon Rahm who’s in the form that he was and come out on top, it makes me feel good,” Finau said. “Rahm is a good friend of mine, we practice quite a bit together, so having Rahmbo as like a sparring partner for me has only made me better. And I hope he can say the same.”

abrdn Scottish Open
Justin Thomas and Jon Rahm during Day One of the abrdn Scottish Open at The Renaissance Club on July 08, 2021, in North Berwick, Scotland. (Photo by Mark Runnacles/Getty Images)

Max Homa, who finished second to Rahm at Riviera and will come to Oak Hill ranked seventh in the world and seeking his first major championship, recently referenced the Avengers Marvel universe when he was asked who Rahm reminds him of.

“Yes, he’s probably Thanos,” Homa said. “He has a lot of the stones in his toolbox. He’s a tremendous golfer. He has zero weaknesses.”

Rahm isn’t out there destroying fictional world populations, but he has destroyed a golf course or two, or more, since joining the Tour following a stellar amateur and college career at Arizona State.

He won 11 tournaments as a Sun Devil, second in school history to the 16 won by Phil Mickelson, and is the only two-time winner of the Ben Hogan Award which since 1990 has been presented to the best college golfer in the country. No amateur in history has been ranked No. 1 in the world longer than the 60 weeks Rahm occupied that spot between 2015 and 2016.

After playing in the U.S. Open as an amateur in 2016 and finishing tied for 23rd, he turned pro and enjoyed his first big-time moment at Torrey Pines in January 2017 when he rolled in a 60-foot putt for eagle at the 72nd hole to win the Farmers Insurance Open, his first pro victory. He has been in ascension mode ever since.

U.S. Open
Jon Rahm celebrates making a putt for birdie on the 18th green during the final round of the 2021 U.S. Open at Torrey Pines Golf Course (South Course) on June 20, 2021, in San Diego, California. (Photo: Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)

Torrey Pines was also the site of his first major championship victory, the 2021 U.S. Open. He never led until he made birdie at the 71st hole to get even with Louie Oosthuizen, then went on to make an 18-footer for birdie at the last to win the tournament. It was the first time a player birdied the final two holes to win the Open since Tom Watson caught and passed Nicklaus at Pebble Beach in 1982.

Rahm has yet to play a competitive round at Oak Hill, and while a fine driver of the ball, he occasionally hits it offline and doing that too often on the East Course, where the rough is expected to be thick, will be problematic.

Still, his iron play and ability to get up and down should be more than enough to keep Rahm in contention Sunday afternoon, and perhaps even kickstart the conversation about whether he, Spieth or McIlroy will be the next to complete the career grand slam.

Sal Maiorana is a reporter for the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, part of the USA Today Network. He can be reached at maiorana@gannett.com. Follow him on Twitter @salmaiorana.

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Fleece or flip-flops: The weather is greatest unknown for 105th PGA Championship in May at Oak Hill, as seen in the 2008 Senior PGA

Only Mother Nature knows for sure whether fans will be dressed in fleece or flip-flops.

“Bring some nice warm clothes,” advised Kerry Haigh, chief championships officer for the PGA of America.

Then he added: “And bring some warm weather so you won’t need your warm clothes.”

Such is the conundrum of hosting the 105th PGA Championship at Oak Hill’s East Course in Rochester, New York, where only Mother Nature knows for sure whether fans will be dressed in fleece or flip-flops May 18-21.

“Oak Hill is a hard enough course in beautiful weather,” said Jay Haas. “Heaven forbid if they have a late spring.”

Haas, now 69, should know. Fifteen years ago, he survived windy, wet, bitter-cold conditions to win the 2008 Senior PGA Championship. The first few days of that event the temperature dipped into the low 40s, an example of the worse-case scenario for Haigh come May. And this year’s PGA Championship is being staged one week earlier than the senior version that has some of its competitors still thawing out. It has some concerned that the weather at this year’s PGA could be something the pros want no part of, especially if it snows. (The 7-day forecast predicts temps ranging from 40-71 degrees, with a high of 56 on Wednesday but hitting 70 on Friday.)

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Veteran pro Leonard Thompson, who made more than 1,000 starts combined between the PGA Tour and PGA Tour Champions, remembers teeing off on the 10th hole at Oak Hill in 2008, his first hole of the championship, and it was sleeting.

“I missed the cut there and I wasn’t that upset about it,” he recalled. “None of us could figure out why they went there in May. That’s not prime season in Rochester.”

2008 Senior PGA Championship
Jay Haas at the 69th Senior PGA Championship at Oak Hill Country Club on May 22, 2008, in Rochester, New York. (Photo: Hunter Martin/Getty Images)

There’s a reasonable explanation for the decision to host the PGA Championship on Lake Ontario’s southern shore this May: it wasn’t part of the original plan.

When the PGA of America signed a contract in September 2015 to bring the PGA Championship there a decade after Jason Dufner won what has proved to be his lone major, the PGA still was held in its customary August date and was dubbed “Glory’s Last Shot” as the final major of the season. But that was before the PGA Tour decided to revamp its schedule and bump the FedEx Cup Playoffs into August so that its season concluded before college football and the NFL kicked off and dominated the attention of sports fans.

To do so, the Players Championship shifted to March, opening a window for the PGA Championship to have the spotlight in May. The first spring PGA was held in 2019 at Bethpage Black in New York and the weather cooperated. Last year, the temperature the week of the PGA was warmer in Rochester than in Tulsa, Oklahoma, where Justin Thomas won the Wanamaker Trophy for the second time.

“Low 60s will be a beautiful day,” Haigh said of the weather at Oak Hill. “From an agronomy standpoint, the question is will they be able to grow the grass? They just need a minimal growing season.”

That’s a big if.

In 2008, the Senior PGA Championship dealt with frost delays during the practice rounds. An Eastern Mountain Sports store in a nearby shopping plaza had a run on gloves, performance undergarments and stocking caps. The lemonade stands and ice-cream carts at the course? They never opened for business. Too chilly. One look at the 10-day forecast led to a wave of pre-tournament withdrawals, including the likes of Ben Crenshaw, Fred Funk and Lanny Wadkins. And even those who showed up had second thoughts. Nick Price cited a back injury in withdrawing after shooting 3-over 38 for nine holes in the second round while Jerry Pate cited no reason after carding a 14-over 84 in the first round, which wasn’t even the highest score in the 156-player field.

“It was unforgiving, one of the hardest weeks we’ve had,” said Haigh.

Craig Harmon, who retired in 2013 as Oak Hill’s head pro after a distinguished 42 years at the club, said he was glad to see Oak Hill play tough in 2008, although the rough may have been too thick, heavy and wet for the 50-and-over set.

“You don’t want your historic golf course to play like a pitch-and-putt and 22 under wins,” Harmon said. “I remember when Johnny Miller shot 63 at Oakmont in the final round of the (1973) U.S. Open, the following year the Open was at Winged Foot and my dad (Claude) was the pro there and he said to the superintendent, ‘No one is shooting 63 next year on our watch.’ They grew the rough up and it was called the Massacre at Winged Foot.”

Hale Irwin famously won the 1974 Open with a score of 7 over par. After a loss at the 1995 Ryder Cup at Oak Hill, Haas found redemption by winning the 2008 Senior PGA with the highest winning score in championship history at 7 over. Haas played the first two rounds alongside Irwin, who missed the cut at Oak Hill’s massacre. But before he departed for warmer climes, Irwin left a note in Haas’s locker encouraging him that his game was sharp and to go take the title.

“Hale wasn’t one to throw around bouquets,” Haas said.

The mercury rose enough on the weekend to be tolerable, but scoring kept rising too. In the third round, Haas hit a low, drawing 8-iron from 172 yards at the 17th hole that rolled in for eagle and catapulted him into a tie for the lead. At Sunday’s trophy ceremony, Harmon watched from nearby, and as soon Haas finished his various duties he made a beeline to Harmon and said, “I’m on the wall baby,” a reference to joining an impressive roll call of the winners of majors at Oak Hill who are pictured in the club’s Hill of Fame.

2008 Senior PGA Championship
The 69th Senior PGA Championship at Oak Hill Country Club on May 24, 2008 in Rochester, New York. (Photo: Hunter Martin/Getty Images)

In preparation for hosting the 105th PGA, Oak Hill superintendent Jeff Corcoran handled normal spring maintenance practices such as aerification to the course in the fall, knowing that any recovery time would be limited for a May championship. In another new twist, the PGA instructed its tent company to build out the scaffolding of its three largest structures ahead of time. That should allow them to do the rest of the decking and flooring even while snow still is on the ground.

What will the move to May mean for future championships? The PGA still has Aronimink in Pennsylvania (2026), Baltusrol in New Jersey (2029) and Congressional in Maryland (2030) on the docket in coming years, but the May date could eliminate the traditional great courses of the northeast from future consideration. It very well could be that Oak Hill’s fourth PGA Championship since 1980 could be its swansong.

“As long as the weather is halfway reasonable it can be our greatest championship yet,” said Haigh, trying to put a positive spin on the biggest unknown of staging this major. “Let’s talk in June about future PGAs at Oak Hill.”

By then, it might even be flip-flop weather.

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PGA Championship highlights: From Tiger Woods at Valhalla to Justin Thomas at Southern Hills, this major delivers drama

For decades, the PGA Championship has delivered drama and amazing finishes.

The Masters has Amen Corner, the green jacket and azaleas. The U.S. Open bills itself as the toughest and most democratic golf tournament in the world. The British Open is the oldest of golf’s four majors and the only one played on links courses.

And then there’s the PGA Championship. It’s the only one of golf’s majors with a field comprised only of professionals, including 20 club professionals, but it gets knocked by some fans and pundits for lacking a persona. Its format has changed, going from match play to stroke play in 1958, and its date has changed, recently moving from August, when it was “Glory’s Last Shot,” to May.

But one thing has been a constant at the PGA Championship for decades, it delivers drama and amazing finishes that often involve the biggest stars in the game. Here are the iconic moments and great finishes at PGA Championships since 2000.

After WD in Italian Open title defense, Robert MacIntyre said he’ll push through ‘niggling injuries’ at PGA Championship

MacIntyre is hoping to play his way onto the European team for the Ryder Cup in Italy later this year.

Robert MacIntyre, whose defense of his Italian Open title was ended by injury last week, has declared he is in perfect physical condition ahead of the  PGA Championship at Oak Hill.

MacIntyre withdrew from the DP World Tour event at the Marco Simone Golf and Country Club, where the Ryder Cup will be staged in September, before the second round on Friday due to a back strain.

The 26-year-old from Oban had recorded his second professional victory in the tournament following a playoff with Matt Fitzpatrick 12 months earlier and was disappointed he was forced to pull out.

However, the Scot has undergone extensive treatment on the problem since and is confident he will be in decent shape when the second major of the year gets underway in Pittsford, New York, on Thursday week.

“I’ll be good to go next week,” he said at a media event to preview the Genesis Scottish Open in July at the Renaissance Club in East Lothian today. “I’ve seen the right people and am doing the right things. So I’ll get on with it.

“It’s far better. I tried my best when I was out there (in Italy). On the Wednesday morning, when I woke up I could hardly move, just from the way I’d slept. I’ve been in for physio yesterday and this morning and it’s feeling far better.

“If I’m being honest, I push as much as I can. I’ve had niggling injuries already this year, most recently my arm, and pushed through that. I pushed as much as I could on this one.

“I managed to get out in the first round feeling good. But I tried to hit a tee shot hard down nine and felt it going. I kind of tried to manage my way round after that, but I struggled late on in the first round.

“I then almost didn’t have enough time between rounds. When I woke up on Friday morning, I thought: ‘This ain’t good.’ I went into the physio room for about an hour then went out and tried to warm up, but the speed was that far down. It wasn’t good enough to go out and play.”

MacIntrye added: “The guys in the physio truck were absolutely brilliant. They’d said it wasn’t going to do any long-term damage trying to push through it. It was just a case of how much pain I could take.

“I could get through it with an iron, but when I was trying to hit a driver I was full tilt and the way I move the back wasn’t allowing me to tilt. I could have played with an iron, but it was too long a golf course to hit something soft.

“I’ve got a strapping on my arm as well because of the ligaments. I just over-extended it. But a couple of painkillers, a bit of strapping and I’m good to go.”

MacIntyre is hoping to play his way onto the European team for the biennial Ryder Cup match with the United States in Italy later this year and knows that a good performance in the PGA Championship next week will kick start his season and boost his chances.

He revealed that he enjoyed being at home in Oban with his family and friends as he recovered from his back problem and is feeling good mentally as well as physically heading into his first major since the Open at St. Andrews last year.

“It is going to be really important,” he said. “If you have a good week, it’s a big push in the right direction. I’ve not seen anything of the golf course, I don’t know it, but I try to keep it simple. Good golf takes care of it.

“The traveling I’ve done since I came home has been unbelievable. But it’s good to get home and see the people I enjoy spending time with.

“I was walking along the beach with my little niece, just enjoying it. It was pouring with rain, but I didn’t have a worry in the world, just enjoying myself.

“That’s how I almost recalibrate. There is so much going on in the golfing world that you can get too bogged down in golf. For me, it’s good to get away from the course.

“I mean, I had five weeks off there and I reckon I touched the clubs five times. For me, I don’t need to hammer it. It’s more about clearing my mind, being happy when I go back to work, step on that golf course with Mike (Thomson) carrying the bag. I want to make life easier for him and easier for myself. I prepare the same way at every tournament.”

MacIntyre added: “My game has been good. It was a far better start to the year in the Middle East. Abu Dhabi, if I’d putted halfway decent I would have been there or thereabouts. I’ve played really well.

“In Kenya, I had so many opportunities from 10 or 12 feet. Again, if I’d putted well, I would have got across the line. In Japan, I was coming back after five weeks off, but my game was still good. And Korea was one that almost got away from me.

“But I feel like 2019 (when he finished Rookie of the Year in his debut season on the DP World Tour) again. If I keep giving myself these chances, it’s going to happen.”

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Kerry Haigh Q&A: The PGA of America’s setup man on setting up Oak Hill for the 105th PGA Championship

As chief championships officer for the PGA of America, he’ll make sure every blade of grass at Oak Hill meets his exacting standards.

Kerry Haigh has been at the forefront of every PGA Championship since 1989 at Kemper Lakes outside of Chicago.

As chief championships officer for the PGA of America, Haigh will make sure every blade of grass at Oak Hill meets his exacting standards for the 105th PGA Championship.

Haigh, a native of England and a scratch golfer before turning his attention to golf administration as a career, is a straight shooter with perhaps one exception: he won’t reveal the speed of the greens at the PGA Championship beyond stating they are “championship speed.”

But, nevertheless, his tireless efforts to make sure a winner is declared on Sunday despite unscheduled weather interruptions that routinely pop up, have earned him a reputation as peerless at what he does.

Oak Hill in Rochester, N.Y., should serve up a splendid setting for a major yet again, and as Haigh told Golfweek, “As long as the weather is halfway reasonable it can be our greatest championship yet.”

MORE: PGA Championship live updates

Here are six things Haigh shared with the media ahead of the 2023 PGA Championship.

The top 10 earners at the PGA Championship over the past 5 years based on earnings per shot

Do any of these names surprise you?

Next week, the golf world heads to Rochester, N.Y., for the 2023 PGA Championship at Oak Hill Country Club. Justin Thomas is the defending champion, as he took down Will Zalatoris in a three-hole playoff last year to claim his second major championship and second Wanamaker trophy.

Jon Rahm claimed the year’s first major at the Masters in April and is the betting favorite to win at Oak Hill next Sunday (+750).

Thanks to Buzz Casino, we put together a list of the top earnings at the last five PGA Championships, but with a twist.

Here are the top 10 earners at the PGA Championship based on earnings per shot.

2023 PGA Championship: Odds for all 18 LIV Golf players at Oak Hill Country Club

Cam Smith currently sits at 22/1 to win at Oak Hill.

The second men’s major championship is just around the corner as the best players in the world will head to Rochester, N.Y., next week for the 2023 PGA Championship at Oak Hill Country Club.

Justin Thomas is the defending champion thanks to his playoff win over Will Zalatoris last year at Southern Hills in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

Mito Pereira, now a member of the LIV Golf League, was in complete control of the tournament before putting his tee shot in the water on the 72nd hole. He’d go on to tie for third.

There are 18 players from the Saudi Arabia-backed circuit teeing it up next week and here are the betting odds for every member, starting with two-time champion Brooks Koepka (2018, 2019).

[gambcom-standard rankid=”3413″ ]

Player Odds
Brooks Koepka 2000
Cameron Smith 2200
Dustin Johnson 2500
Joaquin Niemann 5000
Patrick Reed 6500
Bryson DeChambeau 6500
Talor Gooch 8000
Paul Casey 8000
Abraham Ancer 8000
Mito Pereira 10000
Phil Mickelson 13000
Dean Burmester 13000
Thomas Pieters 15000
Harold Varner III 15000
Anirban Lahiri 15000
Brendan Steele 18000
Martin Kaymer 30000
Sihwan Kim 50000

Gannett may earn revenue from sports betting operators for audience referrals to betting services. Sports betting operators have no influence over nor are any such revenues in any way dependent on or linked to the newsrooms or news coverage. Terms apply, see operator site for Terms and Conditions. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, help is available. Call the National Council on Problem Gambling 24/7 at 1-800-GAMBLER (NJ, OH), 1-800-522-4700 (CO), 1-800-BETS-OFF (IA), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN). Must be 21 or older to gamble. Sports betting and gambling are not legal in all locations. Be sure to comply with laws applicable where you reside.

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2023 PGA Championship: Odds for every player in the field at Oak Hill Country Club

Who’s your pick to win the PGA Championship?

The second men’s major championship is almost here. After Jon Rahm’s win at the Masters the best players in the world head to Oak Hill Country Club in Rochester, N.Y., for the 2023 PGA Championship.

Defending champion Justin Thomas hasn’t had his best stuff so far this season with his best finish coming at the WM Phoenix Open where he grabbed a solo fourth. Overall, Thomas has two top 10s in 11 events.

No surprise here, but world No. 1 Jon Rahm is the betting favorite for Oak Hill sitting at +750 (15/2). The second- and third-ranked players in the world, Scottie Scheffler and Rory McIlroy, are next on the list at +800 (8/1) and +1000 (10/1), respectively.

Here is a complete list of the betting odds for next week’s 2023 PGA Championship

[gambcom-standard rankid=”3413″ ]

Player Odds
Jon Rahm 750
Scottie Scheffler 800
Rory McIlroy 1000
Xander Schauffele 2000
Justin Thomas 2000
Jordan Spieth 2000
Collin Morikawa 2000
Brooks Koepka 2000
Patrick Cantlay 2200
Cameron Smith 2200
Tony Finau 2500
Dustin Johnson 2500
Cameron Young 2500
Viktor Hovland 2800
Max Homa 2800
Sungjae Im 3500
Shane Lowry 3500
Matthew Fitzpatrick 3500
Jason Day 3500
Sam Burns 4000
Hideki Matsuyama 4000
Joohyung Kim 4000
Sahith Theegala 4500
Tyrrell Hatton 5000
Joaquin Niemann 5000
Tommy Fleetwood 6500
Patrick Reed 6500
Keegan Bradley 6500
Justin Rose 6500
Corey Conners 6500
Bryson DeChambeau 6500
Taylor Moore 6500
Talor Gooch 8000
Rickie Fowler 8000
Paul Casey 8000
Adam Scott 8000
Abraham Ancer 8000
Wyndham Clark 8000
Thomas Detry 8000
Taylor Montgomery 8000
Cam Davis 8000
Brendon Todd 8000
Webb Simpson 10000
Seamus Power 10000
Russell Henley 10000
Mito Pereira 10000
Gary Woodland 10000
Davis Riley 10000
Billy Horschel 10000
Aaron Wise 10000
Harris English 10000
Victor Perez 10000
Nicolai Hojgaard 10000
Min Woo Lee 10000
Kurt Kitayama 10000
Keith Mitchell 10000
J.J. Spaun 10000
Emiliano Grillo 10000
Denny McCarthy 10000
Ben Taylor 10000
Si Woo Kim 13000
Robert MacIntyre 13000
Christiaan Bezuidenhout 13000
Chris Kirk 13000
Phil Mickelson 13000
Lucas Herbert 13000
Dean Burmester 13000
Tom Hoge 15000
Thomas Pieters 15000
Sepp Straka 15000
Maverick McNealy 15000
Matt Kuchar 15000
Harold Varner 15000
Francesco Molinari 15000
Brian Harman 15000
Alex Noren 15000
Adam Hadwin 15000
Yannik Paul 15000
Taylor Pendrith 15000
Matt Wallace 15000
Mackenzie Hughes 15000
Jordan Smith 15000
Danny Willett 15000
Brandon Wu 15000
Ben Griffin 15000
Beau Hossler 15000
Anirban Lahiri 15000
Adrian Meronk 15000
K.H. Lee 18000
Scott Stallings 18000
Patrick Rodgers 18000
Padraig Harrington 18000
Callum Shinkwin 18000
Brendan Steele 18000
Adam Svensson 18000
Ryan Fox 20000
Thriston Lawrence 20000
Thorbjorn Olesen 20000
Rasmus Hojgaard 20000
Nick Taylor 20000
Nick Hardy 20000
Mark Hubbard 20000
Kevin Kisner 20000
Justin Suh 20000
Joel Dahmen 20000
Hayden Buckley 20000
Adrian Otaegui 20000
Adri Arnaus 20000
Adam Schenk 20000
Zach Johnson 25000
Trey Mullinax 25000
Kazuki Higa 25000
J.T. Poston 25000
Andrew Putnam 25000
Alex Smalley 25000
Sam Ryder 30000
Sadom Kaewkanjana 30000
Rikuya Hoshino 30000
Pablo Larrazabal 30000
Ockie Strydom 30000
Matthew NeSmith 30000
Martin Kaymer 30000
Luke Donald 30000
Jimmy Walker 30000
Davis Thompson 30000
Y.E. Yang 40000
John Somers 40000
Chez Reavie 40000
Lee Hodges 40000
Wyatt Worthington II 50000
Steve Holmes 50000
Sihwan Kim 50000
Nico Echavarria 50000
Michael Block 50000
Kenny Pigman 50000
Josh Speight 50000
Jesse Droemer 50000
Jason Dufner 50000
Greg Koch 50000
David Micheluzzi 50000
Colin Inglis 50000
Ben Kern 50000
Anthony Cordes 50000
Alex Beach 50000
Russell Grove 50000
Matt Cahill 50000
Gabe Reynolds 50000
Chris Sanger 50000
Chris French 50000
Braden Shattuck 50000
Jeremy Wells 50000
J.J. Killeen 50000
Steven Alker 100000
Shaun Micheel 100000
John Daly 100000

Gannett may earn revenue from sports betting operators for audience referrals to betting services. Sports betting operators have no influence over nor are any such revenues in any way dependent on or linked to the newsrooms or news coverage. Terms apply, see operator site for Terms and Conditions. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, help is available. Call the National Council on Problem Gambling 24/7 at 1-800-GAMBLER (NJ, OH), 1-800-522-4700 (CO), 1-800-BETS-OFF (IA), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN). Must be 21 or older to gamble. Sports betting and gambling are not legal in all locations. Be sure to comply with laws applicable where you reside.

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