The Straits Course twists and turns to test tour pros. Match play in the Ryder Cup should only make it better.

Whistling Straits, site of the 43rd Ryder Cup, will play just as Pete Dye intended when it opened in 1998.

The caddie pointed at a line left of the fairway bunker on No. 4 of Whistling Straits’ Straits Course, urging me to swing away at a target that I simply couldn’t see or even properly imagine. The only comfortable grassy stretch appears to sit farther to the right than the caddie indicated, perhaps offering a bit of a bailout on this tee shot?

Nope. Should have listened to the caddie. With a freshening wind at my back, I went too far right— the thin stretch of fairway proved to be a mirage. The ball found the edge of a bunker, and the ensuing double bogey proved I had no idea how to play that hole.

Just as Pete Dye intended in 1998 when he opened Whistling Straits, site of this year’s Ryder Cup.

A master of disguise. A Tour pro’s nightmare. An artist. A genius. The most creative guy in the room with perhaps the most dirt under his fingernails after long days playing in a field. All these qualities have been ascribed to Dye, who passed away aged 94 in January of 2020 after having built more than 100 courses around the world. And each of those descriptions and more came into play when Dye built the Straits Course tight to Wisconsin’s shoreline of Lake Michigan.

One other word that comes to mind in describing Dye’s efforts at the Straits: counteroffensive.

By the 1990s, Dye had grown tired of seeing Tour professionals gain length off the tee. The best players in the world were just blasting balls past hazards that no longer lived up to that moniker—it’s a trend that has continued, with prodigious Tour length too often dominating strategy. Always interested in getting into the heads of the pros and thumbing his nose at their power, Dye constructed a layout of twists and turns, humps and hollows, sand and more sand. If pros could hit just about any target within sight, why not simply hide those targets to mess with the best?

The result is a thrilling procession of landing areas set on diagonal lines tucked behind mounds or bunkers to create semi-blind and uncomfortable tee shots. And those landing areas are frequently pinched just as they turn to the side, putting even greater demands on a player with a driver in his hands. There are no easy decisions to lay back, as overly cautious tee shots often leave long, obscured second shots from bad angles.

Whistling Straits, No. 4
Whistling Straits, No. 4

The aforementioned No. 4 is a perfect example, with the fairway tumbling hard left out of view toward the shore of the lake at exactly the distance—300-320 yards off the back tee—that most modern Tour professionals would want to land a tee shot. Such deception happens time and again on the Straits—there’s the fairway grass you can see, and way over there is a better target behind a bunker lip or mound of waving fescue.

This version of Dye’s counteroffensive messes with a player’s mind, and all the demands to either play safe or take on tremendous risk can be exhausting.

“The Straits course is really one of his masterpieces,” Mike O’Reilly, the golf operations manager at Whistling Straits and its sister club, Blackwolf Run, said of Dye. “I think he did an amazing job with the visual intimidation on any particular shot, then you get out to the space and say, it didn’t really look like this from back at the tee box. Just some of those mind tricks that he plays—it looks very difficult, very visually intimidating.”

A huge part of that intimidation comes from the bunkers, which appear to be everywhere. Sand short, sand long, even sand way out of play that shouldn’t receive any players’ footprints during this Ryder Cup. There are nearly 1,000 spots on the course that might be considered bunkers.

Whistling Straits, Ryder Cup
Some of the many bunkers at Whistling Straits.

The most notorious of those bunkers at the Straits sits alongside No. 18 and was the final resting spot of Dustin Johnson’s ambitions to win the 2010 PGA Championship, one of three such major championships to have been played at the course. Johnson found a sandy patch to the right of 18 fairway. Believing it to be just a bare spot in the turf, he ground his club before attempting his shot. Problem is, a local rule that week declared all sand areas on the course were bunkers, and Johnson was tagged with two penalty shots. That knocked him out of a playoff in which Martin Kaymer beat Bubba Watson.

The DJ bunker, as it’s become known, was covered by a corporate hospitality tent for the 2015 PGA Championship and very well may be again for this Ryder Cup. Still, O’Reilly said the PGA of America plans to play all such sandy areas as bunkers for the Ryder Cup, and players cannot ground their clubs within them.

All the sand on display is fitting for a course that required some 13,000 truckloads of imported material to build. The Straits and the adjacent Irish Course were constructed on a flat site that once housed a military artillery range. Climb to the top of the manmade hill behind No. 13 green and you can see flat farmland stretching to the horizon along the shore. That was the blank canvas on which Dye created some of the most striking golf holes in North America, all from scratch.

The Straits is slated to play to 7,390 yards for the Ryder Cup with a par of 71. The layout normally plays as a par 72, but it is expected the tee will be moved up on No. 11, turning what is normally a par 5 into a par 4.

The stars of the show are the par 3s, each of the four perched directly above Lake Michigan. They range in length from 143 to 223 yards off the back tees and are positioned to take the most direct buffeting of wind off the lake. In combination, they offer one of the most stunning quartets of par 3s found anywhere, each a tribute to Dye’s imagination.

It was that level of creativity that led to the Straits ranking No. 8 on Golfweek’s Best Modern Courses list for layouts opened in or after 1960 in the United States. It also ranks as the top public-access course in Wisconsin and is the highest-ranked of Dye’s 18 courses that make the Modern Courses list. The Straits also caps a strong trifecta of Dye courses to host top events this year— the Players Championship is played at his TPC Sawgrass Stadium Course each year, and the PGA Championship was at his Kiawah Island Golf Resort Ocean Course in May.

Dye already had built Sawgrass’s Stadium Course (1981) and Kiawah’s Ocean Course (1991) before tackling Whistling Straits. He also had built two other tracks at Destination Kohler, the new resort helmed by plumbing magnate Herb Kohler in the factory town named for his family. The River Course and Meadow Valleys at Blackwolf Run, some nine miles south and inland of Whistling Straits and nearer the resort’s American Club, had kicked off Kohler’s relationship with Dye. When Kohler wanted to expand his resort’s golf amenities, Dye again got the nod to build the two courses at Whistling Straits.

Even before the first shovel struck ground at Whistling Straits, Kohler had big plans to host major events. And from the outset of their relationship, Kohler relished Dye’s determination to challenge the best players.

Whistling Straits, Ryder Cup
Whistling Straits, No. 7

“This one particular chap, he was an odd duck, but he had two courses in particular that were of interest,” Kohler told Golfweek a few years back. “One that had just been open to the public, it was the TPC at Sawgrass, the home course for the PGA Tour. And at least 20 different pros who had a chance to play it were extraordinarily upset, and they were making their feelings known to the local press. … It sort of fascinated me. What I liked about it was, he had this desire to get into the psyche of a pro and really befuddle him.

“This fellow, Pete Dye, took them right to the edge of embarrassment, and they didn’t like being embarrassed, but I enjoyed it.”

So Dye was hired to sculpt all those truckloads of sand into one of the most difficult and perplexing golf courses in the world, building for Kohler an American version of a wild Irish links course. Having a beautiful waterfront location but no great natural terrain with which to work, Dye set about the task with ample imagination and enormous financial support. The results are soaring dunes that drop from the western side of the layout toward the bluff and the lake, providing ample viewing spots for spectators while challenging the pros to pick the proper lines.

Finding the fairways is a must, even for these long-hitting superstars slated to appear in the Ryder Cup. This isn’t a normal Tour course where bomb-and-gouge strategies typically reward whichever player is closest to the green, rough be damned. There are just too many fescue-covered, uneven, sandy and generally bad-tempered lies off the fairways at the Straits to allow for easy recoveries.

“Players ask me, ‘Mike, what advice do you have for me playing the Straits Course?’ And I just say, ‘Hit it in the fairway,’ ” said O’Reilly, who began his career as a caddie at Blackwolf Run before Whistling Straits even opened. “That’s the most important shot, just keeping it in play off the tee. If you keep it in play off the tee and don’t get too overwhelmed with the visuals, you’re going to do just fine. …

“The severity of the bunkers and the dunes and the mounding, you’re going to find yourself in some goofy lies. And I don’t care how good you are, from there it’s going to be difficult to get it up around the green.”

The reward for keeping it in play could be plenty of birdie putts on relatively flattish greens for a top-tier professional event. It wouldn’t be right to describe the putting surfaces as easy, especially under the searing pressure of a Ryder Cup. But these greens don’t resemble those at Augusta National, for example, and its arduous putting challenges. Players can make their fair share of putts on the Straits, so in that way Dye first taketh away from the tees, then he giveth back on the greens.

Also able to give and take away is U.S. captain Steve Stricker, a Wisconsin native and 12-time winner on the PGA Tour. He and the PGA of America will oversee the course setup each day, and he has plenty of options to move tees and flagsticks to benefit his long-hitting American squad.

“Whistling Straits, one of the best things about it for hosting a large event and certainly a Ryder Cup is the flexibility,” O’Reilly said. “There are a lot of things you can do with the golf course. There are multiple tee boxes on every hole that make the opportunity for Captain Stricker to look at the hole and say, you know the wind direction will be this today, let’s do this.”

Prime examples of holes with strategic options include Nos. 13 and 14, both par 4s arriving at a key stretch of the back nine when matches often tilt in one team’s favor. Both holes appear too long on the scorecard to be reasonably reached off the tee—No. 13 is 404 yards, and 14 measures 401 on the card. But depending on wind direction and a player’s bravado, both greens might be within range of a driver.

No. 13 fairway slopes left to right and downhill for the last 125 yards or so, allowing a player to possibly feed a downwind tee shot onto the green. Stricker could play with the tee location to make it even more possible.

Then 14 takes the term dogleg to great extremes, as the fairway abruptly curves 300 yards off the tee. A series of bunkers guards the leftward and direct line to the green, requiring a carry of about 315 yards to fly the sand and possibly scoot a ball onto the green—not out of the realm of possibility for bombers such as Dustin Johnson, Bryson DeChambeau or Rory McIlroy. But a miss will find trouble, trouble or more trouble. Stricker has the option to make it even more enticing by moving the tee markers up just a few steps.

Whistling Straits, Ryder Cup
Whistling Straits, No. 14

“It’s a true risk-reward hole, a really good hole for a Ryder Cup,” O’Reilly said. “If (the players) keep it far enough left off the tee and do carry the bunkers, they can roll right onto the green and have a putt at eagle. If they miss just a little bit right of that, they’re going to pay a penalty.”

From there it’s a long par 4 at No. 15, a reachable par 5 at No. 16 if the wind cooperates, then one of the most scenic holes in the game. No. 17 is a 223-yard par 3 perched directly above the lake, with any tee shot left of the green likely cascading down the bluff into all sorts of double and triple bogeys. Keeping in true Straits fashion, the safer right side of the green is obscured by a mound of fescue and a pot bunker.

“It makes the entire green look smaller,” O’Reilly said. “You can’t see a good portion of the right side of the green, so again a little mind trick.”

It doesn’t get any easier from there. No. 18 is a somewhat bizarrely shaped, dogleg-left, 515-yard par 4 with a minefield of bunkers protecting the direct line off the tee. From the fairway, a creek fronts the green inside an amphitheater setting that should be electric during the Ryder Cup.

O’Reilly said many players will opt to hit a 3-wood up the right side to a relatively safe patch of fairway—that is almost always the right choice during stroke-play events, but it leaves a much longer second shot. However, this is the Ryder Cup and this is match play, so a long hitter might be more tempted to try the heroic, semi-blind, 315-yard carry over the sand to set up a short-iron approach to a demanding green that has four distinct lobes. It’s perfect as a match-play closer—an incredibly difficult, do-or-die finishing hole layered with risk and possible reward.

Just as Dye intended.

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Michael Thorbjornsen follows course record with Western Amateur medal; match play begins

Michael Thorbjornsen landed atop the bracket at the Western Amateur, considered one of the most grueling amateur tournaments of the summer.

Michael Thorbjornsen has put his name in the deep record books kept at Glen View Golf Club in Golf, Illinois. In the second round of the Western Amateur, the Stanford freshman fired a bogey-free 8-under 62 at Glen View. No one has scored better in the club’s 124-year history.

Thorbjornsen came back on Thursday with rounds of 70-67 and now is safely on to the 16-man bracket with a stroke-play medal around his neck.

The double-round days continue from here.

Thorbjornsen, of Wellesley, Massachusetts, landed at 13 under after 72 holes of stroke play in what is often considered one of the most grueling amateur golf tournaments of the summer. That put him one shot ahead of David Ford, a three-time AJGA Invitational winner last year, and Walker Cupper Pierceson Coody, the 2020 Western Amateur champion.

The names of the 16 men still standing after four rounds makes for a distinguished list. It also includes Sunnehanna Amateur champion Trent Phillips, a senior at Georgia, plus Coody’s Walker Cup teammate Ricky Castillo.

Western Amateur: Match-play bracket

Beware of Castillo, the Florida junior, as this tournament wears on. He was undefeated at the Walker Cup in May and has advanced to the semifinals in each of his past two starts at the Western.

Pepperdine’s Joe Highsmith also made the bracket, as did Gordon Sargent, an incoming Vanderbilt player who advanced to the quarterfinals of the U.S. Junior Amateur last week.

Four players tied at 6 under for the final two spots, and after a playoff, Johnny Keefer and Maxwell Moldovan claimed them. It’s a sweet bit of redemption for Moldovan, who recently won the Southern Amateur, after he found himself in the same situation at this tournament a year ago but failed to advance.

The Sweet 16 and quarterfinal rounds will be played on Friday with the semifinal and final rounds following on Saturday.

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Michelle Wie West receives sponsor invite to LPGA match play event at Shadow Creek

Michelle Wie West will compete in the Bank of Hope LPGA Match Play on a sponsor invite, which adds a little more intrigue to the event.

Before one shot is even struck, the new Bank of Hope LPGA Match Play event has already generated buzz. Fans have been hungry for this format. The women’s tour hasn’t had a match-play event on its schedule since 2017 when Lorena Ochoa hosted a tournament in Mexico City that wasn’t even televised.

This one will be televised – live for five days on Golf Channel starting next Wednesday – and the venue, Shadow Creek, certainly draws some interest. The Tom Fazio design hosted The Match: Tiger vs. Phil in 2018 and the PGA Tour’s CJ CUP, won by Jason Kokrak last October.

Now add sponsor invites to the intrigue. Michelle Wie West and Alison Lee, both part of MGM’s Golf Ambassador program, have been offered spots in the 64-player field.

This will give Wie West another opportunity to get tournament-ready before her hometown U.S. Women’s Open at Olympic Club. Wie West has made three starts on the LPGA since returning to the tour after maternity leave, her last coming in late April at the Hugel-Air Premia LA Open. She has missed the cut in all three tournaments.

Other marquee names in the field include World No. 1 Jin Young Ko, Inbee Park, Patty Tavatanakit, Ariya Jutanugarn, Danielle Kang, Sei Young Kim, Stacy Lewis, Sophia Popov and Brooke Henderson.

Notables who didn’t sign up include: Nelly and Jessica Korda, Lexi Thompson and Lydia Ko.

There’s a spot left open for the winner of this week’s Pure Silk Championship. Should that player already be in the field, the first alternate is Ayako Uehara.

The field will be divided into 16 groups of four players with three days of round-robin matches deciding the final 16-player bracket. From there, a series of single-elimination matches will determine Sunday’s championship match.

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Auburn women defeat Mississippi State for first SEC title since 2012

Auburn won its first SEC title in women’s golf since 2012 by overcoming Mississippi State in a thrilling final match.

Auburn’s women might as well have been toeing the line for wind sprints the way they raced from the 16th hole at Greystone Golf Club in Birmingham, Alabama, on Sunday to the 18th hole. The squad of navy-and-orange-clad players were split between two key holes in the final minutes of the SEC Championship, and as soon as Mychael O’Berry’s victory over Mississippi State’s Blair Stockett was official, it was time to meet up and celebrate.

Auburn had won the SEC title, something the Tigers hadn’t done since 2012. This is the their 10th league title in the 40-year history of SEC women’s golf.

Auburn arguably won the day on the greens, getting off to a bit of a slow start against Mississippi State but slowly flipping each match to the point that the official score was 5-0-0.

Scores: SEC Championship final

Anything can happen in match play, as the final match indicated. LSU and South Carolina, ranked Nos. 6 and 1, respectively, in the Golfweek/Sagarin Rankings, distanced themselves over three rounds of stroke play, but South Carolina immediately fell to Alabama, ranked No. 28 in the first round of match play.

Mississippi State, ranked No. 43 by Golfweek, authored a heroic win over LSU, 3-1-1, in the semifinals.

As for Auburn, ranked No. 12, the Tigers played three rounds of stroke play in 25 under, finishing 21 shots behind stroke-play medalist LSU but taking the No. 3 seed into match play. The team knocked off Vanderbilt in the quarterfinals, 3-1-1, after getting lopsided wins out of Megan Schofill (5 and 4) in the lead-off spot and O’Berry (7 and 6) in the fourth spot.

In the semifinals, the Tigers took down Alabama, 3-1-1.

Kaleigh Telfer, a South African who recently finished T22 at the Augusta National Women’s Amateur, put Auburn’s first point on the board in the championship match despite trailing Abby Daniel for much of the back nine. Telfer won Nos. 16 and 18 to secure the first point.

Schofill followed, taking a point against Ashley Gilliam, one of Mississippi State’s marquee players, on the 18th hole.

Amid the celebrations, head coach Melissa Luellen referenced maturity in ending a long week with the conference title.

“Just emotional management because they’re a very mature group, very experienced, they love match play. They eat it up,” she told the SEC Network. “They just know when they’re down it’s OK and if they’re up, just keep pressing.”

Longtime Florida men’s golf coach Buddy Alexander has a rooting interesting in Auburn women’s golf, considering his wife Joan is the team’s director of operations. He texted Luellen a message for her players on Saturday night: Stay positive.

“Championship rings aren’t easy to come by, I have many,” Luellen said in repeating Alexander’s words. “The formula is to be positive, breathe, and stay in the moment.”

Auburn did it until the end.

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Golfweek 2021 Senior Tournament series includes 6-tournament schedule

Senior competitive golf is bigger and better than ever! The US Golf Association has granted fifteen exemptions into the US Senior Amateur for the top ranked players in the WAGR rankings which can be found HERE. Golfweek is part of that ranking …

Senior competitive golf is bigger and better than ever! The US Golf Association has granted fifteen exemptions into the US Senior Amateur for the top ranked players in the WAGR rankings which can be found HERE. Golfweek is part of that ranking system and is certified by WAGR through its Senior National Rankings found HERE. Golfweek has expanded its Elite Senior Amateur Tournament Series giving players the ability to qualify for the US Senior Amateur through exemption. The 6-tournament lineup includes longtime Golfweek stops as well as several new venues.

All Golfweek tournaments are 54-hole tournaments with one being a three-day Senior National Match Play Championship.

Click the tournament name for more information and to register-

GOLFWEEK 2021 ELITE SENIOR AMATEUR TOURNAMENT SERIES

April 10-12: The Golfweek Senior Amateur, PGA West, La Quinta, CA, playing both the Pete Dye Stadium and the Nicklaus Tournament course.

July 7-9: The US Super Senior, Legends, & Super Legends National Championship. Golf Club of Georgia, Alpharetta, GA, the Lakeside Course

August 11-13: The Golfweek Senior National Match Play, Talamore Golf Resort, Southern Pines, NC, The New Course at Talamore

October 5-7: The Golfweek Senior Showdown, Reflection Bay, Henderson, NV, The Nicklaus Course

October 30-November 1: The Golfweek Challenge Cup, venue TBD in FL

Dec 1-3: The Golfweek TOC, The Forest Country Club, Ft Myers, FL, The Bear Course,

2021 Golfweek Senior National Match Play – Talamore Golf Resort

Talamore is where Scotland and the NC Sandhills collide! With 12 strategically placed sod-wall bunkers, The New Course at Talamore Resort is the only course in the Village of Pinehurst/Southern Pines area with multiple sod-wall bunkers. Following …

Talamore is where Scotland and the NC Sandhills collide! With 12 strategically placed sod-wall bunkers, The New Course at Talamore Resort is the only course in the Village of Pinehurst/Southern Pines area with multiple sod-wall bunkers. Following its recent restoration, the vision of legendary golf course architect, Reese Jones, comes back to life. Talamore is one of the premier courses in the Pinehurst area and will be the perfect venue for Golfweek’s Seventh Annual Senior National Match Play!

The Golfweek Senior National Match-Play Championship consists of four separate brackets, senior (age 55-64), super-senior (age 65-69), legends (age 74) and super-legends (75+). Over the course of three days, players in each bracket will be whittled to one Senior National Match-Play champion in each division. Unlike other match play tournaments, The Golfweek Senior National Match Play is not a one loss and done tournament. As players are eliminated from match-play they will enter a consolation stroke-play competition using the stableford scoring system where national ranking points will also be awarded. This is a nationally ranked senior tournament by Golfweek / USA Today Sports, and, is certified by the USGA and R&A as a World Amateur Golf Ranking counting tournament!

Obscure rule surfaces on consecutive holes in WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play semifinals

A quirky match play rule surfaced on consecutive holes at the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play when Scottie Scheffler found the water twice.

AUSTIN, Texas — As Matt Kuchar lined up his putt on the 12th hole during Sunday’s semifinal match at the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play he did so under an odd scenario, knowing that his opponent was standing well behind him — still lining up a wedge.

The reason was a quirky match play rule that surfaced at Austin Country Club when Scottie Scheffler put his second shot into the water on the par-5 12th hole. Kuchar had already hit his second shot and was sitting on the front of the green.

Under the rules of match play, however, Scheffler’s ball is considered closer to the hole because of where it was resting. That meant Kuchar had to putt while Scheffler stood 77 yards from the pin with a wedge in hand.

Golfweek’s rules expert, Ron Gaines, said this is a scenario that rarely presents itself.

“It’s an oddball, for sure,” Gaines said. “But this is determined by where the ball comes to rest, not where it crosses the margin of the penalty. Think of it as a penalty without water. You might go up and see if you can play it. Technically, Kuchar is farther away, because it’s where the ball is resting, not where they’re going to play it from.”

Scheffler was 2 up at the time, but lost the hole and moved on to the risk/reward par-4 13th.

Incredibly, the exact same scenario played out again as Scheffler’s drive landed just shy of the green in the water hazard.

Kuchar was now 90 yards from the flag and Scheffler stood well behind him, waiting to play from 177 yards.

Kuchar pulled the match all square after the peculiar two-hole stretch.

Nick Faldo said on the Golf Channel broadcast to rules official Steve Rintoul that he was unfamiliar with the rule.

“I’ve got Paul Azinger in the tower, we’ve been match players now for 40 years and didn’t even know this was a match play rule, and considering we’ve been calling the match play all these years, this is the first time I’ve experienced this kind of situation,” Faldo said.

The falls under USGA rule 6.4: Order of Play When Playing Hole.
Under the rules, had Scheffler played his shot first, Kuchar would have had the option to cancel the stroke. In other words, if Scheffler put his ball in tight to the flag, Kuchar could have nullified the shot.

The rule states:

In match play, the order of play is fundamental; if a player plays out of turn, the opponent may cancel that stroke and make the player play again.

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Angus Flanagan earns Western Am stroke-play medal; bracket set at Crooked Stick

Angus Flanagan holed a 30-foot birdie on his last hole at Crooked Stick Golf Club in Carmel, Indiana, to win Western Amateur medalist honors.

Rainy conditions on the first of three potential 36-hole days at the Western Amateur might have made all the difference for Angus Flanagan. The Minnesota senior grew up in England. Rain clearly isn’t an issue.

Flanagan holed a 30-footer for birdie on his 72nd hole Thursday evening at Crooked Stick Golf Club in Carmel, Indiana, to wrap up Western Amateur medalist honors. Now the format switches to match play. Beginning Friday morning, there will be four rounds of it before a champion is determined on Saturday afternoon.

It was a dramatic finish for Flanagan, who used that birdie to put the finishing touch on a final-round 66 and reach 11 under for 72 holes.


Scoring: Western Amateur


Flanagan, who won a share of the Big Ten individual title in 2019, played the 3M Open on the PGA Tour last week. He earned his invite into the event by winning the Minnesota State Open on July 9 with a course-record, final-round 64 at Royal Golf Club in Lake Elmo. His name is certainly starting to make the rounds.

Seven players tied for the 16th position at even par, forcing a playoff to determine the sole player who would move on – and face Flanagan on Friday morning. Ultimately North Carolina’s Austin Hitt earned that honor. He outlasted an impressive crew of opponents in the playoff, including 2018 Western Amateur champion Cole Hammer along with Texas player Travis Vick, Pepperdine’s William Mouw and incoming Ohio State freshman Maxwell Moldovan.

Three of last year’s Sweet 16 are on the bracket again: Ricky Castillo, Turk Pettit and Davis Thompson, the latter being the returning Western Am medalist.

Among the marquee match-ups for Friday morning is defending U.S. Amateur champion Andy Ogletree against LSU’s Trey Winstead, who already made a run at both the North & South title and the Sunnehanna title. Behind them, Castillo – who made it to the semifinals at this event last year – takes on Vanderbilt’s Harrison Ott.

The lower bracket is topped by Sam Bennett, stroke-play runner-up and a Texas A&M junior, versus Connor Creasy, who just completed his senior year at the University of Georgia.

German Matthias Schmid, a Louisville player who won the 2019 European Amateur, takes on George Duangmanee, an incoming Virginia freshman, in the first round. Interestingly, there is another junior player on the bracket, too. Joseph Pagdin, No. 2 in the Golfweek Junior Rankings, will meet Thompson in the final match of the morning.

Oklahoma’s Quade Cummins was among those who barely missed the match-play cut along with Oklahoma State’s Austin Eckroat and recent Sunnehanna Amateur champion Preston Summerhays.

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Beauty of match play on display at Gil Hanse’s Ohoopee

COBBTOWN, Ga. – In December the Presidents Cup was played at Royal Melbourne in Australia, giving golf fans a chance to see the game’s best compete on one of the game’s great courses. It also was a chance to experience the beauty of match play. …

COBBTOWN, Ga. – In December the Presidents Cup was played at Royal Melbourne in Australia, giving golf fans a chance to see the game’s best compete on one of the game’s great courses. It also was a chance to experience the beauty of match play. 

 “Match play is a completely different game. The focus shifts from beating the course to beating your opponent. Different dynamic,” Conrad Ray, Stanford’s director of men’s golf, told me recently.

Changing that dynamic makes the golf more personal. Match play adds layers of strategy and psychology to a round, and it brings out a wider range of emotions. All of it equals a heightened experience for players and fans alike.

Match play can yield thrilling and compelling golf on almost any stage (i.e. Hazeltine and Medinah), but the opportunity for excitement, creative shotmaking, risk-taking and disaster is far more likely at architectural masterpieces such as Royal Melbourne.

So what makes a great match play hole or course?

While that could be debated forever, the answer that seems to be consistent from players, caddies, designers and fans is options. 

Giving players options requires them to think and execute. When you add in the head-to-head element of match play, the thinking becomes more complex. Providing options also leads to more aggressive play. Knowing that making an 8 only costs you one hole shifts the risk vs. reward calculation for players.

Firm and fast conditions add to the intrigue. Giving players the choice to use the ground contours requires much greater thought as different clubs, trajectories and spins are factored in. Courses that are wider, play firm and fast, and feature strategic hazards offer the best match play venues. 

Former Aussie tour player and course designer Michael Clayton believes the 10th hole at Royal Melbourne West (No. 6 for the Presidents Cup) is a prime example. Players can lay up in the wide fairway or try to drive the green by carrying a deep bunker. High risk and high reward.

Royal Melbourne proved to be an epic Presidents Cup venue because it asks interesting questions and allows for players to answer in a variety of ways. It makes you wonder if it was specifically designed for match play? While we may never get a definitive answer to that question, we now know what such a course would look like if it were built today.

No. 5 at Ohoopee Match Club (Courtesy of Ohoopee Match Club)

More than 9,000 miles from Royal Melbourne in rural southeast Georgia sits the Ohoopee Match Club, a course that was specifically designed for match play.

The course in Cobbtown was developed by Michael Walrath, a New York businessman, and crafted by Gil Hanse, Jim Wagner and their crew of “Cavemen,” the amicable nickname given to the team’s shapers who handcraft features. Ohoopee opened in 2018 and already has garnered numerous awards and recognition.

The club sits on 3,000-plus acres of sand-based savannas and woodlands with the course radiating out from a collection of buildings overlooking a lake. Ohoopee offers first-class amenities and service but does so in a very casual and relaxed way. Spending a few days at OMC feels more like visiting family than it does a prestigious club. Music plays while players warm up on the range, a fire burns outside on the porch, guests toss bean bags while watching their friends finish on 18 and members serve as bartenders when the staff leaves for the night. Members and guests can stay in tastefully appointed cottages or in “the burrows” – what could be described as a trendy version of a wine cellar dorm. 

The course gently weaves through different landscapes in a way that you typically only see the hole you are on. The layout is comprised of 22 holes, which the club used to make two distinctly different courses for morning and afternoon play. The Whiskey Routing, played in the afternoon and featuring a community whiskey bottle, utilizes 14 of the holes from the championship course, but often at a different angle and shorter length. It also incorporates four alternate holes dubbed the A, B, C and D holes. 

What makes the design work so well for match play is the variety of the holes and the choices they provide the player. There is ample room off the tee, but usually an advantage can be seized from a particular spot. The firm and fast conditions require players to consider the ground contours that will help some shots nestle to the hole while rejecting others. 

Like Royal Melbourne, OMC asks interesting questions and allows players to answer them in different ways. 

Gil Hanse on Ohoopee

At a recent gathering of golf architects at Ohoopee Match Club, I sat down with Hanse and asked about the process of designing a course for match play.

JB: How did the concept of a match play course come about?

GH: It was Michael’s idea, Michael Walrath the owner. He had reached out to us about a different site, but that didn’t work very well for golf and we were familiar with this property and turned him onto the site.

Gil Hanse (Darren Carroll/Getty Images for the PGA of America)

JB: With match play as a design objective, what were some ideas that you thought about trying to incorporate into the design?

GH: The first thing that came to mind was the finishing stretch. How do we make it a compelling finish for matches? How do we sequence the golf holes to impact the way matches might be carried out? And then the thought process of more of a heroic school of architecture approach, where you’ve got a lot of big risk, big reward.

JB: Did your mindset change at all when it came to designing the holes or the features?

GH: Here we were able to build green complexes where occasionally we focused on a particular hole location. Normally we try to build greens that are based on slope and fit into their surroundings. Here we could do that, but also have a more acute focus on specific hole locations for a match and build green complexes around that. Giving players the choice to go big or go home depending on where they were in the match.

JB: How did the 22-hole course with morning and afternoon routing come about?

GH: We had a friend out walking when we were just getting started, and he felt the routing might be too long of a walk for 36 holes. So I started looking at ways for a shorter afternoon routing and originally thought about adding some par-3 holes after the first hole, and then we talked about adding some holes out at the far end into the prairie. Jim Wagner ultimately came up with the routing and how it actually works. 

ACC Championship to be decided by match play beginning this spring

The ACC has decided to incorporate match play into its men’s and women’s league championships beginning this spring.

A decade after match play debuted in the 2009 NCAA Championship, the format continues to spread into conference championships. The ACC has decided to incorporate match play into its league championship beginning this spring.

The format change was approved last year and goes into effect for both the men’s and women’s ACC Championships in 2020. The championship will now feature 54 holes of stroke play before a cut to the top four teams, who move on to match play.

The men’s championship will be played April 17-20 at Old North State Club in New London, North Carolina. The women’s championship will take place April 22-26 at the Reserve Golf Club in Pawley’s Island, South Carolina.

Interestingly, last year’s NCAA Women’s Championship (the fifth decided by match play) featured an all-ACC final between Duke and Wake Forest. Duke ultimately won, claiming its seventh program championship but its first in the match-play era.

Wake Forest had won the conference title a month earlier.

“I’m excited about the format of ACC being match play,” Wake Forest women’s head coach Kim Lewellen said. “Not only do I think it is great practice for our NCAA Championship, for both players and coaches, but provides a phenomenal experience for spectators.”

North Carolina men’s head coach Andrew DiBitetto had similar thoughts on the upcoming conference format change, particularly in terms of the postseason preparation it might offer.

“I think this is an exciting change for our ACC Championship,” he said. “Bringing match play to the event allows us to better align with how our national champion is crowned. Also, cuts in college golf are rare. For the most part, we only see them at regionals and at the national championship.

“I believe both elements, the match play and the cut, gives the student-athletes in our conference the opportunity to be better prepared for NCAAs. When you combine the new format with an ACC that is extremely talented and deep in men’s golf, I think we are getting ready to create a highly competitive, intense and pressure-packed championship.”

The ACC joins a short but distinguished list of conferences that have changed to a match-play format in the recent past. On the men’s side, the Sun Belt Conference, Conference USA and the SEC use the format while only the SEC determines its winner by match play on the women’s side.

On the men’s side at least, the ACC Championship has landed some prestigious venues for the next four years, including Capital City Club (Crabapple Course) in Atlanta, Georgia for 2021; The Clubs by Joe (Shark’s Tooth Course) in Panama City, Florida in 2022; The Country Club of North Carolina (Dogwood Course) in Pinehurst, North Carolina in 2023 and Charlotte Country Club in Charlotte, North Carolina in 2024.

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