2023 U.S. Open: A tight and tiny 15th hole leads our look at LACC’s spectrum of par 3s

An 80-yard par 3 in the U.S. Open at LACC? Count on it.

USGA officials always say they want to test every part of a player’s game at the U.S. Open. John Bodenhamer, the ruling body’s chief championships officer, said he wants to see players have to hit it high, low, left to right and right to left – get every club in the bag dirty. Players better have every shot in the bag, as the old cliché goes.

But a lob wedge off a tee? That’s a new one. And that option likely will come into play at least once this week at Los Angeles Country Club’s North Course, as the USGA might set up the par-3 15th around 80 yards long – the shortest par 3 in modern U.S. Open history.

The 15th is officially listed as 124 yards long, but the USGA utilized a forward tee and set it up at 78 yards for the Saturday singles matches in the 2017 Walker Cup, the biennial competition between a team of amateurs from the U.S. and another from Great Britain and Ireland. The USGA hasn’t confirmed it will set the 15th at a similar length this week, but it’s a safe bet – keep an eye on Saturday’s hole locations sheet.

In that Walker Cup, players recorded four birdies, nine pars and one bogey on the shortened 15th hole. Some players aimed left of the flag to take advantage of a mound in the green that can help stop a ball, while others took direct aim at the cup. American Will Zalatoris missed the green but made par from one of two large bunkers guarding that sliver of putting surface.

The StrackaLine heat map for the 15th green at Los Angeles Country Club’s North Course (courtesy of StrackaLine)

Some facts: The green features a long tongue that sticks out toward the front right. That area is only eight paces across, and the firm and bouncy putting surface is tilted as much as 3 degrees from left to right. It’s a tiny target, forcing players to control spin as well as distance.

Which brings us back to hitting lob wedge off a tee. It’s not a shot the pros practice much, if ever. Sounds easy – every shot is supposed to be simpler off a tee, right? That’s kind of the point of a tee. But the extremely lofted face of a lob or sand wedge can easily slide under a ball on a tee, sometimes making precise contact more difficult. Instead of smashing down on a lofted wedge, as pros typically do so well, there’s a chance of catching the ball one or two grooves too high on the face and watching it flutter off without much control.

Count on some players just hitting the tee shot from the ground, as they normally would with a lofted wedge. Others might try the tee to gain clean contact to produce the most spin.

“I remember like you almost had to practice teeing up with a 60-degree lob wedge like an inch off the ground, which you never do, and just trying to hit it perfect, because you had to with height, with spin,” two-time major champion Collin Morikawa, who played in that 2017 Walker Cup, said Tuesday at LACC. “It’s only going to be that much more important this week if they do move it up. I’m sure they will.

“So, yeah, you have like a yard and a half to land it if you want to hit a good shot. If not, you’ve got to play left and hopefully hit a good putt. Yeah, it’s frustrating because you can hit an okay shot and not get rewarded at all. Especially out here, you can’t land it in the rough. It’s not going to bounce out. You’ve got to land it in the right spot. I just remember it was a very tough shot. I pulled it off, and I think I still had like 20 feet for birdie.”

It’s a very different shot on a different kind of U.S. Open course. LACC is wider than typical U.S. Open setups, and balls will be bouncing everywhere. That’s particularly true on the par 3s, two of which make up for any length the 15th doesn’t need – the seventh is listed on the card as being 284 yards and can play even longer, and the 11th is on the card at 290 yards.

Check out the details on each of the five par 3s in play this week below. (The official yardage for the U.S. Open is listed in the header for each hole. The StrackaLine maps show different yardages for several holes, referring to the normal setup for member’s play.)

[gambcom-standard rankid=”3413″ ]

Bay Hill’s par 3s might be the toughest on Tour (and they have a huge impact on the Arnold Palmer Invitational)

Pros in the Arnold Palmer Invitational must survive what was in 2022 the most difficult set of par 3s on Tour, minus the majors.

Gary Woodland, winner of the 2019 U.S. Open, has some advice for players in the Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by Mastercard: Watch your step on the par 3s at Bay Hill Club & Lodge. 

In last year’s event Woodland arrived at the downhill, over-the-water par-3 17th on Sunday with a one-shot lead at 6 under par for the week, having just made eagle on the par-5 16th. One more good swing, one more good result, and Woodland would have a chance play the famed par-4 18th with a lead in pursuit of his first title at Bay Hill. 

Things didn’t work out. Woodland’s 8-iron approach to the back-right hole location – a small target tucked between sand, water and rough – fell short of the green, clearing the pond but plugging into the front bunker. It took him two swipes to get out of the sand, and the ensuing double bogey left him a shot behind eventual winner Scottie Scheffler. A following bogey on 18 added salt to the wound, dropping him to a tie for fifth place. 

It was a painful example of how tough the par 3s play at Bay Hill. The four holes – Nos. 2, 7, 14 and 17 – averaged the highest score over par among any set of pars 3s on the PGA Tour in the 2021-22 season in an official stroke-play individual event, not counting major championships. The Bay Hill quartet played to an average over-par score of 3.193 for the week, proving it’s not always the longest holes that trip up the best players in the world, but sometimes the shortest. 

“Most of the time, the par 3s out here (on the PGA Tour), you’re trying to attack, trying to make some birdies,” Woodland said. 

But not at Bay Hill. 

“You really should play to the middle of the green on all four of them,” said the four-time PGA Tour winner. “… No. 2, when you’re trying to run away with par. No. 17, when you’re trying to run away with par.”

Bay Hill
Gary Woodland took two shots to escape a buried lie in the bunker at the front of the 17th green in the final round of the 2022 Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill Club & Lodge in Orlando. (Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

The worst part for Woodland last year? He struck his tee shot on No. 17 exactly as he planned toward a more generous area of the green left of the flag. He said he isn’t sure if his ball was hit by a gust of wind or what, but there was plenty of frustration in coming up short. 

Woodland wasn’t the only player in contention to lose traction Sunday on the 17th. Viktor Hovland was 5 under par for the week – which would have earned him a spot in a playoff – when he walked up the hill from the 16th green to the 17th tee. Four shots later, he was one behind. The Norwegian spoke later about how much “this one stings” after that bogey on 17 knocked him into a tie for second place.

“It’s just a brutal hole,” Woodland said. “You know where that pin’s gonna be: back right. They move the tee up and they kind of tempt you a little bit.”

As so often is the case, temptation leads to folly. Especially on the par 3s at Bay Hill. The layout is famous for its closing par-4 18th, with its green wrapped around a pond. The par-5 sixth has gained notoriety in recent years as well, with ever-longer players attempting eye-popping tee shots across the lake around which the hole is wrapped. But smart pros know to be wary of the one-shotters. 

Looking again at last year’s event, it’s clear how important the par 3s are for players packed atop a tight leaderboard. Winner Scheffler played the par 3s for the week in 48 shots, which was even par in 16 attempts. Woodland required 50 total shots, playing them in 2 over, and he finished two shots back in the end. Tyrrell Hatton, who also finished tied for second and one shot behind Scheffler, required 51 total strokes on the par 3s, playing them 3 over par for the week. And Hovland took 52 shots in all on the par 3s, playing them 4 over for the week. Each of those strokes mattered dearly on the final leaderboard. 

That theme extended into the final round. Scheffler was 1 under on the par 3s Sunday, making birdie on No. 2 and parring the others. Hovland and Hatton were one shot worse, with both players even on the par 3s in the final round. Woodland played the pars 3s that day in 2 over par, with three pars and that double bogey on 17. 

[afflinkbutton text=”Book your trip to Bay Hill today” link=”https://www.golfbreaks.com/en-us/vacations/orlando/arnold-palmers-bay-hill-club-lodge/arnold-palmer-bay-hill-course/?cid=999740052&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=golfweek&utm_campaign=pgat_tournament_courses_q3_22_gw”]

Five things on No. 16 at TPC Scottsdale: The details, the party and more

If you’re not one to hush up for golf, check out five thoughts on the 16th at TPC Scottsdale’s Stadium Course.

A party. A par-3. The loudest scene in golf. A chance to cut loose and show a very different side of golf, where pros can interact with fans in ways not seen anywhere else. A chance to elicit wild cheers, or maybe lose a tournament to the sound of boos late in the final round.

Called the Coliseum, No. 16 at TPC Scottsdale’s Stadium Course is many things to different people. What the atmosphere is most of all, especially to those who attend, is unforgettable ­­­– assuming they haven’t been overserved.

Dubbed the People’s Open, the WM Phoenix Open – rebranded this year to condense Waste Management to WM ­– has been played at the Stadium Course since 1987. And it has become for many the can’t-miss event on the PGA Tour calendar.

A group of men dressed like Richard Simmons pose in the birds nest at No. 16 during the 2020 Waste Management Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale. (Nicole Neri/The Republic)

And the 16th is the star of a show that can host more than 200,000 fans in a day. The event no longer offers up statistics on fan attendance since the 2019 event, but on Saturday in 2018, more than 216,000 fans attended the event.

Not to be lost in all the noise and revelry is that the Thunderbirds, the charitable organization that operates the event, has raised more than $160 million and counting for Arizona charities – No. 16 is great and all, but the numbers 1 and 6 look even better when followed by all those zeroes, in this case.

A drone view of the 16th hole at TPC Scottsdale’s Stadium Course in 2020 (Golfweek files)

Also worth noting: The Stadium Course, designed by Tom Weiskopf and Jay Morrish and opened in 1986, ranks No. 5 in Arizona on Golfweek’s Best Courses You Can Play list for public-access layouts. It will play at 7,261 yards with a par of 71. And with those details taken care of, check out several of the more-interesting themes of No. 16 – and what comes after.

The Hay short course at Pebble Beach is fun, fast and a blueprint for the rest of the country

Tiger Woods’ design of The Hay could serve as a blueprint for how to introduce golf across the country with a small, sustainable footprint.

Over the past 15 years, numerous high-profile short courses have popped up around the country. Examples include Bandon Preserve at Bandon Dunes Golf Resort (13 holes), The Cradle at Pinehurst (nine holes) and The Sandbox at Sand Valley (17 holes), each a short course within a popular multi-course golf destination. Each has a well-regarded designer and each serves to keep resort guests on property.

Typically full of par 3s, they are fun, bold, quick and an ideal complement to the big courses. At the end of the day, the primary users are men on buddy trips.

Pebble Beach has had a short course for more than 50 years. However, the design and marketing of the former Peter Hay Golf Course never provided that ideal complement to the big courses at Pebble Beach Resort, and guests rarely added it to their golf itinerary.

That has changed.

After a complete reimagining of the site by Tiger Woods, The Hay opened last Friday. The new layout is bold and honors the history of Pebble Beach. Architecture aficionados will recognize the Biarritz, the thumbprint and the replica of the seventh hole at Pebble Beach Golf Links. Novices will notice you can putt off the tee on many holes.

[vertical-gallery id=778094904]

Like Bandon Preserve, The Cradle and The Sandbox, The Hay is fun, quick and beautiful. It is relaxed (eightsomes allowed) and communal, with plenty of crosstalk from hole to hole and group to group. Simply put, it provides an ideal complement to the other resort offerings.

The Hay is different from the others in size. Sitting on roughly eight acres, the holes are short. Very short. The longest is 100 yards, with four holes at 61 yards or shorter. And no one cares. Golfers know it is different and meant for fun.

While success will be determined over time, the early returns are noteworthy.

Three days after opening, the tee sheet is full morning through evening. Golfers playing Pebble, Spyglass Hill or Spanish Bay are adding a stroll around The Hay before or after their rounds. In less than a week, the tees have been moved to mats due to the number of divots. And with a $65 green fee for resort guests, it doesn’t break the bank.

Which begs the question: If these courses work at resorts, why can’t they work in more urban and suburban locations?

Wouldn’t it be great if the people playing were kids? Or local residents who bike over? Wouldn’t it be great to run out with the family for a summer loop after dinner?

Wouldn’t it be great to have a lunch meeting with sticks in hand? A round only takes 45 minutes.

At eight acres, the development costs are reasonable, and the impact could be significant.

Think about your nearest big city or even a small town. Odds are there is an underperforming golf course or public park where a short course could be a wonderful community asset. A place where kids could learn to play. A place that connects residents of different backgrounds.

This week Golfweek reported that the PGA Tour will offer $40 million in bonus money to players who move the needle. Think what that $40 million could do for communities across the country? A lot more than it will do for 10 players who are already multi-millionaires.

The USGA has long used the slogan For The Good of the Game. Just think if the governing body used its resources to help fund short courses in towns across America.

Think about the golf manufacturers. How cool would it be to show up at courses like these knowing you didn’t need to have clubs or balls because they were provided?

Golf has gained a lot during COVID-19, with the number of rounds played in the U.S. soaring as people search for outdoor recreation. I’m hopeful the powers that be in golf will seize this opportunity to invest in future generations of golfers. A great way to do it would be taking courses like The Hay to cities and towns across America.

The ultimate par-3 contest: A hole-by-hole look at the toughest on Tour

Imagine a golf course created from the most difficult par-3 holes on the PGA Tour.

While the Masters has its version of a Par 3 Contest, imagine taking that concept and instead of cutting holes down to size, the course is created from the most difficult par-3 challenges on Tour.

It would be the Ultimate Par 3 Contest.

Based on the 2019 scoring averages, we can create such a course – for the most part – where each hole holds top rank as the toughest to break par on for PGA Tour professionals.

You’d better bring all of your clubs because a few of these might not be reachable with that trusty 3-iron!