U.S. Women’s Open will put accuracy at premium on renovated Pine Needles course

Pine Needles was designed by legendary golf architect Donald Ross and was restored in 2017 by Kyle Franz.

You can’t judge a book by its cover, but you can judge a golf course by its champions.

That means Pine Needles Lodge & Golf Club in Southern Pines can hold its own in any discussion about great golf courses.

Pine Needles is preparing to host its fourth U.S. Women’s Open on June 2-5. It is a record number of times the USGA has brought the Women’s Open to one course.

The previous three winners are Hall of Famers Annika Sorenstam in 1996, Karrie Webb in 2001 and future Hall of Famer Cristie Kerr in 2007.

“We’ve been very fortunate,” said Pine Needles president Kelly Miller. “The course has produced some great champions. I think it’s a tribute to Donald Ross (the designer), the strategy, the shot integrity and everything else.”

Miller, 63, is the son-in-law of the late Peggy Kirk Bell and her husband Warren ‘Bullet’ Bell, who purchased the course in 1953.

Pine Needles will be hosting the Women’s Open for the first time in 15 years. It underwent a restoration in 2017 under the guidance of Kyle Franz that changed the grass on the greens. He also rebuilt the bunkers and added more in strategic locations.  The final touch was removing the rough and replacing it with wiregrass and sandy areas to give the course a more rugged look.

U.S. WOMEN’S OPEN: Thursday first-round tee times, TV/streaming info

“The course is a lot different than it was in the previous Opens,” Miller said. “No. 1 is the Bermuda greens which are much firmer and have a lot more contouring since the restoration. The Open at Olympic Club last year had very deep rough and here we don’t have virtually any rough. We have wiregrass but the course will play very wide and, hopefully, very fast. Whoever wins here will have to be a great thinker and be able to execute their shots.”

Sorenstam vs. next generation

Annika Sorenstam and David Esch pose with a trophy during the U.S. Women’s Open at Pine Needles in North Carolina. Mandatory Credit: J.D. Cuban /Allsport

Sorenstam is a 10-time major winner with three U.S. Open titles. She retired in 2008 but returned to competition last year and won the U.S. Senior Women’s Open after she turned 50. That qualified her to play at Pine Needles this year. She won by six shots here in 1996 with an 8-under score.

“The course is challenging but it’s fair,” she said. “It has a variety of holes and it may look straightforward but it’s not as wide open as you think. You have to have accuracy on top of distance.”

Sorenstam will be competing against players half her age or younger and distance is a concern for her. In her heyday, she carried her driver 250 yards. Now she hits it 230.

“That’s a two-club difference,” she said. “I feel that many of today’s players can reach the par 5s in two but that will be hard for me. I want to just play my game, not get caught up in the moment and enjoy it.”

Course superintendent David Fruchte has been at Pine Needles for 32 years and believes accuracy could be more important than distance in winning the 77th U.S. Women’s Open.

“The most challenging thing for the women will be their second shots coming into the greens,” he said. “These Bermuda greens seem to be firmer than what we had before with bentgrass. Coming in at the right angle and getting the ball to stop will be the key.”

Surprisingly, the course will play slightly shorter than it did in 2007. It is still a par 71 but the yardage this year is 6,638 yards compared to 6,664 in 2007.

Advances in ball and club technology have helped players hit the ball farther than 15 years ago, forcing most courses to get longer, not shorter. It is a testament to the strategy required to score well at Pine Needles.

“The biggest thing is we got rid of the rough and brought in a lot of wiregrass which can make it play tougher,” Fruchte said. “There could be some difficult lies. We have also narrowed the fairways. Before we had 28 to 32-yard wide fairways and three inches of rough. It’s a Donald Ross golf course that stands up to the test of time. We’ll see how it stands up from 2007 to now.”

Cathedrals of the game

The Flag Raising on the first tee before the start of the first round of the 2019 U.S. Senior Women’s Open at Pine Needles Lodge & Golf Club in Southern Pines, N.C. on Thursday, May 16, 2019. (Copyright USGA/Chris Keane)

John Bodenhamer, the chief championships officer, said the USGA includes Pine Needles on a list of courses it calls “cathedrals of the game.” Other courses on that list include future U.S. Women’s Open sites such as Pebble Beach, Riviera, Inverness, Oakmont and Pinehurst.

“We are going to the game’s greatest places,” Bodenhamer said. “It’s the litmus test the USGA uses for the Women’s Open. It’s just an amazing lineup that we are proud of.”

But Pine Needles will rank at the top of the list by hosting its fourth national women’s golf championship.

“We like to think of Pine Needles as an incredibly special place,” he said. “There is a reason this is the only place in the game to host four U.S. Women’s Opens. Just think about the honor roll of past champions here. Great courses produce great winners.”

2022 U.S. Women’s Open

When: June 2-5

Where: Pine Needles Lodge & Golf Club in Southern Pines

On the air: Thursday-Friday (Golf Channel, Peacock); Saturday-Sunday (NBC)

The course: Pine Needles, which was the site of the 1996, 2001 and 2007 U.S. Women’s Open Championships, will be played at 6,638 yards with par at 71 for the US Women’s Open. Designed by legendary golf architect Donald Ross, Pine Needles was restored in 2017 by Kyle Franz.

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‘This is still her house’: Peggy Kirk Bell’s legacy reigns over U.S. Women’s Open at Pine Needles

“This will be our first Open without Mrs. Bell so I know she’ll be looking down.”

President of Pine Needles Lodge & Golf Club Kelly Miller plans to be standing at the first tee when the first shot is struck in the 77th US Women’s Open.

Miller recalls standing there with his late mother-in-law and the owner of the course, Peggy Kirk Bell, when the first tee shot was hit in 1996 for the first U.S. Women’s Open at Pine Needles.

“I was with Peg when the first shot went off,” Miller said. “It was pretty cool. She had a little tear in her eye and said her husband Bullet would have been so proud. So, we’ll all be down there on that first tee for this tournament.”

Bell was a charter member of the LPGA in 1950. She was a pioneer in buying a plane and flying herself to tournaments. When her playing days were over, she became a renowned teacher of the game, especially for women.

In an era when women golfers were not always wanted at golf courses, Bell welcomed them. She became the first woman voted into the World Golf Teachers Hall of Fame in 2002.

In 1990, she received the Bob Jones Award, the highest honor given by the USGA in recognition of distinguished sportsmanship in golf.

In 2019, Bell was voted posthumously into the World Golf Hall of Fame. She died in 2016 at the age of 95.

“We miss her so much but yet there’s still so much of her that is still here,” Miller said. “In the end, it’s the feeling this is still her house.”

Bell was instrumental in getting the USGA to come to Pine Needles in 1996. The course had hosted a U.S. Girls Junior and was in the midst of hosting the U.S. Women’s Senior Amateur in 1991.

Judy Bell, no relation, was a USGA executive sitting in the Pine Needles bar with Miller and Bell.

“Mrs. Bell said to Judy, ‘We’ve had the kids and we have these old ladies here. When are we going to get us some pros?’ ” Miller recalled. “Judy said, ‘Peg, if you want the Open, you’ve got it.’ And that’s how it happened.”

Annika Sorenstam’s relationship with Peggy Kirk Bell

Annika Sorenstam of Sweden kisses the trophy after winning the 1996 U.S. Women”s Open at the Pine Needles Golf Club in Southern Pines, North Carolina. Mandatory Credit: Craig Jones /Allsport

Hall of Fame golfer Annika Sorenstam won the first Open at Pine Needles. She retired in 2008 but returned to competition last year when she turned 50 and won the U.S. Women’s Senior Open. That earned her a spot in the Open field this year and she will tee it up at Pine Needles.

Sorenstam forged a special relationship with Bell. Sorenstam, a native of Sweden, was playing in her first golf tournament in the US as a young amateur about 30 years ago at Pinehurst Resort.

“I met Peggy and she offered to show me around in a limousine,” Sorenstam recalled during a media event in April. “I had never been in one before. She brought me here to stay at Pine Needles and she was a great host. It brings back a lot of memories coming back here.”

Their friendship grew over the years until Bell passed away.

Sorenstam was asked if she would be playing in this U.S. Women’s Open if it was being held somewhere besides Pine Needles.

“No, I would not have,” she said. “I’m pretty sure about that. That was probably the deciding factor.

“Being a past champion here is very special and being with Peggy’s family. There was always this friendly, family-feeling environment here.”

Record number of U.S. Women’s Open entrants

Seated in front is Peggy Kirk Bell, the matriarch and founding member of the LPGA. Behind Bell is, from left, her son Kirk Bell, his wife, Holly Bell, her oldest daughter Peggy Ann Bell Miller, her husband, Kelly Miller, her youngest daughter, Bonnie Bell McGowan, and her husband, Pat McGowan.

This will be a record-setting U.S. Women’s Open in a couple of ways. First, there were a record 1,874 entries trying to qualify for the field of 156 players. Then, there is the biggest purse in women’s golf. The addition of sponsor ProMedica has allowed the USGA to nearly double the purse to $10 million. The winner will receive $1.8 million.

Those are numbers Bell could hardly have imagined when she and her husband bought Pine Needles in 1953.

“This will be our first Open without Mrs. Bell so I know she’ll be looking down,” Miller said.

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