A look back at the three previous editions of the U.S. Open played at The Country Club in Brookline

As we gear up for this year’s return, we relive the U.S. Open’s three previous visits to Brookline.

BROOKLINE, Mass. — The golf world now turns its eyes to the Bay State, as The Country Club in Brookline plays host to the 122nd U.S. Open.

One of the U.S. Golf Association’s five founding members, The Country Club has not hosted the organization’s flagship event in 34 years.

The drought seems something a shame, given the drama that has surrounded each of the tournament’s three stops in Brookline.

The requisite 72 holes have yet to prove enough to crown a champion at The Country Club, with playoffs following each playing of the event there.

As we gear up for this year’s return, we relive the U.S. Open’s three previous visits to Brookline.

A 60-year-old security guard dies at The Country Club, host of next week’s U.S. Open

“Injuries and evidence at the scene suggest that he may have fallen from a decking area behind a tent.

A 60-year-old security guard was found dead at The Country Club in Brookline, Massachusetts, site of the 2022 U.S. Open.

The man was identified as David C. McConnell, a resident of Revere, Massachusetts. His body was found by co-workers Wednesday morning.

“Injuries and evidence at the scene suggest that he may have fallen from a decking area behind a tent that did not have railings present,” Michael Morrissey, the Norfolk District Attorney, said in a statement. “OSHA responded to the scene to open a workplace safety investigation. While the evidence available at this time is not inconsistent with an accidental fall, the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner has accepted the case and will determine the cause and manner of death.”

McConnell was hired by the USGA, which released a statement: “The USGA is terribly saddened by what occurred at our championship site overnight. This is an active investigation and we are working closely with local authorities to determine what happened.”

The Country Club will host the U.S. Open for a fourth time next week.

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USGA has elevated the fan experience since the 88th U.S. Open

There are some of the innovations that will boost the fan experience at the 2022 U.S. Open.

Much has changed since The Country Club in Brookline, Massachusetts, last held a U.S. Open in 1988. Players have grown stronger, championship courses have been stretched and the competitive fields have become even deeper.

Things have changed for fans, too. When Curtis Strange recovered with a stellar bunker shot on the 72nd hole to force a playoff against Nick Faldo, which Strange won the next day in his first of back-to-back U.S. Open titles, there was no worldwide internet connectivity, no streaming apps, not even cell phones on the course.

The U.S. Golf Association has in recent years partnered with Cisco to improve all that. In this video, USGA managing director of digital media and ticketing Amanda Weiner shares some of the innovations that will boost the fan experience both at this year’s U.S. Open at The Country Club and for viewers watching on tv or streaming devices.

Want tickets to the 2022 U.S. Open? Here’s what you need to know

If you’re looking to go to the U.S. Open at The Country Club, there are several options.

If you’re looking to go to the U.S. Open at The Country Club in Brookline, Massachusetts, there are several options, some of them actually inexpensive.

It depends on what you want to see: the tournament itself, the practice rounds or both. And it depends on where on the golf course you want to watch.

On TicketSmarter.com, you can get a weekly badge, which allows access to the tournament and practice rounds for the whole week. Ace Ticket is selling badges as well, as does Stub Hub.

2022 U.S. Open: Find tickets on TicketSmarter

Practice rounds tickets are cheaper

TicketSmarter.com is selling tickets to the practice rounds on June 13, 14 and 15 for as low as $73 or as high as $150 for each round.

Ace Tickets has similar prices in the hundreds for the practice rounds, depending where you are located in the gallery. Stub Hub has practice round tickets for as low as $53 or as high as $100.

Tournament rounds

When it comes to the U.S Open tournament rounds, June 16-19, TicketSmarter has those priced at $414 to $799 and up per ticket, per round; Ace Ticket has them starting at $909, with the highest ticket being $39,795 for a 12-person cabana. Stub Hub has ticket prices as low as $395 or as high as $650 per person.

How you can buy tickets

There are other websites where people can get tickets such as koobit.com, usopen.com, msgpromotions.com, seatgeek.com and even Craigslist.com. An informal survey indicates tickets on Craigslist and sites like eBay are more expensive than those on Stub Hub, Ticketsmarter and Ace.

When it comes to parking passes, many of those cost about $50 and up, depending on proximity to the course.

History of the U.S. Open

This year marks the 122nd U.S. Open, with the first one being held in 1895 in Newport, Rhode Island. This will be The Country Club’s fourth time hosting the event, the others being held there in 1913, 1963 and 1988.

That first U.S. Open had ten professionals and one amateur. The winner was Horace Rawlins, a 21-year-old Englishman who had arrived in the U.S. earlier that year to take up a position at the host club. He received $150 out of a prize fund of $335, plus a $50 gold medal.

His club received the Open Championship Cup trophy, which was presented by the USGA.

Since the PGA Championship moved from August to May, the U.S. Open is now the third of the four men’s major golf championships.

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Tiger Woods will not play in next week’s U.S. Open: ‘My body needs more time’

The 15-time major winner and three-time U.S. Open champion announced his intentions on Tuesday.

Tiger Woods will not play in next week’s U.S. Open.

The 15-time major winner and three-time U.S. Open champion (Pebble Beach, 2000), Bethpage Black (2002) and Torrey Pines (2008) finished 47th in the Masters and made the cut in the PGA Championship before withdrawing after the third round in his only starts on 2022.

“I previously informed the USGA that I will not be competing in the U.S. Open as my body needs more time to get stronger for major championship golf,” Woods said in a post on Twitter. “I do hope and plan to be ready to play in Ireland at the (J.P, McManus Pro-Am) and at (The Open Championship) next month. I;m excited to get back out there soon!”

Woods continues to recover from a horrific, single-car, rollover crash north of Los Angeles in February 2021 that severely damaged his right leg, ankle and foot. After finishing second alongside son, Charlie, in the PNC Championship in December, Woods stunningly made the cut in the Masters before laboring on the weekend and falling down the leaderboard in April.

Woods looked strong in the early parts of the PGA Championship in May but struggled mightily with his injuries in the second and especially in the third round. Woods also is dealing with the ramifications of five surgeries on his left knee and five surgeries, including spinal fusion, in his back.

Woods has won three Open Championships, two at this year’s venue, St. Andrews in Scotland, the Home of Golf. In 2000, Woods won by eight shots to become the youngest player, at age 24, to win the career Grand Slam. He added his second Open win at St. Andrews in 2005 when he won by five shots.

His third Open championship came in 2006 when he won by two at Royal Liverpool.

His official statement from his Twitter account:

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U.S. Open: Rickie Fowler headlines list of interesting names competing in final qualifying

Monday is known as “Golf’s Longest Day,” a 36-hole grind at nine locations.

The 122nd U.S. Open is June 16-19 and Monday is the final day for some to make the field for The Country Club in Brookline, Massachusetts.

Monday is known as “Golf’s Longest Day,” as it’s a 36-hole grind at nine locations—eight in the U.S. and one in Canada—for the final spots in the third men’s major of 2022.

The U.S. Golf Association reports the number of golfers at each qualifier and the final number of available spots will be announced on Monday.

Golf Channel has 10 hours of coverage planned starting at 7 a.m. There are three live TV windows: 7-9 a.m., noon-2 p.m. and 6 p.m.-midnight. All times are ET. Live scoring at the nine sites can be found here: https://www.usopen.com/qualifying/final.html.

Here is the list of courses hosting final qualifying and some of the notable names at each:

RattleSnake Point Golf Club (CopperHead Course), in Milton, Ontario, Canada

Ryan Palmer, 46, Jonas Blixt, 38, and C.T. Pan, 30, headline the field north of the border on Monday. Also, Lexi Thompson’s brother Curtis is in this qualifier.

The Olympic Club (Ocean Course), San Francisco

A pair of 18-year-olds are teeing it up in the Bay Area. Cooper Jones of Highland, Utah, is a junior who’s 3-for-3 helping his high school team win the state title. He’s joined by Luke Potter of Encinitas, California, who will play for Arizona State starting this fall.

The Club at Admiral’s Cove (North and West Courses), Jupiter, Florida

Rickie Fowler, 33, who has played in 12 U.S. Opens, is in this qualifier, as is Matthew Wolff, 23, who was the runner-up to Bryson DeChambeau in the 2020 U.S. Open.

Ansley Golf Club (Settindown Creek Course), Roswell, Georgia

PGA Tour veterans Bill Haas, Patton Kizzire, Richy Werenski and Brendon Todd will seek to punch their tickets in Georgia on Monday.

Woodmont Country Club (North Course), Rockville, Maryland

Joseph Bramlett, Kevin Chappell and Harry Higgs are among those competing.

Century Country Club & Old Oaks Country Club, Purchase, New York

Ricky Barnes and Kelly Kraft are in this regional but the father/son duo of Fran Quinn, 57, and Owen, 23, will also tee it up Monday. They live about 45 minutes from The Country Club at Brookline.

Kinsale Golf and Fitness Club & Wedgewood Golf and Country Club, Columbus, Ohio

Zach Johnson, 46, who will be the U.S. team’s Ryder Cup captain in 2024, has won two major championships, the 2007 Masters Tournament and the 2015 Open Championship, and has played in 18 U.S. Opens.

Rafa Cabrera Bello, 37, of Spain, is aiming to play in his ninth U.S. Open. His best finish was a tie for 23rd in 2020.

Cole Hammer, 22, fresh off an NCAA Championship with Texas, will vie for his fourth U.S. Open appearance.

Former world No. 1 Luke Donald and former PGA Championship winner Jason Dufner are also in this qualifier.

Springfield (Ohio) Country Club

Brandt Snedeker, Jim Herman, Troy Merritt, Scott Piercy and Doc Redman are in this field but there will be some attention on Danny Woodhead, 37, who advanced out of a local qualifier in Omaha. He is most famous for playing in the NFL alongside Tom Brady with the New England Patriots.

Pronghorn Resort (Nicklaus Resort), Bend, Oregon

The field in Bend, Oregon, is full of amateur players, including some who just competed at the NCAA Championship, like Max Brenchley (BYU) and Joe Highsmith (Pepperdine). Charlie Beljan is attempting to advance through both local and final qualifying for the third time in his career and the first time since 2009.

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Meet the first female GM at The Country Club in Brookline (which is only a few weeks from hosting the U.S. Open)

LaCount, the GM/COO at The Country Club in Brookline, is the first woman to lead the club in its 138-year history.

Some families pass down antique vases, property, scrapbooks or top-secret recipes. Kristen LaCount inherited a country club.

LaCount, the general manager/COO at The Country Club in Brookline, is the third generation in her family to work at the historic club, and the first woman to lead the club in its 138-year history. The course will host the U.S. Open from June 16-19.

Her mother grew up just across the street from the club, in Buttonwood Village, working weekends at the front desk throughout college while LaCount’s grandmother worked in the club’s business office. LaCount’s father started as a dishwasher, quickly working his way up to become TCC’s youngest executive chef, a position he held for decades.

“We had one car in our family, so we’d come over and pick up dad at the back delivery area, and we’d be sitting on milk crates with a bowl of peppermint stick ice cream waiting for him to finish up work,” LaCount recalled. “So the club was always extremely present in my life.”

There’s a common trope of executives starting in the mailroom and working their way to the top. For LaCount, it was the club’s snack bar, where she got her start as a young teenager in the mid-1990s.

“It really was my first taste of interacting with staff and learning how to manage people, and that was probably a huge point for me … that just reinforced that this is the industry that I wanted to be in,” LaCount said. “It wasn’t just about food and beverage and service and golf, and all those things. It was really about the personal connections that you make.”

Fresh out of college, she saw a job offer fall through and, on her father’s recommendation, met with former TCC General Manager David Chag for some career advice.

“Mr. Chag, David, took me under his wing and said, ‘What do you think about learning a little bit of the front of the house and the management side?’” LaCount recalled.

With Chag as her mentor, LaCount buried herself in the work and rose through the ranks. By the time the club hosted the 2013 U.S. Amateur Golf Championship, she knew she wanted a future in club management. And TCC, with its large membership and sprawling, college campus-like grounds, captured her heart.

She was made TCC’s first-ever assistant general manager, raised as Chag’s eventual successor. And she made her home in Brookline with her husband, Prairie Fire restaurateur Dan Kerrigan, and their two children.

The Country Club in Brookline
The Country Club of Brookline in Boston, Massachusetts. Photo by Stephen Munday/Getty Images

Of his mentee, Chag said LaCount’s personality and work ethic made her a natural leader.

“She has an incredible work ethic and enthusiasm and personality that’s infectious, so others tend to want to work with her,” he said. “People enjoy being around her.”

Now, nearly two decades after she first joined the club full-time, LaCount has taken the reins.

“She just struck us that she was the best person for the job, so much so that we decided not to do a search, but just to directly hire her,” said TCC President Lyman Bullard.

He added, “I think she has been preparing for this job her whole life, and she has just jumped right into it with great energy, enthusiasm and leadership.”

LaCount, who took office in October of 2020, had her work cut out for her amid a pandemic, Bullard said.

“As you can imagine, in a COVID world, there are no dull months in any organization, anywhere,” he said. “I think she has everybody on the staff ready to be as creative and flexible as we need to be to make it a fun winter experience for our members.”

For her part, LaCount said she plans to maintain the stability the club saw under Chag’s leadership, even as TCC navigates high-profile projects and events, like the 2022 U.S. Open.

Chag, who is still with TCC in a senior advisor role at the club. but took a step back after 33 years on the job, said it has been “rewarding” to watch LaCount take the helm.

“To step back and watch someone else take it on, I do it with pride, because it’s an individual that was trained here and was ready to do it, so there’s a great deal of pride in it,” he said.

As the first woman to lead TCC, Bullard said, LaCount is continuing her record of paving the way for women in the club management world, a typically male-dominated industry.

“She earned it,” he said. “She was developed over a long period of time; she worked her way up and she completely earned it.”

The significance of being the club’s first female GM is not lost on LaCount.

Arnold Palmer Ligonier, Pa., winner of the U.S. Open golf championship in 1960, watches his tee shot on the first hole at The Country Club, June 20, 1963, in Brookline, Mass., at the start of the 1963 USGA Open.

“It comes with a great deal of responsibility, in my mind,” she said. “I have a daughter now. That, to me, comes with a whole other set of responsibilities for setting an example, whether it’s the next generation of club managers or the next generation of professionals, period, in any industry.”

But at the end of the day, she said, “There’s a part of me that always says, you want the best person for the job, and what is first and most important to me is that I was the most qualified person for this job.”

And do her children have any plans to join the family business?

“I did ask [my daughter] one day what she wanted to be when she grows up, and we haven’t gotten very far, other than that she wants to do gymnastics,” LaCount said, laughing.

With LaCount in club management and her husband in the restaurant industry, she described theirs as a “hospitality family,” one for whom working nights, weekends and holidays is just part of the norm.

“My husband and I just couldn’t be happier doing what we do,” she said. “If either of our children decides that they want to take this path, they will have nothing but support from their parents. But if they don’t, that’s OK too. As cliche as it sounds, every parent just wants to make sure that their kids are doing what they’re passionate about.”

(Editor’s note: This story originally ran on Nov. 10, 2020, in the Brookline Tab, and was edited to include the current title of Chag. Abby Patkin is a reporter for the MetroWest Daily News, part of the USA Today Network.)

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Golfweek’s Best Classic Courses 2022: From Pebble Beach to Pinehurst, the top 200 golf courses built before 1960

Golfweek’s raters have ranked the top 200 courses built in the United States before 1960, such as Augusta National, Pebble Beach and more

Welcome to the Golfweek’s Best 2022 list of the Top 200 Classic Courses before 1960 in the United States.

Each year we publish many lists, with this Top 200 Classic Courses list among the premium offerings. Also extremely popular and significant are the lists for Top 200 Modern Courses, the Best Courses You Can Play State by State and Best Private Courses State by State.

The hundreds of members of our course-ratings panel continually evaluate courses and rate them based on 10 criteria on a points basis of 1 through 10. They also file a single, overall rating on each course. Those overall ratings are averaged to produce these rankings. The top handful of courses in the world have an average rating of above 9, while many excellent layouts fall into the high-6 to the 8 range.

To ensure these lists are up-to-date, Golfweek’s Best in recent years has altered how the individual ratings are compiled into the rankings. Only ratings from rounds played in the past 10 years are included in the compilations. This helps ensure that any course in the rankings still measures up.

Courses also must have a minimum of 25 votes to qualify for the Top 200 Modern or the Top 200 Classic. Other Golfweek’s Best lists, such as Best Courses You Can Play or Best Private, do not require as many votes. This makes it possible that a course can show up on other lists but not on the premium Top 200 lists.

Each course is listed with its average rating next to the name, the location, the year it opened and the designers. The list also notes in parenthesis next to the name of each course where that course ranked in 2021. Also included with many courses are links to recent stories about that layout.

After the designers are several designations that note what type of facility it is:

• p: private
• d: daily fee
• r: resort course
• t: tour course
• u: university
• m: municipal
• re: real estate
• c: casino

* Indicates new to or returning to this list.

Editor’s note: The 2022 Golfweek’s Best Modern Courses list for the top 200 layouts built after 1960 in the U.S. was published Monday, May 23. The Best Courses You Can Play lists and the Best Private Courses lists will follow over the next two weeks. 

Will Zalatoris, Adam Scott, Keegan Bradley among those now exempt into 2022 U.S. Open

The U.S. Golf Association has announced 30 golfers who are newly qualified for the 2022 U.S. Open.

Less than 24 hours after Justin Thomas won his second major at the PGA Championship, we cast our gaze eastward towards The Country Club in Brookline, Massachusetts, site of the 122nd U.S. Open.

On Monday, the U.S. Golf Association announced 30 golfers who are newly qualified for event, including PGA runner-up Will Zalatoris as well as Adam Scott and Keegan Bradley. There are now 79 exempt players for the third men’s major of 2022 with 27 of them earning their spot for placing in the top 60 in the latest Official World Golf Ranking as of May 23.

Zalatoris, who lost a playoff to Thomas on Sunday at the PGA, is now ranked 14th in the world. He is the highest-ranked player in the OWGR who was not previously exempt into the U.S. Open.

Zalatoris has two runner-up finishes and five top 10s in eight starts in the majors. This will be his fourth U.S. Open. He missed the cut in 2021, posted a T-6 finish in 2020, didn’t play it in 2019 and missed the cut in 2018.

Mito Pereira, who held the 54-hole lead by three shots at Southern Hills before faltering late and falling into a tie for third, is also now in the field. This will be his second U.S. Open after he made his Open debut in 2019 at Pebble Beach.

Among the others who are now in the U.S. Open field: Cameron Young, Matthew Fitzpatrick, Tommy Fleetwood, Tyrrell Hatton, Si Woo Kim, K.H. Lee and Harold Varner III.

The USGA says that the “number of fully exempt golfers may increase with the addition of the top 60 players from the OWGR as of Monday, June 6.”

The 2022 U.S. Open will be held June 16-19. The last time it was at the Country Club was in 1988. It was also staged there in 1913 and 1963.

The Country Club is one of the five founding member clubs of the USGA.

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USGA’s Lee Elder Internship to provide 25 diverse students with on-the-job training at U.S. Open

“This bright group of young leaders shows us what the future of golf can and will be,” said USGA CEO Mike Whan.

The golf world lost “a true trailblazer and gentleman” last November with the death of Lee Elder, but the man who broke the color barrier at the Masters is still giving back to the game after his passing.

The USGA announced that 25 students from underrepresented communities will receive on-the-job training as part of the Lee Elder Internship during the 122nd U.S. Open on June 16-19 at The Country Club in Brookline, Massachusetts.

“This bright group of young leaders shows us what the future of golf can and will be,” said USGA CEO Mike Whan. “Only a small fraction of the 2 million golf jobs across our $84 billion industry are held by people from underrepresented communities. It’s our responsibility to continually advance and grow the game through programs that expose more young professionals to the wealth of opportunities that exist, and to elevate their ability to make our game stronger.”

The group of 25 interns includes 15 who identify as female and 10 as male from 22 universities and various countries including the United States, Argentina, the Republic of Korea and Nigeria. More than 200 students from 37 states and five countries applied after the internship that was announced in November 2021.

From the release:

To remove systemic barriers that can impede diverse participation in traditional internship programs, an emphasis was placed on the student’s demonstrated commitment to diversity, drawing from previous and current work or school experiences, referrals and recommendations.

“We are thrilled with the overall interest and the quality of applicants for this first-of-its-kind program,” said Will Fulton, general chair for the 2022 U.S. Open. “This program embodies Lee Elder’s vision and hope for the future of golf and we recognize that diversification is one of the biggest opportunities for the game. Through this program, we hope to connect with those who can help shape the future of golf as potential leaders who may not have been reached without programs like the Lee Elder Internship.”

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