Friday, November 27, 2009

Money & Business

Where Duffers Walk in Tiger's Footsteps

By Thomas Omestad
Posted 6/11/06
Page 2 of 2

"Jewel." Jones lengthened the course, created undulations in the greens, and rebuilt tees and greenside bunkers. The city will build a new clubhouse and is tuning up maintenance of the course--which hosts the Buick Invitational each winter--into Open playing condition. "This piece of real estate is like a jewel we have to polish," says Tom Dougherty, a 53-year-old San Diego management consultant, who has been playing Torrey for 35 years.

Tough indeed are two holes that vie for signature status. No. 3 is a downhill par 3, ocean glimmering beyond and a steep canyon to the left. Overshooting the green may mean saying goodbye to your ball. No. 4 follows--a long uphill climb, big sand traps, and magnificent ocean views with a beach tucked far below. The famously crooked Torrey pine trees stud the rough.

Back east, the passion for playing Open courses has been stoked by the 2005 championship at venerable No. 2 at Pinehurst, a golf mecca first carved out of the pine barrens of central North Carolina in the 1890s. Eight courses grace this resort, but No. 2 (now 99 years old) was the personal masterpiece of Donald Ross, a Scottish pro and groundskeeper who became a kind of Johnny Appleseed of American golf courses early last century.

The place oozes history, golf and otherwise. The village of Pinehurst was drawn up by the firm of Frederick Law Olmsted, the designer of New York's Central Park and other key urban spaces. Annie Oakley ran the gun club, and Amelia Earhart flew her airplane in. The Rockefellers and DuPonts came down for vacation. Just beyond the clubhouse, the local Scots created the first driving range--on a rise known as "Maniac Hill."

Neither the pine trees nor water hazards create the main difficulty of the course; rather, it's the need to shoot precisely to hold tricky, domed greens. Inferior shots often roll down into grassy "collection areas" or bunkers. The par-4 fifth and par-3 sixth--considered signature holes--are classic Ross, the crowned greens repelling many approach shots. Other holes do likewise.

The complexities of No. 2 prompted even Tiger Woods to allow that the many shot options around the greens produce a "confusion factor." Back in 1999, the Open at No. 2 produced high drama. The late Payne Stewart won on 18 by lofting a wedge to 15 feet from the flagstick and draining the putt. His exuberant victory fist at 18 is immortalized in a statue behind the green. That history draws people to Pinehurst. I spotted one guest who had scooped up a cup of sand from a trap beside the 18th green as a souvenir.

Up north, the last course of this select quartet beckons: New York's Bethpage Black. Opened in 1936 during the Great Depression and built with Works Progress Administration labor, the Black was architect A. W. Tillinghast's gift to public golf. With the need to drive the ball long over bunkers and tall fescue rough, the Black's muscular layout earned intense loyalty from golf aficionados. At the signature par-4 fifth, the drive has to go deep, and the second shot must climb a hill to a narrow green. Woods won the 2002 Open at the Black with the only score under par, and that was fitting: Woods himself is the product of munis in Southern California.

How to Get Your Tee Time

Pebble Beach Golf Links

Resort guests can book tee times up to 18 months in advance. Expect to pay as much as $450 for a round. Non-resort guests should call (800) 654-9300 for tee times.

Torrey Pines South Golf Course

Greens fees range anywhere from $40 to $135. Info: (619) 570-1234.

Pinehurst No. 2 Golf Course

Rates range from $150 to $375. Info for resort guests: (800) 487-4653. For nonguests: (800) 795-4653.

Bethpage Black Golf Course

Greens fees range from $41 to $102. Info: (516) 249-0707.

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