Oakmont Hosts Record 9th US Open by M. James Ward
2016 marks my 30th US Open in covering this year's championship Oakmont Country Club – the tour de force facility located just several miles from downtown Pittsburgh, PA. The famed club serves a record 9th time as the host venue for the national championship of American golf. This marks the fourth time I have covered a US Open from Oakmont – the earlier times coming in '83, '94 and '07. There are a number of key courses that have been host to the US Open but in my mind only three are worthy in being among the elite trio – Pebble Beach, Shinnecock Hills and Oakmont. The aforementioned troika deserves to host the second oldest major at least once every ten years.
Oakmont has crowned notable winners of the US Open through the years – names such as Tommy Armour, Bobby Jones, Ben Hogan, Jack Nicklaus, Johnny Miller, Larry Nelson, Ernie Els and Angel Cabrera are among its roster of superb champions. The lone unknown winner came in 1935 when Sam Parks won the event – the only competitor to break 300. But it was the 1973 US Open that brought to centre stage one of the most electric moments in all of championship golf. A 26-year-old golfer from California – named Johnny Miller – fired a record 8-under-par 63 in the final round to leap frog a stellar leaderboard and claim the title. Miller's round was achieved in hitting all 18 greens in regulation – and ending with just 29 putts. Although the number 63 has been matched numerous times since then – it is Miller's that stand alone as the lowest find round to win a major championship. For the round to have been done at Oakmont has only added to the allure of its accomplishment.
The UK-equivalent to Oakmont is Scotland's Muirfield. Both layouts are exacting but will yield low scores with stellar play and each is blessed with s listing of champions that clearly ratifies the pedigree of the layouts.
Oakmont came into being as the sole design of Henry Clay Fownes – his first and only design. Construction began on Sept. 15, 1903 – with a crew of men, horses, mules and scrapers. Play began less than one year later on Oct. 1, 1904. Oakmont from the very beginning was built on one premise – reward only the finest of shots and punish with vengeance any shot – most especially putts – played even slightly indifferently. Befitting his Calvinistic-belief – Fownes believed forgiveness was something only The Creator could provide. “A shot poorly played should be a shot irrevocably lost,” and his famous companion thunder: “Let the clumsy, the spineless, the alibi artist stand aside!”
Oakmont's ferocious reputation is not bolstered with a large body of water either next to it like Pebble Beach or nearby like Shinnecock Hills. Oakmont is stark in its appearance – early on trees were few in number – in many ways resembling an interior links. To bolster the design, Fownes placed numerous bunkers – at its height nearly 350 scattered about. That total now numbers 210. To complicate matters, Fownes ingeniously – or cruelly – created a furrow instrument used to "rake" the bunkers. The furrow would often cause balls to find its dastardly "V" area and make escape truly an art form. The United States Golf Association (USGA) banned their usage from greenside bunkers in the '62 event and eventually decided that in all future Opens at Oakmont enough was enough and ended in totality their involvement.
Still, competitors had best avoid the well-known "church pews" bunkers that straddle the 3rd and 4th holes as well as at the long par-4 15th. The pews are diabolical in their lethal performance. Sand exists but it is a series of grass covered mounds positioned perpendicular to the line of play that can be nightmarish for any player hooking too far. Once you hit the church pews it is anything but a day at the beach.
Clearly, the main issue for Oakmont to handle internally was the profusion of trees that accelerated throughout the property. Video footage from the '73, '83 and '94 Opens shows an Oakmont choked with trees. Prior to the '07 Open a movement took hold – at first only with a small group of senior leaders at the club who wanted to restore Oakmont as envisioned by its founder. The removal of trees initially happened during evening hours and in the winter months – keeping most members unaware of the activities. Eventually, the plan was unearthed and possible litigation appeared likely until it was decided to proceed ahead. All told, approximately 7,500 trees were removed prior to the '07 Open and since that time a comparable amount has also been removed – primarily from the perimeter of the property. The vistas of the course are now totally exposed from the high point occupied at the clubhouse.
The teeth of Oakmont revolves around its devilish putting surfaces. Along with Oakland Hills / South and Winged Foot / West the ones found at Oakmont are easily the swiftest and most vexing of its kind. The greens are kept ultra-fast even for regular member play and it's no joke when members say the speed in which Open competitors play is actually slower than what they handle daily. The putting surfaces are angled to encourage only the most well-played of approaches – often times there are specific holes where the green actually runs downhill from front-to-back – especially at the demanding 1st and 10th holes.
When people marvel at how Tiger Woods never hit a bunker when winning the '00 Open Championship at The Old Course at St. Andrews – equally impressive is the fact that '62 Open champion Jack Nicklaus only had one three-putt green in 90 holes when vanquishing Arnold Palmer in their historic playoff. That is truly incredible when four and five putts are not uncommon.
Since the '07 event there have been very few changes to the course. The back of the 6th green has been expanded so additional pin placements are now doable. At the long par-5 12th – measuring 667 yards, but still just the second longest par-5 ever played in a US Open – two new bunkers were removed and one expanded. The total yardage for the championship 7,219 yards – 11 fewer than what was played in '07 with the par remaining 70 as the uphill 9th will once again play as a par-4 hole.
Given the inherent challenges Oakmont presents the key will be in the overall course set-up. In the '83 event the off-fairway rough was so deep and dense that often times a simply wedge out was the only recourse. USGA Executive Director Mike Davis has been quite imaginative since becoming the point man for US Open set-ups – starting with the '06 event at Winged Foot / West.
The US Open clearly elevated winner Jordan Spieth last year at Chambers Bay and reconfirmed his earlier Masters win in '15 was anything but a fluke. Oakmont is a relentless punishing test of golf – it will not permit consistent wayward driving no matter how far players hit it today. The course will also force players to demonstrate extraordinary patience since unlike many PGA Tour events the wherewithal to avoid the big numbers will be essential since the course will not feature an endless supply of birdie opportunities.
After the newness of Chambers Bay and the uncertainty of what will happen in '17 when the US Open ventures to another new site in Erin Hills in Wisconsin – the return of Oakmont to centre stage is indeed most welcomed for what it is always done so well – define greatness.
FOUR HOLES WORTH WATCHING AT OAKMONT
1st Hole – 482 Yards, Par-4
Bracketed by bunkers on both sides of the fairway before plunging downhill to a blind green that runs quickly away from the player.
Critical to make sure one’s approach doesn’t finish short of the green – unlikely par from that position. A tough opener that can knock the wind from players looking to get a round started in fine fashion.
3rd Hole – 426 Yards, Par-4
The famed Church Pews bunker complex hugs the left side – critical to avoid at all costs. Fairway pinches in deeper you attempt to hit your tee shot.
Several deep bunkers patrol the right side. Green is elevated above the fairway and falls away slightly from the players. Finding the fairway will mean a short
iron and good birdie possibility. Tough to gauge the nature of the approach.
10th hole – 462 (440) Yards, Par-4
Although this stout par-4 plays downhill the fairway is especially hard to find as it moves from left-to-right in the landing area. Bunkers guard both sides of the fairway and the smart play for many will be a fairway metal or even long iron or hybrid. The green falls away and is especially speedy front to back. Crucial for players to get at or beyond the pin location for an easier putt or chip should they miss when approaching.
17th hole – 313 Yards, Par-4
The penultimate hole tempts the boldest of plays but will bite back very hard for anything short of pinpoint execution that marries length and uncanny accuracy. Driving the green will be a possibility and the USGA may decide to move tee positions up to tempt even the most cautious. Given the yardage many players will be under the mindset of a must birdie. Those who get too greedy may find this hole a real thorn.
Looking back … MILLER’S MEMORABLE, MIRACLE 63
In 1973 a 26-year-old aspiring player named Johnny Miller created a golf buzz that still resonates today. 27 times players have since matched the score of 63 in a major championship but the one that still stands apart is the first one shot by the highly talented Californian in winning the US Open at Oakmont.
What makes the round so historic is it was done at Oakmont – the poster child along with Winged Foot – in being the toughest examination of golf in America. The Pittsburgh-based course was created by the Fownes family to be an uncompromising beast – ensuring even the slightest of errors would be punished severely.
Much has been written that Oakmont was receptive to low scores because of overnight rains that preceded the play of the final round that year but only three other players broke 70 in the final round – 23-year-old Lanny Wadkins with 65 and Jack Nicklaus and Ralph Johnston with 68s. More over Miller’s 63 – was done in the final round – something done only three other times. The important separation elevating Miller’s round was his was done in contention – the others were not. And, Miller is one of only six men to have ultimately won the actual major. What makes the round even more superlative – was that Miller trailed by six shots and 12 players – including the likes of Arnold Palmer, Lee Trevino, Nicklaus, Julius Boros, Gene Littler, Tom Weiskopf and Jerry Heard. Nearly all of the aforementioned are Hall-of-Famers.
In many ways what Miller did on June 17, 1973 is etched indelibly in the pantheon of sports – comparable to what Secretariat did in winning The Triple Crown by 31 lengths or USA’s Bob Beamon’s mindboggling win in the long jump in the 1968 Summer Olympics – breaking the previous mark by nearly two feet – and maintaining the world record for nearly 23 years or the perfect marks set by the sensational UK ice-dancing tandem Jayne Torvil and Christopher Dean at the 1984 Winter Olympics with 12 perfect 6.0’s in the final free style event and attaining the highest cumulative total for a single performance.
Miller’s round catapulted him to win to even greater success in the years to follow – 10 PGA Tour wins from January 1974 through January of 1975 – and eventually winning The Open Championship in 1976 over an up and coming talent named Seve Ballesteros.
Incredibly – Miller’s round did feature one lone bogey – at the long par-3 8th. But that bogey served to push Miller harder and he finished strongly – barely missing makeable birdie putts at the final two holes.
Miller’s round was jumpstarted on the practice range before commencing play when he decided to open up his stance as much as possible in order to hit the ball more powerfully and accurately. His iron play – his main strength throughout his prime years – was stellar. Birdies at the first 4 holes pushed him front and center.
Can 63 be broken? Surely it can. But the circumstances tied to Miller will be a high bar for any record breaker to exceed. In all of golf lore – Miller’s moment will forever be etched.





