Home United States USA — mix Few Birdies, but One Double Bogey, on the Shortest-Ever U.S. Open Hole

Few Birdies, but One Double Bogey, on the Shortest-Ever U.S. Open Hole

132
0
SHARE

The 15th hole at Los Angeles Country Club on Saturday was only 81 yards long, but the field struggled mightily.
At 81 yards, the par-3 15th hole at Los Angeles Country Club on Saturday was the shortest hole in the history of the U.S. Open.
Only a golfer can fully grasp the mental torment that such a bite-size challenge poses, but here is one way to understand the situation: No one likes a hole where it’s easier to throw the ball onto the green than it is to hit it there with a golf club.
Add to the third-round setting a severely sloped 15th green; three massive, menacing bunkers surrounding the target area; and knotty, knee-high grass all around. And — oh, yes — the approach shot is uphill, and there is a gusty wind at the players’ backs.
Step right up, who wants to go first? How about you, Brooks Koepka, five-time major champion?
Didn’t Koepka suggest earlier this week that L.A. Country Club might be too easy? He said he worried about a “birdiefest.” Maybe he had a hole less than 100 yards in mind. (The old record for shortest U.S. Open hole was 92 yards, at the 2010 event.)
Koepka was three under par for his Saturday round and firmly in the top 10 when he stepped to the 15th. But his tee shot had none of the touch required and soared to the back of the green. His first putt was way short. His next putt was way long.

Continue reading...