This year the U.S. Open is
coming back to Oakmont CC.
Oakmont – just outside of
Pittsburg – has hosted more
major championships than any
other course in America.
Founded in 1903 and designed
by Henry Fownes, Oakmont was
developed on an old, barren,
windswept farm. Fownes loved
the land because it reminded
him of the links-style golf
courses in Scotland.
But, about 40 years ago, the
Oakmont members decided to
“beautify” the course by
planting trees. And planting
trees they did – Oakmont
began to look like a tree
farm.
Well, have you ever seen
trees on a sod farm? Trees
are not conducive to growing
grass – the shade and lack
of air flow make a course
superintendent’s job a
nightmare. I like trees.
But, I’m not in love with
too many trees on a golf
course. Trees should be used
to define holes and protect
players from dangerous
situations.
Too many trees on a golf
course take away shot making
options and restrict
strategy. This happened at
Oakmont. Surprisingly, the
members recognized the
problem and fixed it –
they’ve removed between
5,000 – 8,000 trees. Of
course this wasn’t easy –
some of the members went
ballistic and the club had
two warring factions.
As I’ve talked about in
previous columns, I believe
in the risk/reward school of
course design, not the penal
school of course design. The
penal school demands that
the shot has to land in the
perfect landing zone –
anything else, even a shot
just a yard off target is
severely penalized, in fact
very often the shot just a
little off is much more
penalized than a wild shot.
I believe that a good design
offers a variety of
strategies to play the hole
and that each shot is
balanced in a risk/reward
ratio. Heavily tree lined
fairways don’t offer much
for strategy – hit it
perfect or else.
The classic golf courses
were risk/reward designs.
But over the years many have
been “improved” by the
misguided ideas of green
committees. Also beginning
in the ‘60’s, many of the
new championship courses
were designed to be torture
chambers and full of
gimmicks. During that same
era, baseball parks and
football stadiums were also
poorly designed. Fortunately
most of those ridiculous
stadiums are being torn down
and replaced with classic
parks such as Camden Yards.
Hopefully, golf is catching
on to the blunders of course
design of the last 40 years
and will revive the sanity
and playability of the
classic golf courses.