Top Players Unequipped For The Artistry Troon Demands
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Top Players Unequipped For The Artistry Troon Demands

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Top Players Unequipped For The Artistry Troon Demands

On Friday afternoon, the 152nd Open Championship was on TILT. Justin Thomas, tied for third at the start of his round, went out in 45, and he wasn’t even the most woebegone player over the first few holes. Robert MacIntyre began his round triple-bogey, bogey, bogey, triple. Rory McIlroy made an 8, part of his front-nine 42. Joaco Niemann had a snowman of his own on the 120-yard Postage Stamp. Two less-accomplished players recorded a 9. Poor Aguri Iwaski somehow made back-to-back 9s! Tony Finau made an 8 and a 7. Matt Fitzpatrick had a pair of 7s. Wyndham Clark shot 80 as did Min Woo Lee. Players were bleeding to death live on TV.

It was glorious. 

It’s always entertaining to watch pros suffer but windswept Royal Troon revealed something deeper about the state of professional golf, asking questions that few players were equipped to answer. In every sport the athletes have become bigger and faster but the defense holds them in check; a 6’9” point guard in the NBA doesn’t have as much of an advantage when the man guarding him is just as tall and athletic. But the typical setup on any pro golf tour has been rendered defenseless by space-age equipment fine-tuned by computers and wielded by athletes whose minds and bodies have been optimized by nutritionists, trainers, sports psychologists and stats geeks. Golf at the highest level is now all offense.

Royal Troon changed the calculus with its small greens, skinny fairways, wicked bunkers and, especially, ever-present gales. The mindless, paint-by-the-numbers golf that works so well on marshmallowy PGA Tour setups has led to despair and ruin at this Open. For two days, at least, art triumphed over science.

Shane Lowry, a preeminent shotmaker and magician with a wedge, leads by two strokes, at -7. Tied for fourth, five back, is Scottie Scheffler, shot-shaper extraordinaire. The ultimate feel player, Dustin Johnson, is back from the dead and in contention after a 69 that was bettered by only four players, including an inventive Jason Day, who didn’t make a single bogey (it should be noted that all four players teed off before 9:57 a.m. and missed some of the worst winds).

Elucidating the challenge, Adam Scott said, “You have to strike your shots really pure. They have to start on the right line. You have to land the ball in very small areas. And we’re not used to seeing the ball move so much in the air. It’s just really difficult out there. A few guys are managing better than others but once it starts going the wrong way it’s hard to figure out what to do because your go-to is not working.”

For all of that, Abe Ancer believes the challenge is metaphysical. “It’s tough, man. On any shot, you can hit three or four different clubs. It’s just trying to pick the one that you feel most comfortable with pulling off the shot. I think you have to be extremely precise but also extremely creative. Mentally, I mean, it can drive you crazy.”

The players who have prospered embrace the unique test. “I always loved being able to curve the ball,” Scheffler said after a second straight 70. “That’s just something that I always loved to do. It kind of fascinated me a little bit. To me that’s kind of the fun part of the game, and out here it can be challenging.”

After a couple of practice rounds, pro golfers script their tournament strategy like Bill Walsh calling plays for Joe Montana. Typically, when they step on the first tee on Thursday the pros have a game plan for every hole and a pretty good idea which club they’ll employ on any given shot. All of that went out the window at this Open when the prevailing wind flipped for the first two rounds and gusts reached 32 miles per hour. “Nothing makes sense with the yardage book, really,” Justin Rose said following his second-round 68, which left him tied for second at -5. “You’re hitting wedges from like 180 (yards). I hit driver, 3-wood into the (par-4) 15th hole in practice. I hit driver, flick sand wedge today. It’s pretty crazy the difference that links golf can give you. That’s the fun part of it, though. I say the yardage book is out the window, yes, but at the same time you’re making a lot of calculations out there, and nothing is standard.”

Justin Rose, 43, has relied on his experience at Royal Troon. (GETTY IMAGES/Harry How)

On the fifth hole, dead into the wind, Adam Scott nuked a 3-iron that expired after 180 yards. On the downwind 18th, his 4-iron rolled out to 315 yards. “Where else could that happen?” he asked with a tinge of wonderment. The shot he was most proud of on Friday came on the sixth hole, a 7-iron from 112 yards to 20 feet. “Yardages don’t mean anything,” he says. “They’re not even a guide. It’s all feel. To play a 5-iron from 140 yards, you have to hit that 100 times to have confidence. But out here you only get one chance, and it’s do or die.”

Players lacking imagination or conviction were badly exposed by Royal Troon. Bryson DeChambeau became the poster boy. His towering drives and metronomic iron play have made him a force on LIV Golf’s benign setups and carried him to victory last month at a windless U.S. Open but that game did not translate to the ancient linksland. He shot 76-75 to miss the cut by three strokes. He still doesn’t understand the essential challenge of this unique championship. Asked about his future Open prospects, he said, “I can do it when it’s warm and not windy.”

Top Photo Caption: Tommy Fleetwood was among the top players to miss the cut this week. (GETTY IMAGES/Andrew Redington)

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Alan Shipnuck

Alan Shipnuck

Alan Shipnuck

Alan spent 25 years on the golf beat for Sports Illustrated and was previously the executive editor at the Fire Pit Collective. Author of nine books, including PHIL; LIV AND LET DIE; BUD, SWEAT & TEES; and THE SWINGER.

Alan Shipnuck

Alan Shipnuck

Alan Shipnuck

Alan Shipnuck

Alan Shipnuck

Alan Shipnuck

Alan Shipnuck

Alan Shipnuck





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      Syd

      7 months ago

      So good to see these overpaid, over sponsored golfers play in tough conditions. -20 isn’t true golf, it’s boring! Don’t rollback the ball, give us more Troon’s!

      Reply

      Tim Goddard

      7 months ago

      Excellent article Alan. The PGA tour is pillow boring. This is golf. A great design with long iron play being a key ( along with the bunkers with leaving room for doubt). It is great to hear the commentators lauding a great course and not over hyping the verdant marshmallows which adorn the PGA. One day me may have a world tour of 15 tournaments played on courses equal to Royal Troon. Till then….. Go well. Tim g (in Barwon Heads, a town with 3 links courses in Australia).

      Reply

      Darren Jeffries

      7 months ago

      A great write up. It takes feel and vision to get it around there. Those that are comfortable with hitting shots based on imagination, not from the end result of some mathematical equation, can ride the wave. Reminds me of when I was a junior, where we’d go to the practice green and each of us would choose an area from which to have a ‘chip off’, moving after each time to even challenging locations, where imagination was the deciding factor. Yes luck has to play a part and, if we’re all honest, the harder or more imagination the shot, the element of luck tends to increase, but invariably so does the imagination and the required skill set to pull the shot off. He who dares….Shane is in his absolute element and the fact Sheffle says he’s intrigued by shot shaping must help his state of mind when taking on Royal Troon, which will unlikely end in doom.

      Reply

      I miss, I miss, I make

      7 months ago

      Tom Watson. High ball hitter. How many did he win? Hmm

      Reply

      Mike

      7 months ago

      Good article. However, for me, well, every once in awhile it’s interesting to see players in conditions such as these, I’m good with winning scores at Majors in the -10 to -15 range. As a hacker, I want to see players play well, really well, & not muck it up like me. Plus, when the wind is like that, too much luck is involved.

      Reply

      Tony P

      7 months ago

      Shame we don’t have more links-type golf in the US…..While the Ocean Course at Kiawah isn’t quite a true links course, it’s close enough. I play it about 25 times a year. Everything depends on the wind….Sadly, the during last two PGAs there it has been pretty benign.

      Reply

      I miss, I miss, I make

      7 months ago

      Very fortunate in the Northwest with the courses at Bandon. Also barring what was an unmitigated disaster by the USGA Chambers Bay. Due to it’s location and that the courses were designed to be played by “human beings” Bandon will never see a TOUR event but has shown brilliantly at the US Am and college events. Chambers Bay? You will have to take my word but Chambers Bay is a great course. Unfortunately the USGA poisoned the well.

      Reply

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