Sunday, September 22, 2013

From wicker baskets to Yul Brynner, Merion Golf Club endures to host another U.S. Open


From wicker baskets to Yul Brynner, Merion Golf Club endures to host another U.S. Open











Eric Adelson June 11, 2013 11:28 AMYahoo Sports






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The infamous wicker baskets of Merion Golf Club. (AP)
ARDMORE, Pa. – The most mysterious woman in the golf world will take her turn in the spotlight this week. (No, not Lindsey Vonn.) Her impact will be front and center, clear to millions of people, and yet even the folks at the U.S. Open have no idea who she is.



"I've been at this job for 12 years," says Andy Mutch, curator at Merion Golf Club, site of this weekend's 113th U.S. Open. "And I don't know."

The anonymous woman is in charge of making the famous wicker baskets at the top of the flagsticks here. A member of the grounds crew did the job until 1980, and since then it's been her. The baskets are taken down after every round to keep them from being stolen, which is ironic considering legend has it that the baskets were modeled after staffs European shepherds used to keep their lunch away from the animals. Mutch jokes the reason for the secrecy has some parallels there.

"Maybe she doesn't want to be bombarded with golf fans who want a wicker basket in their basement or man cave," he suggests.

The baskets and their mysterious maker are just one nugget in a gold mine of history at Merion, located 10 miles east of downtown Philadelphia. If these links could speak, they could tell stories involving everyone from Bobby Jones to Lee Trevino to Yul Brynner. Augusta National might be the most famous golf course in America, but Merion could be the most fascinating.

[Related: Old school Merion to provide new U.S. Open test]

How fascinating? Well, the host of this year's second leg of golf's grand slam is actually where the term "grand slam" was coined. In 1930, Jones won the U.S. Amateur here after claiming titles at the British Amateur, British Open, and U.S. Open. An Atlanta journalist named O.B. Keeler called it a "grand slam" and the name has now been around longer than its tie to the Amateur events Jones won.

"It's one of the most important events that's ever happened in golf," Mutch says.

Jones had his coming out party here in 1916, at the age of 14, when he took the golf world by storm with his electric play and his third-rail temper. Mutch says Jones went around the course screaming, cussing and "helicoptering" clubs. That kind of behavior would get any player ostracized from the golf community today, let alone a teenager, but back then the notable scribes of the time, no less than Grantland Rice, basically gave the kid a pass. Mutch describes Jones as a "total embarrassment," yet says the crowds ate it up. "They absolutely loved him," he says. "It's Philadelphia, remember?"

Jones' play sent a ripple throughout the nation. Eight years later, he'd come back here and win the U.S. Amateur.

Tiger Woods rocked the sports world by winning the Masters at 21 in 1997, but Jones' play at Merion made him arguably the greatest child prodigy in sports history. When he won the "grand slam" in 1930, the course was so crowded that players needed police escorts to each tee. He retired only a few months later, at age 28.





View gallery.

A plaque commemorates Ben Hogan's 1-iron on the 18th hole at Merion. (AP)Incredibly, Jones' achievements may not be the most amazing in the course's history. That honor probably belongs to Ben Hogan, who came back from a near-fatal bus collision to win here in 1950. Doctors were unsure Hogan would ever walk again, and 16 months later he was here, forcing a playoff despite serious pain. The photo of his 1-iron approach on 18 (his 36th hole of that day) is one of the most famous in the sport's lore.



As if that wasn't enough Open legend, Trevino beat Jack Nicklaus here in 1971, despite missing a par putt in the final round when a boy fell out of a tree. The next day, Trevino threw a rubber snake at Nicklaus before beating the much longer hitter in the playoff.

All this history, dating back more than a century, brings to mind the obvious question: Why hasn't the U.S. Open been held here since 1981? The course is at the doorstep of one of America's great cities, so close to Philadelphia that countless residents have taken the 30-minute train ride to play here after work. Merion has hosted 18 USGA championships, an incredible number. "It's had the highest level of competition," Mutch says. "At every level of golf they have held a championship. I'm not sure any other club in America can say that."

So why has Merion waited so long?

That brings us to Yul Brynner.

The Russian-born actor known for his role as the King of Siam was in town for a stint in "The King and I" and he requested a remote, quiet spot where he could stay. His agent put him up in a house here, on Golf House Road, as the Open was starting. Instead of getting peace and quiet, he got a mob of fans outside his window.

"Word got out that Brynner took it out on his people as if he were the King of Siam punishing the lowly members of his court," jokes former USGA director David Fay in a recent Golf Digest interview.

Obviously Brynner's meltdown didn't tip the scales away from Merion, but it was symbolic of an era when majors were moving out of the cozy confines of smaller courses and into the corporate tent era. Merion had always been a brutal test, with its narrow fairways and its spooky bunkers that seem to stare straight back at the golfers as they approach, but it was short (under 7,000 yards) and hemmed in. Only a concerted effort by Fay, Mike Davis, and some club members who bought land near the sixth hole pushed momentum back in favor of Merion returning to the major circuit. Fay told Golf Digest that because of the big broadcast deals in recent years (Thank you, Mr. Woods), "We could afford to take a financial hit every so often."

It's a shame that a visit to this course is considered any type of sacrifice. But holding the Open here would be like having the Super Bowl in Notre Dame Stadium – a delight for traditionalists but not fit for the times. It's a risk, and one made more dicey by the bad weather threatening to make some parts of the course unplayable. Sad but true: returning to Merion might be looked back on as a mistake.

Then again, waking up these echoes by putting Tiger Woods and today's greats on this postage stamp of a course might give this tournament something that might entice even the most hardened mercenaries a reason to come back here soon: serious history.

Tiger Woods stunned during press conference


Tiger Woods stunned during press conference











Eric Adelson June 11, 2013 2:28 PMYahoo Sports



ARDMORE, Pa. – By this point, after all these years, Tiger Woods has heard pretty much every media question imaginable.



Which is why it was so surprising – and fun – to see him stunned into silence during his press conference on Tuesday.

"The U.S. Open is usually one of the most grueling weeks of golf," offered a young woman seated amid the mob in the media tent. "So what would you do off the course in order to be at ease and relax?"




Cheyenne Woods at the U.S. Women's Open golf tournament in 2012. (AP)Not a hard-hitting question, but it came from a member of the media Woods knows quite well: his niece, Cheyenne Woods.



For a brief moment, Tiger was silent amid the chuckles of those in the room who recognized the questioner. Then he broke into a huge grin.

"Didn't expect that," he said.

Then he played along.

"Well, off the course, we have a great crew at the house and we're going to have fun," he began. "Tomorrow, make sure you're – is it 6:30 dinner? Is that all right? Okay. Perfect."

[Related: Tiger Woods still a big favorite to win the U.S. Open]

Cheyenne beamed and fleshed a Cheshire grin even after the press dispersed. Tiger was caught unprepared, and Cheyenne seemed to revel in that.

"I don't think he knew I was going to be at the press conference today," she told a few reporters as she exited. "I think I was the last person he was expecting."

Clearly.

It wasn't the only disarming moment of the press conference. Cheyenne's uncle was also asked (by another reporter) about the legacy of Charlie Sifford, one of the relatively few African-American legends in golf. It was Sifford, now 91, who helped desegregate the sport.

"I know my dad probably wouldn't have picked up the game if it wasn't for what Charlie did," Woods said. "I've always called him my grandpa, the grandpa I never really had. I've gotten to know him through the years and it's been fantastic. We owe a lot to him and all the pioneers that have paved the way for us to be here."

Although that answer came before Cheyenne's question, the two responses nicely linked the most famous golfer in the world with both the past and the future.

Cheyenne Woods, who will be 23 next month, majored in communications at Wake Forest and she is writing for a golf website called Back9Network.com, which is affiliated with USA Today. She qualified for the U.S. Women's Open last year and played in her first LPGA Championship.

She will be covering the entire U.S. Open this week, and apparently she'll get the kind of access every reporter dreams of: dinner on the eve of the U.S. Open with Tiger Woods.

Rainy Merion Could Be Phil Mickelson’s Best Chance at a US Open


Rainy Merion Could Be Phil Mickelson’s Best Chance at a US Open
Five-time Runner Up May Have His Best Chance to Capture His National Championship This Week











Chris Chaney June 11, 2013 3:49 PM




COMMENTARY | For Phil Mickelson, the US Open has always been the one that got away.

Finishing runner-up in his national championship five times, more than anyone else in


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His cl
ose calls at the tournament are well documented beginning with the 1999 Open in which the late Payne Stewart holed a 15-footer to top Mickelson on the 72nd hole. He would go on to finish second again in 2002 at Bethpage, in 2004 at Shinnecock, infamously in 2006 at Winged Foot and most recently, in 2009, again at Bethpage.



Contrary to popular belief, the stringent test of accuracy posed by the US Open has not had much of an adverse effect on the free-swinging Mickelson. Aside from those five runner-ups, Mickelson has finished in the top-10 three other times as well.

A balky putter cost Mickelson the championship in 2004 when he three-putted from five feet to double-bogey the 71st hole, giving Retief Goosen the opening he needed and again in 2009 when he missed key putts on holes 14, 15, 16 and 17 in the final round, leaving an opening for Lucas Glover.

Course management has cooked Mickelson's goose in the past as well, most notably at Winged Foot in 2006 when he inexplicably pulled a driver on the last hole of the championship despite holding a one-stroke lead. Mickelson would go on to blow his tee shot into the merchandise tents and catch an unfavorable "fried egg" lie in the greenside bunker. He made double-bogey, missing out on a playoff with eventual championGeoff Ogilvy by a shot.

All of that is to say if Mickelson could have kept his bearings about him coming down the stretch, he could have won at least two US Opens already.

So, what should make this year any different?

For one, Mickelson is clearly peaking coming into a rain-drenched Merion that doesn't stretch over 7,000 yards. Shooting weekend rounds of 67-65-67 at the FedEx St. Jude Classic last week, Mickelson was striking the ball well with his irons, an important key to succes in US Opens, while also yielding a hot putter.

With the weather not cooperating with the USGA, Merion Golf Club seems vulnerable to a birdie barrage, especially among the longer hitters who will have wedges into nearly half of the greens.

Add to the mix that Mickelson is first on Tour this year in birdies and eighth in strokes gained - putting, and the soon-to-be 43 year old could be looking at his best chance to raise the US Open Trophy since 2009.

"I'm really encouraged with the way I hit my irons," Mickelson said following the St. Jude. "I've got to get the 3-wood in play a little bit more, although next week at Merion distance won't be as critical as at TPC Southwind. I'll be able to hit higher and softer shots."

Those softer shots with will likely come off of wedges from one of the best short-iron players in the history of the game, which translates to more looks at birdie.

Always one to inject a sense intrigue into the biggest weeks of the year, Mickelson not only will keep the driver out of the bag at Merion this week, he won't be back on the tournament grounds until Thursday morning before his 7:11 a.m. tee time.

"I was scheduled to return to San Diego after my 2:30 press conference Tuesday. I came back Monday," Mickelson said in a statement. "My daughter Amanda is speaking at her 8th grade graduation ceremony and I always planned on being here for that, but since it was raining so much Monday and we didn't know if we'd even be able to play a sloppy course, I came home last night to practice in great weather on my range and greens. I'll be ready to go Thursday."

Always one with a flair for the dramatic, the idea of Mickelson hoisting the US Open Trophy on Father's Day after leaving a major championship venue midweek to see his daughter graduate seems so crazy only Phil could pull it off.

Chris Chaney is a Cincinnati, Ohio-based sportswriter. He has written for multiple outlets including WrongFairway.com, Hoopville.com, The Cincinnati (OH) Enquirer and The Clermont (OH) Sun.

Follow him on Twitter @Wrong_Fairway.

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