The Eve of the Open
The Eve of the Open
By Lee Pace
It’s been 10 years since the last U.S. Open at Pinehurst No. 2. What’s different about the golf course and infrastructure in one decade? So much. But then again, so little.
The Deuce does not fit into the Open template of having narrow fairways and suffocating rough following its 2010-11 restoration by Bill Coore & Ben Crenshaw. So course prep leading to the third week of June is pretty much status quo as it is any other June.
Coore saw the course in the spring of 2023.
“It just looked to me like, ‘Go play,’” he says. “The presentation is just perfect. It hasn’t changed in nine years. If anything, it’s better.”
But there are some differences on and around the golf course.
* The Cradle on hiatus. The immensely popular nine-hole course designed by Gil Hanse in 2017 sits on 10 acres south of the resort clubhouse. That area is used as the practice grounds for the Open, so Pinehurst officials have had to close it to take out some of the wire grass and sand-scaping to allow for efficient pickup of a hundred thousand golf balls during the week. Then they will put The Cradle back together after the Open.
* No ladies. June of 2014 was marked by the first-ever back-to-back men’s and women’s national championships on the same venue, and since then the USGA has settled the Women’s Open into a consistent late-May calendar slot. They’ll make an exception in 2029, however, when No. 2 will once again be the site for the men’s and women’s competitions.
* Bermuda greens. The Pinehurst U.S. Opens in 1999, 2005 and 2014 were all played on bent grass putting surfaces. The greens were converted after the 2014 event to Champion Bermuda, and this will be the first time the Open has been played on ultra-dwarf Bermuda. The chief difference? They’ll be a little firmer and thus put even more premium on accurate iron play.
* More wire grass. Pinehurst maintenance staff added some 50,000 wire grass plants from November through March, and the tufts are positioned randomly along the perimeters of the fairways in the hardpan sand. Combined with pine needles, wildflowers and random “volunteer” vegetation, golfers have no idea what kind of lie and shot they’ll have if they miss the short grass.
* A narrower 13th hole. John Bodenhamer, the chief course set-up official for the USGA, cropped 12 yards off the left side of the fairway in the landing zone. The shortest par-4 on the course at 381 yards will now offer a target of 28 yards on golfers’ tee shots.
* Where’s Payne? The statue of Payne Stewart in his iconic pose making the winning putt at Pinehurst in 1999 has stood beside the 18th green since November 2001. But with the myriad of infrastructure for the Open, it would have gotten lost behind the grandstands. For Open week, it’s being repositioned at the main entrance.
* And a more balanced color palette between the Opens of 2005 and 2014.
The course was too green, too lush and “too organized,” in the words of Coore, in 2005, which was why the restoration was taken on in the first place. Part of that project included changing the triple-row irrigation system to a single-row down the middle of each fairway. An inordinate six weeks of hardly any rain leading up to the 2014 Open lent a bit much of a brown and crispy look to the premises.
The winter and spring of 2024 have been ideal in terms of temperature and rainfall. The course will retain its jagged and unkempt look reminiscent of how designer Donald Ross left it upon his death in 1948. But the brown areas not hit by the irrigation row a decade ago will look healthier.
The only tweaks Bodenhamer will make during championship week will be predicated on weather.
“We plan to just let Pinehurst be Pinehurst, as Donald Ross’ masterpiece will surely produce another memorable U.S. Open,” he says.
Chapel Hill based writer Lee Pace has written about golf in the Sandhills since the late 1980s and has authored a dozen books about clubs, courses and the people who’d made it special over more than a century.
Lee Pace
Other Blogs
Off for Pinehurst
Small Towns Big Style
At Home In The Pines
10 Great Things To Do
Discover The Path To Pinehurst’s Past
Insider Golf Tips
Unique Wedding Venues
North Carolina Couples Vacation
Our Favorite 19th Holes in the Home of American Golf
Girlfriend Getaways
Tobacco Road: A Truly Unique Golf Adventure
Carolinas Golf Association Hall of History
Where the Ladies Golf
Romancing Pinehurst
Home of American Golf and U.S. Open Connections
Former U.S. Open Champions Provide Pinehurst Area Some of Its Finest Designs
Donald Ross First of Many Architects to Design U.S. Open-Quality Courses in Sandhills
Sandhills Offers Outstanding Variety of Outdoor Activities
Buddy Golf Trip
18 Holes of Local Knowledge for the Sandhills Golfer
The Family Fun Trip
Midland Road: The “Fifth Avenue of Golf”
Collards, Community and Collaboration
10 Little-Known Facts About North Carolina’s Pinehurst/Southern Pines Region
Sandhills Holiday Gift Guide
Spring Primer: Local Knowledge from the Home of American Golf
Our Favorite Coffee Shops in the Sandhills
Franz Creating Legacy on the Links
Bring Fido! Pet-Friendly Finds Among the Pines
Bottlebrush: Pinehurst Area’s Best Kept Secret
Franz Part 2: The Legacy Continues
Why Visit Pinehurst If You Don’t Play Golf?
Franz Part 3: On Sandhills Topography
Top 10 Places for a #Sandhills Selfie
“Bermuda Revolution” Around Sandhills Leads to Ideal Year-Round Golf
Hunger Games – Sandhills Golfers Dining Guide
Episode 1: Golf Tips with Nick Bradley
Episode 2: Golf Tips with Nick Bradley
Sandhills Embraces Walking Culture
Patrick Dougherty: The Stickman Cometh
Dining A to Z
Fall Renewal in the Sandhills
Pinehurst’s Ryder Cup 1951
No. 2 Celebrates 10 Years
2004 Ryder Cup That Wasn’t
Family Fun in the Sandhills
Remarkable Golf Stays in The Pinehurst Area
Couples Weekend Getaway Ideas
Nature’s Canvas: Tobacco Road
Perfect Getaway to Southern Pines
Culinary Discoveries in the Sandhills of N.C.
Restaurant Roundtable Q&A
Dormie Club’s New Era
Talamore and Mid South: History of Their Own
Undiscovered Pinehurst
Talamore Doing More for 2022
Romantic Gift Ideas In Pinehurst Area
Foodie Weekend in the Sandhills
Wellness in the Pines
The Military Means Business in the Sandhills
Pine Needles Goes Back in Time
Grande Dame of Women’s Golf
A Guide to Berry Picking in the Sandhills
Waltzing on the Danube with Peggy Kirk Bell
From Cradle to Cradle
Donald Ross Could Golf His Ball
No Resting on Laurels Around the Home of American Golf
Flower Farms in the Sandhills
Fall into Pinehurst Golf
What Goes Around…
Talamore Resort Debuts New Toptracer Range
The History of the Pinehurst Inns
“For me, Pinehurst is such a special place for golf!”- Tom Fazio
Maples Roots Run Deep in Sandhills Golf Design
New Southern Pines Mural
Pinehurst Area Buzzing with 2023 Excitement
Discover the Sweetness of the Sandhills
Celebrating the New Year in Moore County
The Big Three
Jones Family Imprint
The Hanse Touch
Coore & Crenshaw Roots Run Deep
Pinehurst Resort Announces New Course to be Designed by Tom Doak
PINEHURST’S MAGNOLIA INN REOPENS
Southern Pines Golf Club Recognized
Spring in the Sandhills
Mother/Daughter Weekend in the Sandhills
A Few of Our Favorite (Golfing) Things
Golf Pride Retail Lab
6 Trails to Explore for the Year of the Trail
Pinehurst No. 2 Still Ranked Best Course in NC
Sandhills Ecology 101
X Marks the 10-Spot
Best Date Night Ideas in the Sandhills
9 Urban Trails Around Pinehurst Area
Uniquely Pinehurst
2024 U.S. Open: A Look Ahead
1999 U.S. Open: A Look Back
A Restorative Weekend Getaway at Tanglewood Farm B&B in Southern Pines
Top Things To Do On A Long Weekend
Independence Day in the Sandhills
Celebrating NC Peaches
Kid You Not
Sleepy Summers No More
Getting Outside
When They Were Young
Pinehurst Major-itis
Loving Our Black & Whites
Lens of the Sandhills
Festival D’avion Named as Signature Event
Celebrate American Craft Week
Act Two for Tot Hill Farm
An Artist in the Dirt
Legends of the Pines
Breakfast Joints of the Sandhills
The Scottish Invasion
To Dornoch and Back
A “New” Pinehurst Welcomes the World in 2024
Pinehurst Holiday
Golfers Gift Guide
Sandhills Nightlife Scene
A U.S. Open Year
Payne at 25
Where to Antique in Cameron and Carthage
Girls’ Weekend in Moore County
Sandhills Hall of Fame
Hall of Fame Take Two
BHAWK Distillery Toasts Military Spirit
A Dozen Master Strokes
Popular Pinecone Pathways Returns for Spring 2024
The Dynamic Decade
Sandhills Pours Double Dose
Rebirth at Woodlake
Pints in the Pines: A Guide to the Breweries of the Sandhills
Count to Ten
Architect’s Mosaic
USGA Officially Opens Golf House Pinehurst
No Putter, No Problem
Meet the Makers
The Coincidental Resort
The Shot
Village People
Pinehurst Area Basks in U.S. Open Glow
World Golf Hall of Fame
Walk It Off
The Deuce: Tips & Tricks
Sergeant’s Valor Rye named Rye Whiskey of the Year in USA Spirits
2023 Visitor Spending
Wildlife in the Sandhills
A Walking Tour of Southern Pines
The Fall Foursome (And Beyond)
Good Eats in the Sandhills