Iain Carter's US Open Diary
Who would want to be in the spikes of boss David Fay? There's not much he can do about the weather - but it didn't stop disgruntled fans having a go as he filled up his car on the way home from the rain-affected first day at Bethpage.
Spectators who had paid around $100 for tickets were treated to just three-and-a-quarter hours of early morning golf and haven't been holding back in making it known they feel somewhat short-changed.
"I heard it last night when I was pumping gas," Fay admitted. "I must say I'm glad I had a coat on because the comments weren't very positive. And I heard it again this morning at Dunkin' Donuts. But we're trying to come up with a solution that is fair."
The answer is that those first day tickets will be good for any play on Monday and given the forecast it seems inevitable that will be the earliest the championship will finish.
Fay also admitted that the current ticketing policy is not clear on refunds and the like when weather intervenes. "We understand that we need to be crisper in our printed communications going forward," he said.
As for the Championship, be in no doubt it will run its full 72 or, if necessary, 90-hole course and will finish whenever those holes have been completed.
If, for the sake of argument, 72 holes were completed on Monday morning and there was a tie, the 18 hole play-off would follow almost immediately.
There are also no plans to rescind the 10-shot rule on the halfway cut, even if it means a bloated field for the final two rounds that would create yet more logistical headaches.
"We are comfortable with our policy," said championship director Jim Hyler. "We have no plans to look at that based on what's going on out here."
It's tough to work out which side of the draw is better placed given the extraordinary circumstances of this . Weighing up the impact of the opening day's is not straightforward.
Those early starters caught in the Thursday deluge departed the course believing they had found themselves in the unlucky half of the draw. They had to battle atrociously wet and windy conditions before the 10.14 sounding of the siren that ended play for the day.
But on Friday they returned to and crucially were able to reap the benefits of smoother greens.
On the downside, once their round is completed they head for home - the next time they get to peg it up will be when the rains are expected to have returned to on Saturday.
Meanwhile, the other the half of the draw began at 10.00am. As the late/early section they play in the fine weather all day long with a short turnaround between their first and second rounds.
But come the afternoon the soft greens are sure to become uneven given the heavy traffic around the holes. Swings and roundabouts spring to mind.
Driving - length and accuracy - is going to be the key stat this week. Is Tiger Woods's swing dialled in sufficiently? I didn't look to be as he hit just seven out of 14 fairways in his first-round 74.
Jeff Brehaut, the 46-year-old American, is loving life in the US Open limelight. An even-par 70 was a fine start to what is his second appearance at his country's national championship.
And the fun and games began at the end of his Wednesday practice round. He'd hit two poor approaches into greenside bunkers on the ninth hole. A large crowd was assembling because was in the vicinity.
Brehaut delighted the assembled throng by holing his first bunker shot. "The crowd went nuts," according to the .
So the veteran then moved to his next ball and holed that as well. "I was jumping up and down. I pumped my fist, then signed half an hour of autographs," Brehaut said. "Even if this is as good as it gets, this is pretty good."
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Comment number 1.
At 20th Jun 2009, misoramen wrote:The early starters on Thursday got the raw deal but some of them did incredibly well.
I have a tenner on Mc Dowell at 100-1!
early days but I'm thinking of getting some golf lessons with my winnings!
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Comment number 2.
At 20th Jun 2009, kwiniaskagolfer wrote:Iain,
As posted elsewhere, if they allow six hour rounds and don't use available daylight, the USGA is bound to have problems regardless of the weather.
If there was any will to do so, they could have started earlier Friday, started Round 2 by 3.30 p.m., and started again at 6.30 a.m. Saturday, plenty of light as I write. And the Van Pelt / Brehault groups could have been off and running by 8.00 a.m. at the latest. That would have permitted at least a start to Round 3 on Saturday.
But they're so beholden to NBC and Woods that they won't do that. It won't be just the guys at Dunkin Donuts and the gas station, it will be the pros criticising Fay if he doesn't get his act together, and rightly so. The likes of Drew Weaver, McDowell, Edfors and Trevor Murphy being given a ridiculously severe handicap.
You may not want to be in Fay's spikes, but bet you'd like his pay cheque.
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Comment number 3.
At 21st Jun 2009, John From London Town MBE wrote:For such a great championship, it is sad to see the USGA 'bowing' to both NBC & Tiger Woods' needs. In the long run, this may well cause more headaches.
An example of these same headaches, could result in players who have made the cut, pulling out of events which they are due to play in next week. Sponsors won't be happy, other TV companies won't be happy & it doesn't show much respect or unity to the rest of the Golfing associations worldwide.
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