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Usual mix of skill, patience needed at golf’s toughest test

• Some are looking forward to the brutal rough around the greens, and others say it is like survival every day

Andrew Both San Diego

The US Open is said to be golf’s toughest test. An exacting examination of skill and patience is in store for the world’s best players at the 121st staging of the Major championship, which began on Thursday.

The prevailing view of players is that anyone wanting to contend will have to avoid the thick rough waiting to gobble up errant shots at Torrey Pines south. The 7,652-yard par-71 layout, a city-owned municipal course that San Diego residents can play for as little as $63, hugs cliff tops above the Pacific Ocean and affords magnificent views of the world’s largest water hazard.

Players, however, will be more concerned with how deeply their balls nestle down in the wiry rough that, to listen to them, will often be penal but also occasionally offer a reprieve.

“This thick-blade grass, you can actually get lucky and get some decent lies, or you can get some that it’s hard to move [the ball] five yards,” said Spaniard Jon Rahm, who is likely to start as one of the favourites on a course where he posted his first PGA Tour victory.

“So the discrepancy is big. It’s a US Open. You’re going to get good breaks and bad breaks,” Rahm added.

Several former champions weighed in, with Rory McIlroy perhaps the only contrarian. The US’s Gary Woodland, the 2019 champion up the coast at Pebble Beach, said the rough was so deep around some greens that organisers gave it a late haircut.

“I think they’ve mowed it a little since Sunday because you were losing balls around the greens,” Woodland said. “It’s brutal.”

Another former champion, Webb Simpson, relishes the test. “I don’t think I would like it 20 times a year, but it’s really fun for a week,” the 2012 winner said. “You feel like it’s kind of survival every day.”

Straight-talking two-time champion Brooks Koepka offered a typical observation. “If you don’t hit the fairways, you’re going to be in trouble,” he said.

But McIlroy had a slightly different take. “The rough is playable. It’s not as penal as some other US Opens,” he said.

Torrey Pines previously hosted the US Open in 2008, when Tiger Woods famously won in a playoff against Rocco Mediate despite playing for five days with two tibia stress fractures and a badly injured left knee that would require reconstructive surgery a week later.

The winning score then was one under par. Woods is not playing this year as he rehabilitates from a February car crash, but Phil Mickelson is, playing in his hometown in the one championship he needs to complete the career Grand Slam, after six agonising runner-up finishes.

Mickelson joins 155 others, including nine amateurs, who will tee up for the first two rounds, and the top 60 (plus ties) will advance to the final 36 holes. /

I THINK THEY’VE MOWED IT A LITTLE SINCE SUNDAY BECAUSE YOU WERE LOSING BALLS AROUND THE GREENS. IT’S BRUTAL

Gary Woodland US Open champion in 2019

SPORT

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2021-06-18T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-06-18T07:00:00.0000000Z

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