When Oakmont Nation Membership was handed the excellence of Nationwide Historic Landmark within the Nineteen Eighties – awarded to these ‘buildings, districts, objects, websites or buildings of excellent historic significance’, it was a call little doubt taken by people who don’t should play their golf there.
This was the positioning of Angel Cabrera’s U.S. Open win of 2007 with a rating of +5; the highest-winning tally in 50 years of the devilish match.
And when it returned to Oakmont in 2016, Dustin Johnson lifted the trophy after compiling a rating of -4; one in all simply 4 gamers to complete below par after 72 holes.
The U.S. Open will return to Oakmont in 2025, so right here’s an early take a look at one of the vital testing programs in North America.
18 Holes of Hell
People who wager on sports activities will probably be eyeing the gamers greatest outfitted to deal with the rigours of Oakmont: Scottie Scheffler (5/1), Rory McIlroy, Jon Rahm and Xander Schauffele (all 10/1) thought of the main protagonists within the ante publish odds.
However because the predictions made by websites like Paddy Energy Information will attest, Oakmont Nation Membership is such a gruelling take a look at that, finally, the U.S. Open in 2025 could also be outlined by a single gap – so few and much between are the birdie alternatives out there.
The structure, designed by Henry Fownes in 1903 (and toughened by Tom Fazio and Gil Hanse), has stood the take a look at of time. It performs to round 7,300 yards for its Par 70, which is extremely lengthy, however has the distinctive distinction of being virtually tree-less and boasting only a handful of water hazards.
So the place does the problem come from? Nicely, there are 175 bunkers for starters – making Oakmont one of many sandiest tracks on the main golf rotation. The Church Pews bunker has taken on a notoriety of its personal: in play on each the third and fourth holes, the sand-trap measures 100 x 40 yards and options greater than a dozen grass-covered ridges, or ‘pews’.
The inexperienced complexes additionally play a component. That includes staggering slopes, they’re additionally laid with Poa Annua, which is without doubt one of the more durable surfaces to putt on – notably in scorching climate, when the grass can grow to be bumpy. If the situations maintain in Pittsburgh, the greens will play lightning quick too… an issue each on strategy and when placing.
On the 2016 U.S. Open, 14 of the 18 holes averaged over par. The hardest was the opening gap, a 482-yard Par 4 that noticed extra double bogeys (or worse) than birdies over the course of the week.
In accordance with Golf Digest, Oakmont Nation Membership is the second hardest course in all of America. It’s an accolade that’s nicely deserved…
Profitable the Arduous Approach
Rewind to the 54-hole stage of the 2016 US Open and Shane Lowry discovered himself three photographs away from the sphere.
However the complexities of Oakmont, allied to the stress of profitable a significant, noticed the Irishman crumble within the remaining spherical – one birdie and 7 bogeys in his closing 76 a microcosm of what can go unsuitable round these 18 holes.
And in 2007, a rating of +11 would have secured you a top-ten end on the leaderboard – throughout all the 4 days, par was damaged solely eight occasions in all.
Brad Faxon as soon as described the greens at Oakmont as ‘the toughest I’ve ever putted on’, whereas Phil Mickelson – who has seen a lot in his three a long time as knowledgeable – categorised the structure because the ‘hardest course the professionals have ever performed’.
So good luck, and Godspeed, to these lining up on the 2025 U.S. Open.