It’s
a cold, grey day in the old grey town, so my thoughts stray happily across the
Pond toward posh, breezy Southampton, N.Y., to the Shinnecock Hills Golf Club
and the approaching 104th U.S. Open. And there’s a goofy smile on my face. To
paraphrase our favorite son, Bobby Jones, you could take out of my life
everything except what I’ve experienced at Shinnecock Hills, and I would have an
utterly goofy life. Each time I go there, something abnormal
transpires.
On
my first trip, a late Friday afternoon in midsummer, I became entangled in the
legendary weekend exodus from Manhattan. (The Long Island Expressway, more or
less a straight shot from Gotham to Shinnecock,
slows to slightly above car-wash speed on summer weekends.) Never the most
patient of motorists, I wrenched my Pinto off an early exit and attempted an ad
lib path through roads less traveled, but instead locked onto the great circle
route, driving an extra thousand miles or so around the tip of far-flung Montauk
Point, the remotest reach of Long Island. Seven hours after leaving the city, I
completed my two-hour trip.
The
second time, in anticipation of a similar adventure, I drove like Roger Ramjet,
but somewhere between Ronkonkama and Speonk—why do all Long Island towns sound
as if they were named by someone with a terrible head cold?—was rewarded with an
$86 speeding ticket. The third time, I arrived unscathed for a golf-eve bash at
one of Southampton’s Gatsby-era mansions. It
seems, however, that I enjoyed myself a bit too much that evening, for I awoke
the next morning on the chintz-covered sofa of a lovely but entirely unfamiliar
cottage in Westhampton where no one else seemed to reside. Also mysteriously
absent was my car. Only an inveterate talent for hitchhiking enabled me to make
my 8 o’clock tee time, and it was not until the back nine that I was reunited
with my clubs.
But
my oddest experiences at Shinnecock have involved tour pros. The first occurred
on June 2, 1982, when, along with Ben Crenshaw and two officials from New York’s Metropolitan
Golf Association, I arrived in the pre-dawn darkness on the tee of Shinnecock’s
14th hole. The four of us had a mission, which I’d concocted as a publicity
stunt for my then employer, GOLF Magazine: to play 18 of the Met Area’s greatest
holes, each on a different golf course. Our dream course involved an expedition
of roughly 750 miles across three states. From Shinnecock, the itinerary called
for National (No. 4), Inwood (18), Woodmere (16), Garden City Golf Club (16) and
Meadowbrook (8), all on Long Island; followed by Stanwich (17) in Connecticut;
then back to New York for Westchester Country Club (13 West), Knollwood (18),
Metropolis (6), Quaker Ridge (4) and Winged Foot (17 West); and finally over to
New Jersey for Ridgewood (9 West), Upper Montclair (3 South), Fiddler’s Elbow (9
Blue), Somerset Hills (12), Plainfield (12) and Baltusrol (4 Lower).
I’d
plotted it for weeks, like the invasion of Normandy—hired lead-footed chauffeurs,
arranged police escorts, rented a helicopter for the ups and downs (14 in all)
and orchestrated each of the 18 visits with the precision of a NASA landing. All
we needed was some cooperation from Mother Nature.
But
she screwed with us. When we awoke that morning in Southampton’s Sandpiper Inn,
the entire eastern end of Long Island was
shrouded in fog. Our helicopter, based several miles away, was grounded and
wouldn’t be leaving anytime soon.
My
assault had called for a 7 a.m. launch, but by 8 a.m. we were still stranded at
that 14th hole, a gorgeously rightward-doglegging par-4 of 445 yards. Again,
impatience got the better of me. "Let’s play a practice hole," I said to my
partners. "It may be the only golf we see today."
And
so, in the mist, we did. Crenshaw birdied it, and I got up and down from a
bunker for par. Moments later, the fog lifted and we teed off for real. This
time Ben made par and I naturally sliced my drive into oblivion, taking a
triple-bogey 7.
Thereafter,
things went smoothly, and at precisely 8:10 p.m. Ben putted out for his par 3 at
Baltusrol’s pond-fronted fourth, our lunacy complete. The "round" had taken just
over 11 hours. Crenshaw played commendably, a 5-over par 77 despite a triple at
Inwood, and he putted as only he could—one-putting seven straight times through
three different states. I managed an 89, which was decent in view of the fact
that I became severely airsick somewhere between National and
Inwood.
Four
years later the U.S. Open returned to Shinnecock after an absence of 90 years.
There were doubts as to whether the USGA could pull it off—mostly concerns about
traffic flow and accommodations—but it turned out to be a tremendous success
(ergo the return in 1995 and again this year).
That
week was not without its weird moments. Because of the shortage of decent
hotels, GOLF had partnered with Newsday, Long
Island’s newspaper, and rented a small steamship to accommodate
advertisers and other guests. The ship was moored in the nearby Shinnecock Canal—until Tuesday night, when a strong
wind came up. The boat busted loose of its mooring and started drifting out to
sea, taking several million dollars of advertising with it. It was nearly 36
hours before things were restored to normal.