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Bethpage Black | For Pros And Amateurs

posted June 29, 2009 - 8:33am
Bethpage Black | For Pros And Amateurs

One of the unique connections between PGA Tour players and their fans is that they can share the same golf course experiences — sort of.

Recreation league basketball players don't play pick-up games in the Staples Center in Los Angeles or Madison Square Garden in New York. And you can't meet friends for a Sunday morning flag football game in Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wis.

But you can play golf at Bethpage State Park in New York. Its five layouts, including the Black Course, are open the public. And the Black Course is the same course where Lucas Glover just won the U.S. Open.

For the second time in eight years, the 7,400-yard par 70 layout about 30 miles east of New York City in Farmingdale, N.Y., hosted the country's national championship. It's among the longest and most difficult layouts used in the U.S. Open rotation.

It's not often a golf course is deemed so difficult, its pending players are warned. On the first tee of the Black Course, a sign reads: “Warning. The Black Course is an extremely difficult course which we recommend only for highly skilled golfers.”

And while certainly the course has been “tweaked” in accordance to the United States Golf Association (U.S.G.A). specifications, it's the same course where the public can play weekdays and weekends with green fees (no carts) ranging from $50 to $120.

Designed by golf course architect A.W. Tillinghast, the Black Course was opened in 1936. It first served as the site of the 102nd U.S. Open Championship in 2002, and it was trend-setting since it was the first time the U.S.G.A. began to include public courses into the U.S. Open rotation with country clubs like Shinnecock Hills, Oakmont, Congressional and Merion.
Last year, in the U.S. Open at Torrey Pines in San Diego, Calif., (another public course) Tiger Woods and Rocco Mediate competed for 91 holes before Woods prevailed in what is often considered the greatest round of golf ever televised.
Next year, the U.S. Open will be played at Pebble Beach Golf Links. Chambers Bay, just outside of Tacoma, Wa., will be the site the 2015 U.S. Open and Erin Hill in Wisconsin is expected to be selected as a U.S. Open host course within the next decade. All are open to the public.

The Black Course at Bethpage, (there are also the red, green, blue and yellow courses) like other U.S. Open courses, features narrow, fair fairways, high roughs and well-placed bunkers. And just like other U.S. Open courses, the winner rarely accumulates a regulation total score better than a few under par.

What separates Bethpage from other U.S. Open courses by most accounts is the architect's vision of what bunkers represent.
Players who hit shots into the large nearly omnipresent bunkers will likely be penalized. Some of the bunkers are located only 10 yards from the fringes of greens and only 20 yards from the hole.

That equation makes for difficult shots for amateurs and pros alike. And as such, it gives pros and amateurs something else to potentially share. If the opportunity arises, they can commiserate.



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