Open Sandwich: What the 2011 field said about the Royal St. George’s test
The scene of epic duals in fiction as well as in reality, the Kent course is all set to host its 15th Open.
In 2003, Tiger Woods famously lost his ball off the first tee, Thomas Bjorn has his hopes of glory dashed in a bunker, and Ben Curtis pulled off one of the great Major Championship coups.
Patience and preparation
Lee Westwood: "More than anywhere on The Open Championship rota, you accept you're going to get bad breaks, but you get good breaks, as well. You're going to need patience, it's going to be tested. Strategically it's a good golf course. You have to plan your way around it."
Louis Oosthuizen: "Your practice rounds have to be so on the spot. Your course management has got to be really good around here and, like any links golf, you're going to have a bad bounce, but you're also going to have good bounces. So you're going to have shots going straight towards a bunker and it takes a bounce away from it, and remember you're going to have it the other way, too."
The Sandwich course is ready… and very green. Popeye rough. #TheOpen
— Ken Brown ....⛳️ (@KenBrownGolf) July 2, 2021
Plenty of exciting #kenonthecourse spots. #golf#GreatGreens⛳️ pic.twitter.com/fSdByzSbva
Off the tee
Charl Schwartzel: "It's so difficult to predict what it's going to do when it hits the ground."
Ian Poulter: "It's not my favourite in rotation. You can hit a lot of great golf shots, certainly off the tee, and get some bad bounces. It amazes me how you can keep the ball on the 17th fairway. (I hit) the middle of the fairway and it's a hog's back, so it could go right or left. It went left and it's in the rough."
Just a little shine for the bunkers 👌🏼#theopen #golf pic.twitter.com/KpjU2bjQqV
— Paul larsen (@PaulLarsenRSG) July 1, 2021
The wind factor
Stewart Cink: "The hardest part of a really windy day is keeping your composure. Like the eighth. I hit it in the middle of the fairway, had 200 yards to the flag, normally that's 5-iron, and it was as good as I could hit a 3-wood to get it to the hole and on the green. Felt like I made an eagle but I made only a par, so you're not getting the reward for well-struck shots. And poorly struck shoots are just blown off the map. You're getting a lot of negative feedback and not much positive feedback. So it's really tough to just stay composed out there."
Pin positions
Phil Mickelson: "I've noticed that on the easy holes the pins have been in ridiculously hard spots. I wish it would go the other way. I wish the hard holes would have the hard pin placements and the easy holes would have the easy pin placements, because then we'd have some birdies and we'd have a lot more bogeys and doubles. But I don't set it up. It's not my job. It's my job to find an effective way to play it. But the way it's set up is going to lead to par, par, par, par. So we don't see too many birdies other than maybe the par-5s."
Approach shots
Rory McIlroy: "Sometimes it's hard to run the ball into these greens because they're so undulating, it can catch the wrong side of a slope and it can go 20, 30 yards away from the green. You're going to really need a very strong ball flight. It's all about the second shot, because the greens are so slopey that you're going to have 25-, 30-footers all day."
Rickie Fowler: "On downwind holes you're not able to stop the ball and you've got to play some shots that land short and run up."
On and around the green
Adam Scott: "It's tough to get the ball close. You're not going to have that many opportunities. You're going to have to make some par putts, so you'd better putt well over the weekend."