Imagine working downtown in a hustling, bustling city like Chicago.
One minute you're at your desk, the next minute you've hopped aboard a south bound train, and fifty minutes later, you're at the door steps of Olympia Fields Country Club.
You meet your out-of-town friends there, who have spent the night in one of 45 (!) guest rooms in the mammoth clubhouse.
You have the option to play the South Course, which retains much of the charm since Tom Bendelow laid it out 85 years ago.
Or you can play the longer and tougher North Course, which will host the U.S. Open in 2003. Mark Mungeam's excellent work (especially in regards to the bunkers) has restored plenty of ruggedness and challenge to the North Course, which Willie Park laid out in 1922.
Indeed, at that time, the North Course was the fourth course for Olympia Fields, making it one of the true centers of activity in American golf in the 1920s.
It is WONDERFUL to see the U.S. Open return to such an historic site and deserving course.
Cheers,