Cog Hill not expecting 2017 U.S. Open
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May 22, 2010
BY LEN ZIEHM lziehm@suntimes.com
From all accounts, the U.S. Golf Association will assign its next available U.S. Open to either Cog Hill or Erin Hills, a Wisconsin course. The announcement of the site for the 2017 championship will be made at next month's U.S. Open, and Cog Hill owner Frank Jemsek has doubts it will go his way.
''I was surprised, and pleased, to learn we're still in the running,'' Jemsek said in reaction to recent published reports in national golf publications. ''We haven't really been talking to [the USGA]. I don't have my lawyers talking to their lawyers, and that discourages me some.''
Mike Davis, the USGA's senior director of rules and competitions, took an immediate liking to Erin Hills when it opened in 2007 and recently spent several days there. Since its opening, Erin Hills has undergone several course revisions and an ownership change in preparation for hosting the U.S. Amateur in 2011.
Cog Hill, meanwhile, underwent a $5.5 million renovation supervised by noted architect Rees Jones before the PGA Tour returned its BMW Championship to the course last fall. Jemsek long has wanted to host U.S. Open, which would fulfill the dream of his late father Joe -- a longtime trend-setter for public golf in Chicago and nationwide.
''I still think we have a slight chance,'' Jemsek said. ''We're still trying, but if we were really into it, we'd be talking to them more than we have been.''