Oakmont Country Club - Oakmont, PAHenry C. Fownes/William C. Fownes 1903, W.C. Fownes/Emil Loeffler 1910-1935, Arthur Snyder 1952, Robert Trent Jones 1964, Arnold Palmer/Ed Seay 1978, Fred Garbin 1983, Arthur Hills 1988, Tom Fazio/Tom Marzolf 2005, Bill Coore/Ben Crenshaw 2016
Doak Scale Score - 10"Audacious" is the first word that comes to my mind at Oakmont with holes that have little time for modern notions of "fairness" Here on the third the further one drives the more the shot needs to be squeezed into the uphill slope between the nest of bunkers right and the church pews left....leaving a blind to semi-blind approach (note the direction pole) to a ridge-top green with a wicked false front and a corresponding fallaway just behind. Would anyone build this hole today?What more needs to be said about Oakmont? I was so excited to play there and so nervous entering that storied cauldron of human misery that I thought I would black out on a few of my first swings. Thankfully, a day or so prior I had received some wisdom from my friend John Y. in western PA who essentially said, "When you get in trouble, don't be a hero. Just get out of trouble". It turned out to be sage advice.
Is Oakmont really a monster? Well, yes, it can be but given that ferocity it is also the most playable, most strategic, and most captivating relentlessly difficult golf course I've ever played There is always a place to miss, or to play safe, or to just chicken out and it's rare to lose a ball, unless perhaps in the drainage ditches which have been left to grow a bit wild. That being said, this is a course where you really want to play from the members tees as those created for US Open play will quickly teach a person why no one is paying them to play the game. It is also a course where you really need to think about placement on every shot and not just from an aerial perspective; the firmness of the ground combined with the slope means you always need to consider where your ball will roll and roll and roll to.
With the amount of architects who have been there over the years one might think it would be a hodge-podge of styles but thankfully the audacity of the original Fownes "a shot poorly played should be a shot irrevocably lost" grand design and wonderful routing lives on 116 years later.
Who today would design holes like the long par-four first along tight OB right to a green falling steeply away, or the tilted green of the 2nd hole where you worry that your coin might slide, or the 17th, where any number of options exist on the steeply uphill 322 yard blind hole? Oakmont simply doesn't care that it's not fair.
The heralded tree-removal program actually continues, and most recently everything along the tracks/turnpike has been removed, such that one can stand on the third green and see the entire golf course. Majestic!
The greens are everything they are claimed to be but I found them so wildly interesting that I can't think of another course where stroking a good putt along an intended line provides so much satisfaction, and even glee.
Oakmont is also perhaps the nicest, most welcoming, most low-key and golf-loving club I've ever had the pleasure to visit.
More audaciousness can be found on the finishing hole and I'm hopeful that the picture from behind the green gives some idea of their nature.