Answers may be hard to come by, as 1986 was too long ago for the average golf fans among us and maybe too recent for the historians, but:
One golf-related thing led to another this afternoon and I found myself watching the final round at Shinnecock. I so very much liked everything about it -- the course/architecture, the 'set up', and the way the game was played. And that in turn led me to finding out that '86 was the first time in 90 years (!) that Shinnecock had hosted the US Open.
Does anyone remember the background to that story/decision, and the reaction to the course? Who was the driving force behind Shinnecock landing the tournament? And, did they/the USGA change or renovate or restore the course beforehand? If so, who was architect involved (if any)?
PS - to this untrained eye and possibly faulty memory, in terms of later championships the '86 (and '95) US Opens at Shinnecock 'felt' so very different than either the 2004 or 2018 editions; and so different too, in terms of looking back, to say the 1974 US Open at Winged Foot.