Gary Player Celebrates 50th Anniversary Of His U.S. Open Win By Reminding The USGA To Roll Back The Ball!
/In the 50th anniversary year of Gary Player's career Grand Slam-clinching win in the U.S. Open, Cliff Schrock digs into the archives to look at the clinching years and ages.
Player was at Chambers Bay Thursday to celebrate the anniversary and put his hosts in their place.
Q. Gary, you won that 65 Open at Bellerive, which has been out of the public eye for a few years, but is coming back. Tell everybody a little bit about what kind of golf course Bellerive is. Maybe even mention some of the best holes or your favorite holes and tell us how you think the players are going to fare there, whether it's an easy time or whether you think it's going to be really tough.
GARY PLAYER: When I went there it was the longest U.S. Open course in history. And it was young. And I go back there now, which I went back to be inducted into the Hall of Fame in St. Louis, which I appreciated, and looked at Bellerive and trees, it's just in undated with trees, and this beautiful golf course today. And it's an appropriate place to have an Open. But very few places today in any tournament, due to the mismanagement of the golf ball, which is actually deteriorating the game to a large extent, not in professional golf; professional golf has never been so healthy, ever. But amateur golf, which is the heart of the game, we're getting less players and less players. You can buy a golf course for a dollar today, if you take over the debt, which nobody does, but rounds are down because they're making golf courses longer, they're putting bunkers in front of the greens, they're making crazy undulating greens, and the members hate it, and then they levy you and so they resign out from the club.
So bleak and yet, so true. Go on...
We're desperately running out of water in the world, and the fertilizer and the machinery and then they levy you again. So if they just leave the golf course as they are for the amateur members and cut the ball back 50 yards for professional golf we wouldn't have to waste hundreds of millions of dollars altering golf courses and making them 7900 yards long and increasing the expenses and getting less people to play. We're in dire straits at the moment. If you look at Augusta, from what I've heard, if I'm correct, they're now buying the street on No. 2 and the street on No. 5, and they're making the tee back on the street. Augusta cannot go back any further, they cannot go in the streets. Well, they are. They're buying the streets. So where are we going? And we've never had a big man play golf here, guys, ladies. We've never had a big man other than George Bayer, who played in our time. Wait until a LeBron James and the Michael Jordans and the Shaq O'Neals, and they're coming. Because this is the only sport you can make more money at 80 than when you were world champion. It doesn't apply to other sports, because you finish at 30 years of age. And so where are we going? We saw Bubba Watson at the 13th hole of Augusta hit a driver and a pitching wedge. We saw him hit a driver and a 9-iron over the 15th on a par 5 over the green. So where are we going? It's making a farce of the game. And they're two different games. And our leaders won't adhere to that.
I love old people who don't care anymore, even when they are insulting their hosts.
They insist that it's the same game. Well, go and watch some of these guys play and you'll realize it's not the same game. And so what we've got to do, we've got to go accordingly on the right path and make the right decision. Because if you make the wrong decision, it will be comparable to what happened with Polaroid and Kodak, who are now extinct today. And their executive, their CEO said, I'm reluctant to change because we're doing so well. And his advisors are saying change, and they're nonexistent today. And Steve Jobs did the opposite, he had vision and went the right way, and was highly successful. So the decision our leaders take now has a great determining factor in what happens in the future.
Now, back to 7,900 yard course that's taking almost six hours to play this afternoon.