Time Has Come Today

By: Jeff Shelley


With apologies to the Chambers Brothers - a Seattle band, by the way, that wrote the song with the above title - the news that the USGA will be holding the 2010 U.S. Amateur and 2015 U.S. Open at a course in the Pacific Northwest, Chambers Bay near Tacoma, is, like that tune, wonderful to hear.

I first visited the course, crafted by Robert Trent Jones Jr. and his design associates Bruce Charleton and Jay Blasi, about seven months before it opened and was immediately smitten by the links planted wall to wall with fescue. Situated along the banks of Puget Sound just west of the Tacoma suburb of University Place, Chambers Bay embodies our naturally gifted region as well as the great game of golf. There are few places for golf like that left in the world, so it's especially comforting that Pierce County Executive John Ladenburg had the foresight and success in building the golf course - and attracting two world-class tournaments - for the former blighted gravel quarry.

Yet, without recognition by all of golf's major publications, it's possible this shiny gem and its site overlooking Puget Sound and the Olympic Mountains might have become just another of our local "best-kept secrets." As a native of the Northwest and someone responsible for writing several books devoted to golf in the region (including three editions of "Golf Courses of the Pacific Northwest" and as co-author of "Championships & Friendships: The First 100 Years of the Pacific Northwest Golf Association"), it's my pleasure to indoctrinate those of you unfamiliar with the game in the upper-left-hand corner of the U.S.

So, here's a primer from an unabashed supporter of the game and my neck of the woods.

Even though the region - including Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Western Montana and British Columbia in Canada - boasts some of the oldest golf clubs in North America, with several founded before the first-ever U.S. Open in 1895, the game's biggest championship has never made it to the Northwest.

It's appropriate that a course in the City of Destiny will host a U.S. Open since it contains Tacoma Country & Golf Club. Originated in 1894, Tacoma C&GC is the oldest private golf club west of the Mississippi River. Over the years the USGA has noted the club's rich heritage and allowed the facility to host several of its national events, including the 1961 U.S. Women's Amateur, 1984 U.S. Senior Women's Amateur, 1994 U.S. Women's Mid-Amateur and the 2007 USGA Junior Girl's.

Tacoma C&GC, which joined the USGA in 1897, was also the one-time home of James Barnes, its head pro in 1906. After leaving the Northwest for the East Coast, Barnes went on to win the PGA Championship in 1916 and 1919, the U.S. Open in 1921 and the British Open in 1925.

With its offices now located in Federal Way, south of Seattle, the Pacific Northwest Golf Association is the fifth oldest golf association in North America. Founded on February 4, 1899, the PNGA is preceded only in age by the USGA (1894), Royal Canadian Golf Association (1895), the Golf Association of Philadelphia (February 5, 1897) and the Metropolitan Golf Association (Greater New York City - April 14, 1897).

By 1898, six strong golf clubs existed in the Northwest that formed the foundation of the PNGA. In British Columbia there was Victoria Golf Club (founded in 1892), while down south in the continental U.S. were Tacoma, Waverley Country Club (1896) in Portland, Seattle Golf Club (whose roots stretch back to the mid-1890s and its original site on Lake Union just north of downtown), Spokane Country Club (1898) and Butte Country Club (late 1890s). News accounts in Victoria's Daily Colonist show that invitations to join the nascent organization were also extended to golf clubs in Vancouver, B.C., Walla Walla, Wash., and Eugene and Pendleton in Oregon.

Other historic clubs in Washington that have either passed or are nearing their centennials include the Country Club of Seattle (1896), Wing Point on Bainbridge Island (1903), Downriver in Spokane (1907), and Everett CC and Touchet Valley (both 1910) in Dayton on the eastern side of the state. Jefferson Park in Seattle - later the playing grounds of a young Fred Couples - was one of the nation's first municipal courses when it debuted in 1915 and will be celebrating its 100th anniversary when the U.S. Open comes to the Puget Sound for the first time.

To the south, golfers were seen wielding mashies and spoons on the dune lands of Oregon's northern coast in the late 1880s in Gearhart. Besides Waverley, Eugene Country Club originated in 1899 and Tualatin, south of Portland, was built in 1912.

The first course in Idaho, Hayden Lake Country Club just north of Coeur d'Alene, began greeting golfers in 1907. The course was designed by the eminent landscape architect J.C. Olmsted of Brookline, Mass. Olmsted also created New York's Central Park and Seattle's highly refined park system. President William Taft rumbled around the resort-style course during a visit in 1909. After his round the notorious trencherman had dinner at the resort's Bozanta Tavern, later proclaiming that a mighty feast of fresh-caught bass, partridge, haunch of venison and bear cub - all accompanied by side dishes and washed down with Moet and Chandon champagnes - was one of the best meals of his life.

The Northwest has generated its fair share of great players. Besides "Long Jim" Barnes and "Boom-Boom" Couples (1992 Masters champion, 15-time winner on the PGA Tour, five-time winner in International events and, by far, the all-time leading money earner in the annual Skins Game), other great male golfers from the region include: H. Chandler Egan (notable architect after moving to Medford, Ore., was the U.S. Amateur champion in 1904 and '05); Dr. Oscar Willing (Walker Cupper in 1923, '24 and '30); Bud Ward (U.S. Amateur champion in 1939 & '41; fourth in 1937 U.S. Open as an amateur); Jack Westland (1952 U.S. Amateur champion at age 46); Al Mengert (many titles both as an amateur and a pro); Portlanders Bruce Cudd and Dick Yost (Walker Cup teammates in 1955); Kermit Zarley (NCAA champion in 1962 and longtime PGA and Senior Tour regular); Jim McLean (one of the nation's top golf instructors is from Seattle and gained stature early as a top amateur with wins in the PNGA Men's in 1969, '71 and '72 as well as the Northwest Open in '70).

Other notables include: Peter Jacobsen (one of golf's most popular players still resides in Portland and remains a life-long Waverley member; "Jake" was an NCAA All-American at the University of Oregon before turning pro and garnering seven PGA Tour wins and two on the Champions Tour, including the 2004 U.S. Senior Open); Bill Sander (1976 U.S. Amateur winner and erstwhile PGA Tour regular); John Fought (1977 U.S. Amateur champ and two-time PGA Tour winner who's now a successful golf architect); Rick Fehr (U.S. Open low amateur in 1984 and a two-time winner on PGA Tour); Kent Myers (four-time winner of the Oregon Amateur and an astounding 19-time member of Hudson Cup amateur teams); and Ryan Moore of Puyallup, Wash., who in 2004 had a year for the ages with victories in the U.S. Amateur, U.S. Public Links, NCAA Championship, Western Amateur and Sahalee Players Championship. Moore is now on the PGA Tour.

Others with national amateur victories include: Bill Welch (1941 Public Links); Bill Wright (a Seattleite who, in 1959, became the first African-American to win the Public Links); Fred Haney (1971 Public Links); Bob Allard (1972 Publinx); and Mike Combs (1990 Publinx).

Women golfers from the Northwest have also made a serious mark on the national scene. These include Grace (DeMoss) Zwahlen, Curtis Cup Team member in 1952 and '54; Edean (Anderson) Ihlanfeldt, who won the 1953 Women's Trans-Mississippi and the U.S. Senior Women's Amateur in 1982; Pat (Lesser) Harbottle, U.S. Junior Girls champion in 1950, U.S. Women's Amateur champion in 1955, Curtis Cupper in 1954 and '55, and the first woman to receive the Seattle PI's "Man of the Year" award in '55.

During a 13-year period, there were only two years - 1959 and 1967 - when a woman from the Northwest was NOT in the finals of the U.S. Women's Amateur. JoAnne (Gunderson) Carner won that championship in 1957, '60, '62, '66 and '68 and was a four-time member of the Curtis Cup before turning pro. The Kirkland, Wash., native was dubbed "The Great Gundy" after storming the LPGA Tour during a career in which she won 43 times and was named to the Hall of Fame.

Carner's major foil during the 1950s and '60s was Anne (Quast) Sander of Seattle. Sander at one time had played in more USGA championship rounds than any other player, male or female. Sander won the U.S. Women's Amateur in 1958, '61 and '63, and was a finalist in '65, '68 and '73. She also won U.S. Senior Women's Amateur titles in 1987, '89, '90, and '93.

Another great female player was Peggy Conley of Spokane. Conley was a finalist in both the U.S. Women's Amateur and the U.S. Girls Junior in 1963 before breaking through with a win in the 1964 Girls Junior. She was a two-time member of the Curtis Cup team (1964 and '68) before turning pro. Other fine competitors include Jo Ann Washam, a three-time winner on the LPGA Tour; Mary Budke, who became a medical doctor after winning the U.S. Women's Amateur in 1972; Connie Guthrie, U.S. Senior Women's Amateur champion in 1984 and '86; Kelli Antolock (U.S. Women's Public Links winner in 1983); Stephanie Davis (1990 U.S. Women's Amateur finalist, losing to Pat Hurst in the last match); Tracy Hanson (1991 U.S. Women's Public Links champion); Heather Graff (1996 U.S. Women's Public Links winner); Ann Swanson (too many regional and national amateur titles to list); and Paige MacKenzie (current LPGA player was a three-time All-American at the University of Washington and a member of the victorious 2006 Curtis Cup team).

Besides competitors, the Northwest has produced several important figures in golf. Perhaps foremost among these was Robert Hudson. The owner of a Portland grocery firm, Hudson was directly responsible for keeping the Ryder Cup alive by personally funding the 1947 matches at Portland Golf Club and making sure the Great Britain team had the wherewithal to make it to the event. He was also instrumental in the Rose City's hosting of three Portland Opens, a PGA Championship and the Western Open. It was in an empty ice cream stand at Portland Golf Club during the 1946 PGA Championship - won by Ben Hogan - that the Golf Writers Association of America was founded by Chicago Tribune golf editor Charles Bartlett, Associated Press editor Russ Newland, and George Bertz, sports editor for the Oregon Journal. In 1947, the GWAA honored Hudson with its Man of the Year award. The Portland grocer also originated and funded the Hudson Cup Matches, an annual event that still pits the best Northwest professionals against the region's top amateurs.

Another name worthy of mention is Jeff Ellis, a fine amateur in his day who was a three-time Hudson Cup player and a finalist in the 1984 U.S. Mid-Amateur, the same year he won the PNGA Men's. During his playing days Ellis, a resident of Whidbey Island, began collecting antique golf clubs. In 1997, he published the first edition of "The Clubmaker's Art," a massive four-color tome that GolfWorld later named as among the top 10 golf books of the 20th century. Travel & Leisure went one step further, calling it one of the top 25 golf books ever written. In late September 2007, Sotheby's sold most of Ellis' collection at auction for a record $2.166 million.

Finally, the region produced one of the most prolific golf course architects in the nation, Arthur Vernon Macan. Born in Ireland, Macan immigrated to Victoria, B.C., in 1912. A year later he won the PNGA Men's Amateur. In 1914, Macan was routed by Jack Neville of Pebble Beach fame in that same tournament. After losing his left foot during the Battle for Vimy Ridge in World War I, Macan turned to designing golf courses, primarily in the Northwest.

His Canadian creations include such heralded tracks as Royal Colwood, Gorge Vale, Kelowna, Nanaimo, and new Shaughnessy. In Washington, Oregon and Idaho, Macan designed Inglewood, Manito, Wenatchee, Columbia-Edgewater, Fircrest, Astoria, Illahe Hills, Hillcrest and Purple Sage. While working on his final course, Lake Spanaway east of Tacoma, Macan died, virtually penniless. Still, many of his dozens of creations endure today.

After a Northwest golf tour, the great Gene Sarazen said of Macan's work: "Never before have I seen such beautiful golf courses. I've seen an architecture, something new, that has been in my mind for years and I am glad to see a man with A.V. Macan's ability bring it out. Every hole is different and each offers a real test if the player expects to get down to par figures."

The great Robert Trent Jones Sr. - the father of the man responsible for Chambers Bay, once paid homage to Macan: "He was a generation ahead of his time. Players have become so proficient at playing short irons into greens. Macan's philosophy is now being introduced to combat this skill."

It now looks as if one of son Bobby's most heralded designs will be doing the same when the game's best players come to the Tacoma area in 2010 and 2015.

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