Tuesday, July 2, 2019

Golf in the Bay Area: the future’s so bright, we gotta wear shades

In golf as well in other matters, I am an unabashed, unashamed Bay Area/Monterey Peninsula chauvinist. The weather and the geography of the region create an environment for the game that is virtually unequaled anywhere else in the world—as a result, we enjoy the privilege of a disproportionate number of world-class events to enjoy when we are not playing golf ourselves, and that includes the game’s majors.

The highly successful 2019 U.S. Open at Pebble Beach refreshed the region’s reputation as a premium site for golf’s biggest events, and the lineup of big-time tournaments that is coming to Northern California in the next few years illustrates the confidence that the game’s governing bodies have in our area as a golf destination.

Big events return as early as next year, when the 2020 PGA Championship comes to TPC Harding Park in San Francisco. Arguably one of the finest municipal courses in the country, the across-the-lake neighbor to the famed Olympic Club is no stranger to big events, having hosted the Schwab Cup Championship in 2013 and the 2009 Presidents Cup.

And speaking of the Olympic Club, the 5-time U.S. Open venue will host its first U.S. Women’s Open in 2021; two years later the USGA’s ultimate distaff championship will makes its first appearance at Pebble Beach Golf Links.

The year 2025 will see two big-time amateur events in the region. The U.S. Amateur will return to the Olympic Club after an 18-year hiatus, and maybe even more exciting, the Walker Cup—probably the premier men’s amateur event in the world, pitting the best amateur men in the U.S against a team of amateur standouts from Great Britain and Ireland—will be played at Cypress Point, the legendary Monterey Peninsula venue that was once part of the Pebble Beach Pro-Am rota. The opportunity to walk those hallowed Alister-Mackenzie-designed fairways is not to be missed.

The major-event calendar comes full-circle in 2027, when the U.S. Open returns to Pebble Beach, marking the Del Monte Forest venue’s seventh time hosting the national championship. Pebble will then be tied with Baltusrol Golf Club, in New Jersey, for second place in host-club status, behind Pennsylvania’s Oakmont Country Club, which will host its record-breaking tenth U.S. Open in 2025.

And finally, as far into the future as the crystal ball can see, in 2028—when I will need a hovercraft-style floating chair to get me around the course—the PGA Championship will return to the Bay Area, alighting across Lake Merced at the Olympic Club for the first time.