Posted on: Sunday, January 13, 2008
Waialae's rough can be tough on members
Advertiser Staff
|
|
Parker McLachlin shows his ball to the crowd after getting an eagle on the final hole of the day at the Sony Open in Hawai'i.
GREGORY YAMAMOTO | The Honolulu Advertiser
|
|
|
|
|
|
Waialae has stayed relatively dry the last three weeks, but was deluged with 12 to 14 inches of rain the previous month — about a third of its normal annual rainfall. Conditions were so bad during the local Sony qualifier in December that the crew could not mow the rough for nearly two weeks and it was up as high as 6 inches.
For the Sony, it has been cut back to 3 1/2 inches — an inch more than the tour wanted but all that could be done without damaging the grass because of all the rain, according to superintendent Dave Nakama. The rain also affected the density of the rough, with the grass growing so quickly that the ball tends to settle all the way down instead of sitting up the way it would when the grass grows slower and thicker.
That caused many, many members to lose balls leading up to the Open and has kept the scores this week relatively routine despite the lack of wind. TV analyst Mark Rolfing said the grounds crew found some 3,000 balls when it was finally able to mow. Nakama insists the count is still on.
"The rough is so high the balls are still out there, actually," he said. "We usually find them after the tournament when we cut the rough back — and they are all ruined because they get cut up by the mower."
NOTES
As the Sony Open celebrates its 10th anniversary, Waialae is hosting a PGA Tour event for the 43rd straight year, including the Hawaiian Open. Only three courses have more seniority — The Masters at Augusta National (1934), Crowne Plaza Invitational at Colonial (1946) and Bermuda Dunes, part of a rotation of courses for the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic (1960).
Parker McLachlin went out second yesterday with Mark Calcavecchia. They followed a single (Scott Sterling) and blitzed the course in less time than it takes the Warriors to finish a football game. "Mark plays fast, almost uncomfortable fast," McLachlin said with a grin. "I kinda got used to it by the second or third hole. ... Normally it takes us 4 1/2 hours or 4 hours and 40 minutes to finish and today we played in three hours. I kinda need a massage myself. I'm not used to walking that fast."
The PGA Tour leaves Hawai'i after today and the Champions Tour moves in, opening its season on the Big Island Friday when the 25th MasterCard Championship tees off at Hualalai. Hale Irwin is the defending champion. He also won the first MasterCard at Hualalai, in 1997, and has won 11 times in Hawai'i. The $1.8 million tournament features winners on the senior circuit from the last two years, major champions from the past five years and four sponsor invites — Ben Crenshaw, Curtis Strange, Lee Trevino and Lanny Wadkins. There are 42 players eligible.
The Champions' first full-field event of the year, the Turtle Bay Championship, will be the following week (Jan. 25 to 27) at the resort's Palmer Course. Fred Funk, who is playing all four Hawai'i events to start the season, will defend his title. The field also includes Hawai'i's David Ishii.