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A controversial hole? And 5 other takeaways from Day 1 of The Open at Royal Liverpool

par-3 17th at the 2023 Open

Nicknamed "Little Eye," the par-3 17th at The Open this week plays in the opposite direction as it did in 2014.

Sean Zak

HOYLAKE, England — The 151st Open is upon us. Everyone who’s anyone in the golf world has made it to England’s Golf Coast and is getting their first taste of Royal Liverpool Golf Club, aka Hoylake.

Here’s what’s happening on the ground.

1. Controversial hole?

The hole that has everyone buzzing — and not in the best way — is the new 15th at RLGC, played as the 17th this week during The Open. Nicknamed “Little Eye,” it plays in the exact opposite direction as it did in 2014. Designers flipped it around and shortened it (to roughly 140 yards), in part because it’ll likely play into the wind, but also to give it the feeling of an island green on the 71st hole of the championship. Only the hazard here is not water, but instead deep, brutal greenside bunkers.

The well-bunkered 17th has the feeling of an island green. TheOpen.com

Jon Rahm dropped a few balls in the penal right bunker Monday and struggled mightily to get close. When he hit first try thin, his ball smacked the pin and fell off the back of the green. His next two spun as much as they could, but both rolled out eight feet beyond the center-cut pin. Lesson learned for everyone: There’s no getting close from that right bunker.

There’s a lot of room on the 17th green but when you miss in the bunker, you’re begging to try and get it close. Sean Zak

2. Internal OB

You’re going to hear a lot about the internal out-of-bounds at Royal Liverpool, a feature that irks many golf-watchers. Well, if we choose that attitude this week, it’s in response to course features that have stood for multiple centuries.

The 3rd hole of the championship is a dogleg right that skirts along the outside of the members’ driving range, which is lined by a grassy hump. Anything to the right is O.B. Anything left is all good. The same applies to the finishing par-5 18th, which could break some hearts with a left-to-right wind like we saw Monday. Tom Kim’s caddie Joe Skovron was out walking the course early Monday afternoon, and shot a grin, saying, ”They sure love their internal O.B. at this course, huh?” The sentiment was less one of annoyance and more challenge accepted. Just look out for players on both holes to favor the left side so much that they aim for the rough, and even try and hit through the rough to the short grass on another hole.

3. Going Green

Course conditions are a birthright talking point of any Open Championship, and this year is no different. 

After baked-out conditions (famously) led Tiger Woods to win here in 2006 without hitting a single driver, it’s a fair bet that things will look slightly different in 2023. After loads of rain, the course is nowhere near as brown nor as bouncy as it was during that ‘06 test. 

Instead, the course is more resembling Rory’s blistering 2014 victory here: green and, in the nasty areas, juicy.

But sharps, a word of caution: Don’t take that to mean much of anything. As with every Open, this year’s winning score will be dependent upon the wind, and it’s expected to blow in the coming days, particularly on Thursday and Friday. 

Things might not be as linksy as they were in ‘06, but if the breeze blows, the field will have its hands full. 

4. Viktor Hovland’s hands

R&A officials have made one thing easy on media members this week: The short-game practice area is just a few steps from the media center. Don’t be surprised when many of the same photos are shared of the leaders on the weekend. On Monday, we were gifted an exhibition in spin, launch, height and trajectory of short-sided chip shots by Viktor Hovland.

Hovland’s short game is much better than it used to be, and he’d be the first to tell you. Sean Zak

Hovland dropped a couple of balls in a short-sided area behind a bunker. These kind of lies inevitably find you on a links course where bunkers serve as the primary defense. Hovland opened up his wedge face and squeezed it in the millimeter of space between ball and turf. You would have thought there was no chance to stay short of the hole, but he somehow created enough spin to check it to a couple feet.

“That’s a great shot,” said his coach, Joe Mayo. “Emphasis on great.

“Remember when you didn’t have these shots?” a reporter said.

“Oh, yeah,” Hovland said laughing. ”Not that long ago, too.”

A pro lacking in short-game confidence may struggle this week. Hovland doesn’t seem to be short of it.

5. Home game

It’s early, but the town of Hoylake has already picked its Open favorite: Mathew Jordan. 

There is a car decorated for Jordan, a Hoylake native and Royal Liverpool member, at the entrance to town, and lots more goodwill circling the golf course, where a healthy collection of Scousers has taken to the local boy. 

“Once I qualified, so many people told me, messaged me,” he said Monday. “They’re going to be here, they’re going to be loud, they’re going to offer me support.”

For a while, a spot in the Open seemed more like a pipe dream. But after a brilliant qualifying performance, not only was he guaranteed a tee time — but one at his longtime home course. 

“I think once the Open happened and golf became the No. 1 thing, then [playing in the Open is] what I always aspired to do,” he said. “It’s like, right, I’ve seen what I’d love to do. So that was always like in the back of my mind of yes, I really want to get there.”

As for how many members of the Jordan fan club will find themselves outside the ropes this week, he could only guess. 

“A lot.”

6. The Wall

There’s a lot made about the circus that follows pro golf around the world, but the most interesting part of this year’s Open may be the one that won’t follow it. 

To the normal visitor, the town of Hoylake feels like a military zone this week. A police perimeter has been set around the town center well outside the golf course, leaving those visiting for the tournament two choices: turn around or hoof it. Only those with a permit issued specially by the R&A can find their way inside the perimeter. 

Past the first wall of security, you’re greeted by a wide array of temporary fencing, parking restrictions, and on a few well-populated sidewalks, barricades to separate those coming from going. 

It’s all a bit strange, to be sure, but come a very crowded weekend, it could prove necessary. 

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