By ALISTAIR TAIT
WALTON-ON-THE-HILL, England – Ninety-four of Europe’s elite
professionals turned up to qualify for arguably the game’s hardest
major, and a garden party broke out.
What do you expect when you stage a U.S. Open qualifying tournament
at Walton Heath, a most quintessential English golf club in a place
called Walton-on-the-Hill in the leafy county of Surrey?
For the record, Simon Khan, Paul Casey, Jaco Van Zyl, Morten Orum
Madsen, Peter Hedblom, Marcus Fraser, Eddie Pepperell, Jose Maria
Olazabal, David Howell, John Parry, Chris Doak and Estanislao Goya took
the 12 qualifying spots and will tee it up at Merion next month.
The day was about more than who qualified. For those fans who turned
up, it was a chance to see some of the rising stars of European and
international golf for free in a relaxed atmosphere. Colin Montgomerie,
Jose Maria Olazabal, Casey, Ross Fisher, Howell, Simon Dyson, Alexander
Noren, Pablo Martin, Rhys Davies, Oliver Fisher, Peter Uihlein and Tom
Lewis all teed it up, to name a few.
Members sat on the clubhouse terrace sipping cocktails while
competitors practiced their putting just a few yards away. A man in a
white straw boater hat and a blue blazer sat sipping red wine as if he
was watching a cricket match.
The only roped-off area was behind the first tee of the Old Course.
Aside from that, spectators could walk practically wherever they wanted,
though most were savvy enough to stay well out of the way.
Still, five young autograph hunters actually strode onto the Old
Course’s 18th green to get autographs from Matthew Baldwin and Chris
Paisley. One of the youngsters was in bare feet. A passing cyclist
leaned on his bike nearby.
“It’s like watching Ollie play amateur golf again,” said Kay Fisher,
mother of European Tour pro Oliver Fisher. “It’s just such a relaxed
atmosphere. It’s a lot different from Wentworth.”
Tickets at the BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth last week cost £40.
Dogs weren’t allowed. Man’s best friend was most welcome at Walton
Heath. The club wouldn’t have it any other way.
As with many traditional English golf clubs, Walton Heath members are
allowed to take their canine chums onto the fairways. So it was no
surprise to see couples out strolling the fairways with dogs on leads.
Walton Heath is on common land, which means exactly what it says on
the tin – land for the common people. The club has to share the course
with walkers, dog walkers, runners, cyclists, picnickers and everyone
else who wants to use the land.
Once a year that includes US Open hopefuls.
Secretary Stuart Christie has been at Walton Heath for four years
after working at Wentworth. He’s presided over four of the nine U.S.
Open qualifiers.
“It’s a great day for us,” Christie said. “The members really embrace
it. We get strong fields every year. I mean, this year we have two
Ryder Cup captains in Monty and Olazabal.
“I’m not sure how many people turn up because we don’t count heads,
but we have 1,400 cars parked, so that gives you an idea. That’s about
as big as we want it to get. We want to keep it pretty low key.”
Michael Campbell did the event the power of good at 2005’s inaugural
tournament. He qualified at Walton Heath and then went on to win the
U.S. Open at Pinehurst. One of the 12 qualifiers might do the same this
year, but those fans who turned up at Walton Heath won’t care a lot.
They’re just looking forward to next year’s U.S. Open garden party.
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