It has been 10 years since Pinehurst No. 2 last hosted a U.S. Open. In that time, the architecture of the course has remained remarkably stable. No new tees or bunkers have been added, and there has been no redesign or relocation of any greens. The course will look and feel quite familiar to competitors and fans. However, there have been subtle but significant changes over the past decade that may not be eye-catching, but will certainly have an impact on the players at this year’s U.S. Open.
Native Area Evolution
The sandscapes surrounding the fairways at Pinehurst No. 2 were famously restored a few years prior to the 2014 U.S. Open. They initially featured clumps of native wiregrass with plenty of exposed sand in between. Since that time, many different plants have naturally filled in some of the gaps. The maintenance team has developed an effective and ever-changing management program to preserve the desired vegetation and control plants that have a negative impact on playability, but golfers in this year’s U.S. Open will find more vegetation and more potential trouble in the sandscapes than there was in 2014.
Some of that is thanks to selective wiregrass planting over the past year. As Pinehurst No. 2 superintendent John Jeffreys explained: “When other courses host a U.S. Open, they typically make the rough taller than it is for normal play. We don’t have that option here because we don’t have any mown rough, but what we can do is add wiregrass.”
Additional wiregrass plants were established near the landing areas for U.S. Open competitors and will be relocated after the championship is complete. “We don’t want too much wiregrass alongside the fairways for regular play because it will slow things down and make the course more difficult for the average golfer,” said Jeffreys. “After the fans and infrastructure from the U.S. Open are gone, we’ll transplant most of what we added to restore areas outside the ropes.”
In addition to wiregrass plantings, the native areas also have some extra challenge because of plants that have emerged naturally. One example is “pineweed,” a native plant that began popping up in the sandscapes over the past several years. It has wiry stems that make it hard to make solid contact with a ball lying below its canopy and its presence certainly caught the attention of players in the 2019 U.S. Amateur, the last USGA championship held on the course. Warm weather this spring has given the pineweed a head start on its annual growth and the maintenance team won’t be doing anything to thin it out prior to the U.S. Open. Golfers beware!