Virginia Golfer Jul / Aug 2017 | Page 21

NEW GRASS The sponsorship may have changed over the years, going from Wachovia (2003–08) to Wells Fargo, which purchased Wachovia (2011–present), but one constant has been the date of Charlotte’s Tour stop: Early May. Temperatures in greater Charlotte, on average, are about 10 degrees warmer in August, when the PGA Championship is usually played. When Quail Hollow shut down to reno- vate, the club switched from predominantly ryegrass to Bermudagrass, which is much more heat tolerant. The event’s defending champion, Jimmy Walker, grew up playing Bermu- da courses in Texas and Oklahoma, and he said he thinks the grass change will completely alter how Quail Hollow plays. “We’re all used to playing it with ryegrass everywhere and bentgrass greens and I know they have changed the greens the last couple years, but it has the potential to play really firm and really fast,” Walker said at a pre-tournament press con- ference in June. “That’s when golf, it can get really hard. When you start losing control of the golf ball, that’s when golf gets hard. “… It’s just a matter of where the rough’s at. Bermuda rough tends to fly a lot. You can get some horrendous lies, so that’s some- thing that guys are going to have to deal with. Am I going to get the big jumper? Am I going to get the really soft shot that comes out? And even around the greens, Bermuda rough is tough to chip out of. It’s very unpredict- able and the greens will probably be fast. That’s the biggest unknown I think.” NEW HOLES With the club already scheduled to have a 90-day renovation window after the conclusion of the 2016 Wells Fargo Cham- pionship, course architect Tom Fazio recommend- ed that Quail Hollow use that time to make some changes to sev- eral holes. Per the vsga.org Defendi ng champion Jimmy Walker hopes to defend his title after battling Lyme Disease earlier this year. Above: The finishing stretch at Quail Hollow, dubbed the Green Mile, will test the world’s best players. Rickie Fowler tees off here on the par-3 16th in last year’s Wells Fargo Championship. Charlotte Observer, after working with three construction firms, these changes were made: No. 1 is now a par-4, 524-yard dogleg right. A new par-3 hole was built to replace No. 2, which was eliminated in order to extend No. 1. No. 5, which was a par-5 hole, is now a par-4 dogleg right. Bunkers were added to No. 11 and the green was pushed back. Former Virginia Tech standout and Quail Hollow member Johnson Wagner offered this simple assessment of the new- look course: “It’s harder,” he told the Observer. HIGHER SCORES From 2010–16, the average winning score of the Wells Fargo at Quail Hollow was 13.7 under par, a number that included Lucas Glover’s 15-under in 2011 and Rory McIlroy’s 21-under, seven-stroke romp in 2015. A longer layout with unfamiliar grass should lead to a higher winning to- tal, somewhere in the vicinity of 8-under to 12-under, club president Johnny Harris told PGA.com. WHO’S IN? All former PGA champions, the last five U.S. Open champions and Open Champi- onship winners (including 2017), the last five Masters champions, current Senior PGA champion Bernhard Langer, the low 15 scorers and ties from the 2016 PGA Championship, and the low 20 scorers from the 2017 PGA Professional National Championship are in the field. In addition, the top 70 money leaders from the end of the 2016 WGC-Bridge- stone to the 2017 Quicken Loans National are in, as well as any member of the U.S. or Europe Ryder Cup squads from 2016, provided they are inside the top 100 of the Official World Golf Ranking as of July 30. Winners of any tournament co-sponsored or approved by the PGA Tour since the 2016 PGA Championship are in as well. Last year, Virginia-based club profes- sionals Josh Speight and Rick Schuller made the field via finishing in the top 20 at the 2016 PGA Professional National Championship. HOW TO WATCH As in years past, TNT will carry the first two rounds of the championship. CBS will broadcast the Saturday and Sunday rounds. The PGA Championship utiliz- es a three-hole aggregate playoff should there be a tie after 72 holes. Keegan Bradley’s victory in 2011 marked the last time the PGA Championship was decid- ed in a playoff. J U LY / A U G U ST 2 0 17 | V I R G I N I A G O L F E R 19