Golf Vic Vol 60 No 1
It exceeded all my expectations. The courses were great, the people were amazing, the volunteers, the organisation. Honestly just a really, really, good tournament. CELINE BOUTIER It was fantastic. I’ve never played a golf tournament like this before. It was good to catch up with a lot of girls I grew up playing golf with as well. It was special with the crowd, especially on the weekend. It was a great event. DAVID LAW Photography: Paul Shire In the first two rounds of the 2019 ISPS Handa Vic Open, 312 golfers teed it up on the Bellarine Peninsula. That’s exactly twice as many players and caddies as the biggest events like the US Open or British Open accept on courses with clubhouses twice the size as 13th Beach. When you think about the challenges, it’s nothing short of a miracle that this tournament succeeds. And not just succeeds but continues to grow – setting trends, sending messages, changing culture and making an important contribution to the game. For much of its first six years at 13th Beach, the Vic Open had been lauded here but considered more of a novelty abroad. But each time it has cut through more and more, until the co-sanctioning breakthroughs of year seven delivered the most important international visitors the tournament has ever seen. No, not just the players but the tour officials, who have returned home glowing in their praise and enthusiastic for the future. “We were always a bit nervous with the two tours coming in as to how they would react in terms of the men and the women playing together and the fairways being open for all the fans,” said Simon Brookhouse, Golf Australia’s General Manager – Golf Operations. “The feedback from the players has always been positive but until you actually get there and see it for yourself, it is a little daunting because it is so different.” The biggest concerns came from the LPGA security people who were worried about the fairways not being roped from galleries. “But once they actually watched the first round, saw it in action and saw the players were really relaxed about it, the tours all worked in really well to make it a very successful event,” said Brookhouse. The Vic Open is now set for four years of co-sanctioning with the European and LPGA tours. And consider this: of the 312 players this year, more than 130 had never played in it before, so the word of mouth impact can only get greater. There had been criticism from some influential quarters, like television commentator Kate Burton, that many of the big LPGA stars had missed an opportunity to push the cause of prizemoney equality but Brookhouse said he had no issue with those who didn’t turn up because the LPGA co-sanctioning wasn’t announced until November and many schedules had already been mapped out. “The feedback we got from the girls who did play was that they were going to take it upon themselves and talk to all their friends on the LPGA to come over next year. I am very sure that with the word of mouth we will get more players with a higher ranking.” Combined with the highly-credentialled field in the ISPS Handa Women’s Australian Open in Adelaide and the originality and excitement of the ISPS Handa World Super 6 in Perth a week later, Australian golf has been able, despite the tyranny of distance, to provide a fabulous fortnight in February. The Women’s Australian Open was able to attract a stronger field and with the momentum built by the Vic Open, more of the topliners may be more inclined to come for two weeks in 2020. Open winner Nelly Korda and sister Jess might even be among them, and wouldn’t that be grand? Korda’s victory at The Grange in Adelaide, continuing a unique family Australian Open tradition, was another genuine ‘cut-through’ story for international media. And the World Super 6 also deserves, like the Vic Open, to gain greater traction in world golf, featuring a concept that makes the third day, Saturday, every bit as exciting as the last day. Watching the trials of golfers fighting on different levels for i) the 54-hole lead and a prizemoney bonus, ii) a top-eight position to get a bye in the first round of matchplay, and iii) a top-24 finish to qualify for the Sunday matchplay was entertainment-plus. The Vic Open also has a Saturday component with a 54-hole cut, which adds something different to the usual 72-hole strokeplay events, where half the field on Sundays are invariably out of contention having failed to make inroads in the third round. A 54-hole cut at the Vic Open, with only 35 men and 35 women making it through, on a course where the wind invariably gets up late in the day to impact course playability, also means everyone surviving the cut has, at least, a sneaky Sunday chance of winning. Just ask Sarah Kemp, who started this year’s final round in the second group of the day at 7.54am, right on the cut number of one over par. Despite a double-bogey start, the 33-year-old Australian then peeled off nine birdies to shoot 65 before the last group of Kim Kaufman, Celina Boutier and Su Oh had even teed off. Steely concentration was a feature of Celine Boutier’s victory. Golf Victoria 7
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