Els - out to erase some bad memories (Getty).
ELS AIMS FOR PINEHURST PINNACLE
Ernie Els is determined to wipe away the memories of last year's final round
at the US Open with a performance to treasure this weekend.
The South African won the title the second time he played in the event in 1994
- after a play-off with Colin Montgomerie and Loren Roberts.
He captured the crown again just three years later, with Montgomerie pushed
into second place once more.
Not since 45-year-old Hale Irwin became the championship's oldest-ever winner
in 1990 has anybody lifted the trophy three times, and so a big day loomed when
the 'Big Easy' moved into second place with a round to go at Shinnecock Hills 12
months ago.
Els considers that what followed was a joke - and he just hopes Pinehurst will
be so very different. The world number three shot 80.
And while playing partner Retief Goosen somehow managed a 71 to win for the
second time in four years, Els was furious.
"It was out of control. Whoever played it, even Retief, would probably concur
with me," he said.
He was not alone in his anger.
Twenty-seven more of the 66 players also failed to break 80 on greens allowed
to become so hard that emergency watering was needed when Billy Mayfair hit a
two-foot putt which rolled 60 feet past the hole on the treacherous seventh.
Mayfair returned an 89.
The blame was laid at the door of the United States Golf Association, of whom
Jerry Kelly, after an 81, said: "When are they going to grow a head? If they
were smart they'd realise they look really stupid."
Even after he had cooled down, Els saw no reason to change his mind.
"I'm sure they would have learnt from that," he said.
"I just hope they take Pinehurst for what it is. The greens are designed in a
certain way where the ball is just going to run off.
"If they make it firm and fast it's going to be a joke again. Hopefully they
take it for how the course was designed to be played and set it up accordingly.
"I don't think it takes a very clever guy to figure that out.
"You don't have to make Pinehurst rock hard. They didn't have to do that at
Shinnecock.
"I think Olympic (1998) and definitely last year got away from them, but they
normally do a very good job. They definitely try and get the best player in the
field that particular week.
"You have to hit fairways, you have to hit greens. If you miss them you've
got to scramble.
"Shinnecock wasn't very long, so I think they felt like going to different
methods of really testing us. Unfortunately, it backfired on them."
At 7,214 yards Pinehurst is 218 yards longer, but it is also a par 70. Payne
Stewart's winning score six years ago was just one under par.
Els missed the halfway cut then and so he also needs to get that memory out of
his system on his return.
"It's just a brutal course around the greens, but I didn't play with my
head," he admits.
"I was going at flags and the ball would finish 30 yards off the green. Those
greens are just diabolical, but I thought the set-up was really fair and I've
got to play a little bit more tactically."
If he does, that third title might be his. And at 35 he has plenty of time to
add to that number.
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