Sunday
Jul312022

Tougher Illinois Open returns to White Eagle

Sunday, July 31, 2022

It was before the Illinois Open three years ago that the Illinois PGA’s Opens Committee decided, so to speak, “No more Mr. Nice Guy.”

They wanted a more challenging set-up for the Illinois Open, since 1950 the de facto state championship for golf in Illinois. The 2019 Illinois Open, played at The Glen Club and Ridgemoor Country Club, the latter which John Updike might have described as a lovely little bandbox of a golf course, was the test bed for tightening the vise.

You couldn’t tell by the winning score – 13-under 210 compared to 14-under 205 at The Glen Club and Ravinia Green the year before – but the courses were more testing. The rough was higher. The pin placements were more exacting.

“We think it’s very important in identifying our Illinois Open champion,” IPGA assistant executive director Brad Slocum said. “We want to make it as tough a test as we can make it without being unfair.”

In 2020 at White Eagle Golf Club in Naperville, the site of this year’s 73rd renewal, the vise was tightened more. On the final day, it was too tight on the par-5 14th hole, the cup cut barely three paces from a slope that gobbled up golf balls and spit them back into a depression on the fairway. Even Bryce Emory, the winner, complained about it.

Ideally, that debacle isn’t repeated. But, notwithstanding an EF-0 tornado that took out 55 trees across the middle of the course, plus the scoreboard by the clubhouse and a big tent a week ago Saturday at dawn, this year White Eagle could be tougher.

Graduated rough – a collar by the fairway, followed by 2-to-3 inch rough, followed farther from the fairway by whatever length it’s grown to since the last cut last week – might keep driver in a few players’ bags in favor of a 3-wood or hybrid on some holes. And with the sloping greens on the Ed Seay-Arnold Palmer designed course stimping to 12 to 13, proper placement of the second shot will be as important as being in the right spot on the fairway off the tree.

“With Brad’s pin placements, it’ll be a real test,” director of golf Curtis Malm said. “But in 2020, I watched Bryce play nine of the 18 holes on the final day, and he had no problem with it.”

Emory, who continues to shoot for a Korn Ferry Tour card, is in this year’s field, but defending champion Tim “Tee-K” Kelly is not, having made it to the KFT circuit in last season’s qualifying tournament. Indeed, the Illinois Open, as IPGA executive director Carrie Williams freely admits, is something of a springboard for young talent chasing their dream, with five of the last seven winners having status on some tour. In recent years, Patrick Flavin and Vince India have won the Illinois Open, while Nick Hardy took second, and all, like Kelly, have or are on the verge of having either Korn Ferry or PGA tour cards today.

That gives Emory hope it can happen to him as well. All he can do is continue to play well and hope the birdies arrive at the right time. Starting, say, on the back nine on Wednesday.

Around White Eagle

White Eagle members seem to be gung-ho for the Open, as they were in 2020. “We had so many people watching in 2020 that we couldn’t use the pictures (because of COVID restrictions on gatherings),” Williams said. “I never saw so many people at an Illinois Open.” … In a first, all three rounds of the Illinois Open will be televised live beyond the bounds of the golf course. Six hours of daily coverage on Naperville Community Television and the Illinois PGA website will be provided by Scientel Solutions, a data communications firm whose owner is a White Eagle member. Alex Campbell and Lauren Withrow will call the action, with cameras placed at several holes around the course. They’re on from 11 a.m.-2 p.m. and 4-7 p.m. Monday and Tuesday, and from noon to 6 p.m. or conclusion on Wednesday. … The purse is expected to be in the vicinity of $100,000. Last year, it was $107,612, with $25,080 going to Kelly. … White Eagle will host a first-stage Korn Ferry qualifying tournament in September, plus next year’s Women’s Western Amateur.

Tim Cronin

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