Gil Hanse will oversee the project, which aims to bring back Donald Ross’ original design intent. Bunkers will be renovated, and greens and fairways will be expanded. Some trees will be removed, as well. Hanse plans to add 100-150 yards from the back tees and subtract 450-500 yards by building more forward tees.
Worcester (Mass.) Country Club will undergo a $3.7 million restoration beginning on July 31 and lasting through late November, to return the course to what Donald Ross had in mind when he designed it more than a century ago, the Worcester Telegram & Gazette reported. Golf course architect Gil Hanse will oversee the project with assistance from Ross expert Bradley Klein.
Worcester CC underwent a Ron Prichard master plan from 2005-2007 to expand greens and fairways, renovate the bunkers and tees, and update the irrigation system, the Telegram & Gazette reported. Many trees were lost due to an ice storm and the influx of Asian longhorned beetles in 2008 and 2009, and others were removed afterward to open playing corridors.
“New England golf courses have a tendency where everything starts to creep in,” WCC superintendent Adam Moore said, “so it’s trying to bring the scale back so it’s fun for everybody. It’s fun for higher handicappers, and it can be challenging for lower handicappers.”
This latest restoration will involve many of the same concerns, the Telegram & Gazette reported. Moore pointed out that bunkers need to be restored or renovated every 10-15 years because the sand degrades and gets contaminated due to drainage issues and the sides of the bunkers wearing down.
More greens and fairways will be expanded, and more trees will be removed, the Telegram & Gazette reported. Hanse plans to add 100-150 yards from the back tees and subtract 450-500 yards by building more forward tees.
The most noticeable change will be the lowering of the 11th green by 8-10 feet, to its original height. Approach shots will be able to roll down onto the green, the Telegram & Gazette reported. The golf course architectural firm of Cornish and Silva raised the 11th green in the early 1970s. Moore isn’t sure why, but he heard the putting surface wasn’t holding up well at the time.
Moore expects the 11th green to be closed from late August or early September, until May or June of next year, the Telegram & Gazette reported.
The bunker to the right of the green will be removed and another built at the original location down the fairway a bit and across from a bunker to the left of the fairway, the Telegram & Gazette reported. A new back tee will lengthen the hole by 12 yards for a total of 420, and a new front tee will be built 20 yards closer to the green.
The 11th hole is famous for four-time U.S. Open champion Bobby Jones calling a one-stroke penalty stroke on himself during the first round of the 1925 U.S. Open for causing his ball to move in the high rough while he addressed it, the Telegram & Gazette reported. No one else saw his ball move, so officials left it up to Jones to decide what to do, and he insisted on being assessed a penalty stroke.
When the media praised Jones for his sportsmanship, he said, “You might as well praise me for not robbing a bank. There is only one way to play the game of golf.”
Jones went on to lose in a 36-hole playoff to Willie MacFarlane, the Telegram & Gazette reported. A plaque next to the 11th tee details the incident, labeling it “A defining moment in the game of golf.”
“I think Bobby Jones on hole 11 here at Worcester Country Club,” WCC head pro Andy Lane said, “is one of the most underrated and untold stories in the game of golf. You could make the argument that the etiquette in the game was really created right here at hole 11 at Worcester Country Club that still exists to this day.”
General manager Troy Sprister told the Telegram & Gazette the reaction of members to the restoration project has been “extremely positive. They’re excited to get it done.”
Members have looked forward to the master plan with Hanse since it was finalized in 2018, the Telegram & Gazette reported. Hanse has worked on such esteemed golf courses as The Country Club, TPC Boston, Merion, Kittansett Club, Taconic Golf Club, Oakland Hills, Winged Foot and Los Angeles CC.
Hanse also developed a master plan in 2009 to restore Whitinsville Golf Club, a 1925 Donald Ross design, the Telegram & Gazette reported.
Art Fitzgerald, Whitinsville GC greens chairman at the time and a perennial club champion, asked Hanse to undertake the job, and he turned him down, the Telegram & Gazette reported. Then he was convinced to change his mind by two-time Masters champion Ben Crenshaw, who enjoyed playing Whitinsville when he used to play in PGA Tour events at Pleasant Valley CC. Crenshaw and Bill Moore, by the way, are building a new course in place of the Pines at the International in Bolton.
Fitzgerald now belongs to Worcester CC as well as Whitinsville, and he helped recruit Hanse to devise this master plan, the Telegram & Gazette reported.
Hanse has visited Worcester CC several times in recent years and will return in August, the Telegram & Gazette reported. He pointed out in his master plan that the club is more fortunate than most classic-era courses because the holes are still in their original sequence.
“The first walk-around we did,” Moore said, “he was really impressed with the land. We have a kind of a unique championship history, too, that I think was appealing.”
At Worcester CC, some fairways and greens have been expanded, some forward tees have been added, and some trees have been removed since 2018, but most of the work will begin on July 31, the Telegram & Gazette reported. Some greens will be expanded by about 10 percent.
Pins could be tucked in several positions on Ross greens, but some of those positions were eliminated when Worcester CC’s greens grew smaller and faster, the Telegram & Gazette reported. Ross designed generous fairways with the expectation that golfers needed to be on the proper side of them to attack the flagsticks.
“We’ve gotten away from that over the years,” Sprister said. “So these fairway expansions will help create more corridors to attack some of these flags. The green expansion will not only make the greens easier to hit, they will afford us more hole placements.”
The last restoration lasted three golf seasons, but this one will take place during only one to minimize the impact to the membership, the Telegram & Gazette reported. Nevertheless, holes will have to close while restoration takes place.
The club championship will be held in July before the restorations begin, the Telegram & Gazette reported.
The club underwent a $2.2 million renovation of the clubhouse dining room and bar area about a decade ago, the Telegram & Gazette reported.
Sprister said the restoration of the course had nothing to do with the club’s unsuccessful attempt to host the 2025 Solheim Cup, but the club has accepted an invitation to bid on the 2032 Solheim Cup, the Telegram & Gazette reported.
Sprister said he and Lane set a goal of elevating Worcester CC into a Top 100 classic golf course, and they hope this restoration project helps accomplish that feat, the Telegram & Gazette reported. After Hanse restored Whitinsville, that club moved into the top 100 classic golf courses of a national publication for the first time, at No. 97 in 2013.
Lane said the restoration will help the club stand out while it celebrates the 100th anniversaries of hosting the 1925 U.S. Open and the inaugural Ryder Cup in 1927, the Telegram & Gazette reported.
Worcester CC traces its roots back to 1900 when Worcester Golf Club was founded, the Telegram & Gazette reported. The club hired Ross in 1913 to design an 18-hole golf course on its present site and in 1914 former President William Howard Taft hit the first tee shot during the club’s opening ceremony.
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