Open Champion
Ben Curtis learned the
game at family-owned Mill
By Dave Berner,
Senior Writer
OSTRANDER, Ohio (July 20, 2003) -- On most Sunday mornings at Mill Creek Golf Club outside Columbus, golfers go about their business of finishing their rounds. But on this Sunday morning things were different, very different.
Golfers had left the course and had rushed into the modest clubhouse to watch TV. The word had spread that 26-year old Ben Curtis -- hometown boy, son of the course superintendent, grandson of the course owner -- was flirting with the lead in the final round of the British Open at Royal St. George's. No one wanted to miss what would turn out to be one of the most improbable and magical wins in golf history.
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On the other side of the world, at the Mill Creek the clubhouse, the crowd had swelled to more than 100 people surrounding the course's only television set. The silence was deafening and the tension palpable as they watched Bjorn over his chip shot. If he made it, it would mean a playoff with Ben, the PGA Tour rookie. The shot looked pretty solid, but the ball failed to fall in the hole turning the Mill Creek clubhouse upside down. The screams of joy and elation rippled across Mill Creek as friends and family embraced and cheered for their hometown hero -- Ben Curtis, 2003 Open Champion.
Ben's Course
Mill
Creek is what one would expect from a course built on the land
that was once the farm of Ben's grandfather. Nothing fancy, just
a back to the basics kind of place.
Mill Creek opened in 1973 and built in the era of the family-owned course. These were typically pleasant places where family members milled about, greeted you, joked with you and generally made you feel welcome. Large corporations can build monster golf courses that earn national attention, but you can't just buy an atmosphere where players feel like guests invited to someone's home for the day.
Mill Creek has that kind of feeling. Before starting your round, chat with the staff in the pro shop/coffee shop/clubhouse. Ask about the course. Ask if there are tricky spots to avoid. And listen carefully when someone tells you to watch out for No. 17. "Drop back in and tell me if you make par there," they'll say to you. Their eyes will twinkle knowingly, much like an uncle pulling a practical joke.
The 17th is actually a symbolic hole for Mill Creek. It encompasses everything this course offers in the way of defense to today's arsenal of modern technology. It's just 160 yards from the white tees, but your tee shot must carry through -- or less likely, over -- a tunnel of trees for the first 100 yards. The shot is uphill, and the green is elevated above the fairway as well.
The
green is hard, quick and sloped from back to front -- so much
so that if you miss the green either left or long, you can't stop
your pitch on the green. Any shot from those areas will trickle
tantalizingly toward the middle of the green, then to your horror
pick up speed until seemingly dropping off the face of the Earth
-- that is, the front of the green. Mill Creek has held up well
as a challenge to golfers of all skill levels.
The length of the course (6,300 yards) makes it attractive to seniors, women and juniors, but the hard and fast greens and the tight fairways offer problems for even the most ambitious amateur golfer.
The scorecard paints a picture of a course that's just run of the mill: a rating of 69.0 and a slope of 116 from the blue tees. But this is not a course where you can just bang your driver and flip sand wedges all day. The subtle and tricky design is enough to make you stop and think about the proper way to play each hole.
Take the par-5 12th hole, for example. It's 505 yards from the blue tees and 485 from the whites. The hole doglegs sharply left around a water hazard about 250 yards from the tee, but a big hitter can't just smack a driver past the trouble. That's because the fairway turns left at a 90 degree angle, and a well-struck driver will send the ball careening through the fairway and behind a cluster of trees.
But
you're not out of the woods after the 12th hole -- OK, you are
for a few holes, but it's just an expression. The trouble continues
at 13, a 150-yard par-3 from the whites that's more difficult
than it looks.
The tee shot looks simple. The green is huge, and the pin seems like it's much closer to you than the yardage listed on the scorecard. But water lurks in front of the green, then wraps around it to the left and sneaks behind, blind from the tee. Still, there's a lot of green to work with. What could be hard about this shot?
Well, if the wind is from the right -- the west to those of you who know how to read a compass and care about these sorts of things -- it blows your ball toward the water. You can compensate for this by aiming to the right, but there's out-of-bounds over there because of the driving range. You have to aim for the center of the green and hope your shot has enough spunk to fight off the wind's pushy nature.
Soon to be Famous
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Course Stats
Blue tees: 6,300 yards, Slope-116, Rating - 69.0
White tees: 6,005 yards, Slope - 115, Rating - 68.2
Red tees: 5,090 yards, Slope - 113, Rating - 68.4
Any opinions expressed above are those of the writer and do not necessarily represent the views of the management. The information in this story was accurate at the time of publication. All contact information, directions and prices should be confirmed directly with the golf course or resort before making reservations and/or travel plans.


