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LOOKNG GOOD AFTER ALL THESE
YEARS: Stanford Golf Course celebrates its 75th
anniversary in January. |
from the first tee,
the possibilities are wide open. You could slice your
ball and land on Campus Drive West. You could hook it
and spook the horses in the Red Barn. You could fail
to carry Junipero Serra Boulevard and listen to the
sound of your ball whacking against a guard rail (or,
it’s happened, bouncing off the roof of a passing
car). More likely, you could drive your ball 190 yards
and watch it bury under the lip of the left bunker.
“You find out pretty quickly it’s not for
beginners,” says volunteer starter Wendy Gayle.
“It’s one tough course.”
And yet beginners come to test their mettle every day
on the Stanford Golf Course, which celebrates its 75th
anniversary in January. With student greens fees of
$20—or 10 bucks for nine holes—Geremy Heitz
can’t wait to tee it up, embarrassing moments
notwithstanding. His second time out on the first hole,
“I was so nervous that I let go of my club in
the middle of a swing, and it flew up into a tree,”
the electrical engineering graduate student says. “All
these people were just standing there, staring.”
Demanding but fun, daunting but beautiful, the 6,835-yard,
par-71 course is a bona fide classic. So said GolfWeek
Magazine in 1998, when it named Stanford No. 87
among the world’s top 100 courses built before
1960. Designed in 1929 by William “Billy”
Bell and George C. Thomas Jr., it remains one of the
nation’s top university courses, ranking alongside
Yale, Ohio State, Oklahoma State and Duke. And with
its centuries-old oaks, weeping willows, black walnuts,
pines, cedars and redwoods, whose birdhouses have welcomed
generations of nuthatches and swallows, the course has
the feel of a wildlife refuge. As play slows down at
dusk, bobcats, coyotes, fox and black-tailed deer tiptoe
through the twilight shadows.

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JOIN THE CLUB: The course attracts
golfers of all ages and skill levels. Women were
amon its earliest supporters and advocates.
Courtesy Stanford Archives
(bottom) |
No. 3 has
had an extreme makeover. Its hydro-seeded green sits
nicely protected in a spot opposite the old third-hole
tee. Where golfers used to hit uphill toward the pin,
they now drive downhill—and likely downwind—in
the afternoon breezes. When construction began last
July to widen nearby Sand Hill Road,
No. 3 and No. 4 were reconfigured to take advantage
of the terrain and restore the beauty and playability
that was lost during earlier construction, says course
veteran Grant Spaeth, ’54. The result, he says:
“magnificent.”
Students, faculty, staff, alumni and their accompanied
guests are eligible to play on the course for greens
fees of $20 to $100. Guests of the University, who must
be sponsored by academic departments, pay top dollar:
$125. The course used to be the exclusive domain of
members; today, students constitute 20 percent of all
golfers.
It was once considered a long golf course, but equipment
advancements in recent years—graphite clubs, oversized
drivers and faster-spinning balls—have taken some
of the sting out of the Stanford course and made it
more accessible to less experienced players. “In
the last 10 years golf has changed so much and balls
are going so much farther for better players with higher
swing speeds,” says course superintendent Ken
Williams. “We don’t have the area to increase
the length of the course, but it’s a great course
for college players.”
Hazards abound. Water comes into play on more than half
the holes. At the infamous No. 12, for example, players
must hit over or around a huge oak tree in the fairway
while also avoiding San Francisquito Creek. That hole
has vexed no less than Tom Watson, ’71, five-time
winner of the British Open. “I played that hole
many times chipping out from the creek,” he says.
The course’s deceptive, undulating greens have
challenged players in United States Golf Association
junior championships, U.S. Open qualifiers and NCAA
tournaments. “A lot of courses today are made
for ‘feel-good’ golf,” says Don Chelemedos,
general manager and head pro. “Resorts want you
to come back, so their courses are designed to allow
you to shoot low scores and not give you much of a challenge.
This is a great golf course in the sense that it forces
you to use every club in your bag.”
Despite some cosmetic changes over the years, the course
still feels charmingly old-fashioned. Unlike contemporary
sand traps that look like finely sculpted kidneys, Stanford’s
bunkers have rough edges and splayed fingers that resemble
worn baseball gloves. The fairways and roughs are dotted
with benches and trees donated in memory of local players.
The water fountain beside the 17th hole bears this sweet
inscription: “50th wedding anniversary. Daphne
& Rudy Munzer. With love from your family. June
29, 1996.”
Shhhh. Approaching No. 6
green. You’ve navigated one of the narrowest fairways
on the course, around an overhanging oak, to be brought
up short by a slender stalker. In the native grasses
of the rough a blue heron is poised above a ground squirrel’s
tunnel, waiting to strike.
Talk to longtime devotees of the golf course and it’s
hard to tell which they’re more proud of—the
course itself or its legacy of great players and champions.
In 1932, Stanford sophomore Charles Seaver (whose son,
Tom, is the Hall of Fame pitcher of the New York Mets)
led the United States to an 8-1 win over Britain in
the prestigious Walker Cup amateur tournament. Sandy
Tatum, ’42, won the NCAA individual championship
in 1942, earned a Rhodes scholarship and served as president
of the United States Golf Association. Tatum’s
coach, Eddie Twiggs, led the Stanford men’s team
to five national championships between 1938 and 1946.

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AGELESS WONDER: No longer considered
a long course by today's standards, Stanford's
18 holes still present plenty of difficulties—undulating
greens, overhanging oaks and troublesome bunkers
and water hazards. |
Mickey Wright, ’58, polished her game here as
a student (at the time, Stanford didn’t offer
women’s intercollegiate golf) before becoming
four-time winner of the Ladies Professional Golf Association
tournament and taking home four U.S. Women’s Open
titles. Tom Watson, in addition to his British Open
victories, won the Masters twice and the U.S. Open.
Eldrick “Tiger” Woods, ’98, drew galleries
of 2,500 during the two years he played on the course
in the mid-’90s with teammates-turned-pros Notah
Begay III and Casey Martin, both ’95. “That
team was extraordinary as players, but even more extraordinary
as people,” says former men’s varsity coach
Wally Goodwin. “They shared scholarship money
to help each other out in tough times.”
The story of Goodwin’s recruiting of Woods is
the stuff of legend among players and pros. The coach
wrote to the 13-year-old phenom when he spotted his
picture in a Sports Illustrated feature. Goodwin
told Woods he would be “thrilled” if he
decided to attend Stanford. The seventh-grader wrote
back what has become a famous letter, with impeccable
grammar and punctuation. “He said, yeah, he’d
like to think about it, which was progress, I thought,”
says Goodwin.
Today the women’s team attracts stars as well.
In 2003, former Stanford All-American Hilary Homeyer
Lunke, ’01, MA ’02, became the first intercollegiate
golfer from Stanford to win the U.S. Women’s Open.
And 14-year-old Michelle Wie, winner of last year’s
Women’s Amateur Public Links Championship, has
publicly expressed a desire to attend Stanford. “I
think she’s a more advanced player than Tiger
was at the same age,” Goodwin says.
women's golf coach
Caroline O’Connor, who is starting her 10th season
at Stanford, loves to drive prospective recruits out
to the ninth hole. It’s a tricky par-4, with a
huge bunker, a fast green and a water hazard. But O’Connor’s
favorite spot is a fenced-off rock in the rough where
Muwekma-Ohlone people used to grind their grains. “That’s
pretty cool,” the coach says.
History is a player on this course. Campus archaeologist
Laura Jones says that hearths, shell beads and pestles
recovered from Muwekma-Ohlone settlements along San
Francisquito Creek date back more than 5,000 years.
“But, with the exception of the mortar stone,
[the prehistoric sites] are all invisible,” she
adds. Jones works closely with Chelemedos and Williams
to minimize the impact to the many Native American sites
that lie beneath the golf course, and an archaeologist
is present whenever there’s digging—say,
to repair an irrigation pipe.
“You’re doing archaeology and golfers are
playing through, so it’s an extremely dangerous
place to work,” says Jones, who has been hit three
times by wayward balls in the 10 years she’s been
on the job. “Hard hats are required and we’ve
put up tents to protect ourselves from balls, but there
are some bad golfers out there.”
The course also has a history as the trotting area for
Senator Stanford’s stock farm, which was acquired
in 1876—the same year the fabled Machrihanish
Golf Club was founded in Scotland. An isolated seaside
links on the Kintyre Peninsula, it is said to have the
best first hole in Scotland, challenging players to
tee off across a finger bay of the Atlantic at high
tide. In 1899, Robert Edgar Allardice, a homesick Scotsman
who headed the Stanford mathematics department, took
a look at waterside options on campus and founded the
Machrihanish Golf Club of California, aka the Stanford
Golf Club. He laid out a nine-hole course near Lake
Lagunita, with rolled dirt for greens.
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FAMILIAR FAVORITE: Golfers
attire has changed, and the oaks are taller, but
the turf remains much the same as when it was
built.
Courtesy Stanford Archives |
By 1906, Stanford was playing host to a men’sclub
championship, a women’s club championship and
a mixed tournament. Stanford won its first intercollegiate
golf match with Cal in 1911, and by 1920 golf was offered
as a “gymnasium course.”
Construction on the current course began in May 1929,
and the first ball sailed off the tee on January 1,
1930. Details like these have been painstakingly verified
by unofficial course historian Gordon Ratliff, a retired
SLAC facilities manager who read through years of microfilm
stories from the Palo Alto Times and Stanford
Daily, and collected them in Stanford Golf
Clippings 1899-1931, published in 1996.
“Women students were pushing for a golf course
in 1929, and they wrote letters to [University comptroller]
Almon Roth,” Ratliff said in a recent interview.
An avid convert to the game, Roth, Class of 1909, arranged
for the required acreage to be set aside, and soon architect
Thomas—who had designed the Los Angeles Country
Club, as well as courses in Bel Air and Ojai, Calif.—had
laid out the course, and Bell was managing the construction.
It was Bell who saw the potential of San Francisquito
Creek. “He looked at the course layout and said,
‘Hey, you’ve got tremendous features and
the creek should be incorporated into the golf course,’”
Ratliff says. Which is why, to this day, golfers hit
from one county into another—from San Mateo to
Santa Clara and back—every time they drive a ball
across the creek.
the 14th hole
is a beaut. Hitting toward a hillside planting of red
and white impatiens, you hope your tee shot will miss
the massive oaks on the right and land on the upslope
across the creek. But what are those parallel white
lines in the grass, spaced several yards apart? Turf
paint from a recent cross-country meet. Golfers aren’t
the only titleholders on the course—the cross-country
teams, national champions in 2003-04, train here.
On a recent morning, varsity golfer Rob Grube was booking
it up Links Road on his mountain bike. With 14 clubs
in a bag slung across his shoulders, he was bound for
the summit at the clubhouse. “Once you start up
the hill, it’s really hard to turn back,”
the curly-headed freshman says. “I’m told
it’s a rite of passage all freshmen go through,
but that could be the upperclassmen talking.”
The same day, on the back nine, varsity golfer Stephanie
Lue played through two foursomes en route to an afternoon
computer science class. Munching on beef jerky, she
turned down offer after offer of rides from passing
golfers in carts. “Thanks, but I’m walking,”
she said brightly.
Chelemedos says 65 percent of today’s players
walk, but Grant Spaeth recalls a time when almost nobody
had a cart. Instead, they had caddies. In the late ’40s
and early ’50s, he and his high school friends
earned extra money hauling clubs for the members whose
dues sustained the golf course.
The conditions he describes sound like heaven to anybody
who has struggled to get a tee time or waited hole to
hole during heavy play. “The course wasn’t
very busy,” says Spaeth, whose father, Carl, was
dean of the Law School and an avid golfer. “There
were times you could go out there on a weekday afternoon
and not see another golfer.”
Now booked solid most days, the course is so popular
that the emphasis is on keeping folks moving. Jim Pansch,
MS ’68, is one of 20 volunteer player assistants
who cruise the course from the first tee at 6:30 a.m.
to closing. He picks up wedges left behind in sand traps,
and he hops out to repair divots with a mulch and seed
mix he trowels from a five-gallon container on the back
of his cart. If a foursome is running a little behind
the schedule on his clipboard, Pansch will lob a cheery,
“Please pick up the pace—appreciate it.”
The exception is when a U.S. president is holding up
play. He and the Secret Service can putt at whatever
pace they like, says Chelemedos, who recalls the times
Bill Clinton played on the course when his daughter,
Chelsea, ’01, was an undergraduate. “He
had some swing issues, and a big slice.”
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NICE DAY FOR A DRIVE: Timo
Rapakko, JSD ’87, tees off at No. 15. |
finally, we're at the breathtaking
18th hole with its dramatic elevation change—a
100-foot drop from the tee to the bottom of the fairway.
On a clear day you can see Mount Tamalpais, the San
Francisco skyline, Oakland, the East Bay hills and the
San Mateo and Dumbarton bridges. Tee it high, watch
it fly.
The Stanford Golf Course may be the only place on campus
where octogenarian alumni rub shoulders with 20-year-old
students—and the next generation of golfers. On
a brilliant October afternoon last fall, 3-year-old
Andy Fisher was on the putting green with his dad, Brett
Fisher, MBA ’92. He had come mostly for a promised
hot dog, fries and chocolate milkshake at the Stanford
Grill, but he commanded the green. Outfitted with a
plastic putter and some Big Bird-yellow Titleists, Andy
was practicing tap-ins.
After 75 years, beloved and nurtured, Stanford Golf
Course is serving more people than ever. While there
are plenty of Greg Norman and Ralph Lauren polos on
display, baggy shorts, saddle shoes and backward baseball
caps are just as common today.
It’s a natural and welcome evolution, says Spaeth.
“The golf course is first and foremost a place
for students and for friends of the University,”
he says.
Including those who lose their clubs in a tree. |