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Fear and loathing at Winged Foot '74: The USGA's response to Johnny Miller
Season 5 · Episode 17

Fear and loathing at Winged Foot '74: The USGA's response to Johnny Miller

Why and how the USGA turned the 1974 U.S. Open at Winged Foot into a monster

50 Things That Changed Golf

June 12, 202342m 3s

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Show Notes

When Johnny Miller shot his famous 63 in the final round at Oakmont in 1973, it instantly became one of the most staggering achievements in the history of major championship golf. For the USGA, it was also something else: an insult. Oakmont was supposed to be one of the toughest courses in the world, and the U.S. Open was supposed to be the toughest test in professional golf. What Miller did undermined that identity, and when the Open came to Winged Foot one year later, the one certainty was that it wouldn't happen again. From the tournament committee to the club members, the mission was to return the U.S. Open to its place of prominence by all means necessary. The course the players encountered that summer was a monster, and they were its victims. What happened next can only be described as carnage; this week on Local Knowledge, we look at why it happened, and what it tells us about America's national open and the people who run it.


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Topics

massacresportspga tourjohnny millergolfgolf coursesu.s. openoakmontjack nicklauspga