Hitting a tee shot into any one of the five deep bunkers on the Postage Stamp par 3 at Royal Troon can lead to a nightmare. Finding all three in just one appearance there? Dastardly, as Joaquin Niemann experienced on Friday in the second round of the British Open, seeing his hopes to hoist the claret jug damaged in a few sandy minutes.
The Chilean, a two-time winner on LIV Golf this year, arrived at Troon’s famous short hole at one under for his round. Niemann was well in contention, and on one of the worst days for wind in recent memory at the Open, he just needed to survive the Stamp, playing at only 123 yards. But the hole had become a club-choice conundrum with the wind, much as it does at Pebble Beach’s little No. 7 when it’s blustery.
GLYN KIRK
The result of Niemann’s tee shot was really unlucky, with his ball hitting the green, but rolling in horsehoe fashion into the right bunker. He got too much ball on his next shot and it scooted across the green into the aptly named Coffin Bunker. It’s so narrow that certain lies make it impossible to get out in one shot, and that’s what happened to Niemann, who needed two swings to escape—he had to go out sideways away from the flag on the second attempt and ended up going into the front bunker that so many players were finding with their tee shots.
From there—he was now trying his fifth shot—Niemann blasted past the flag, settling 26 feet from the cup. Even putting was a struggle. He cozied his first putt to six feet, but then missed the next roll, and with a tap-in, he’d made a quintuple-bogey 8.
According to the broadcast, the snowman was the second-highest score at the Postage Stamp in the last six stagings of the Open at Troon. As the second round continued, Niemann’s 8 was one of five double-bogey scores or worse on No. 8. But, compared to many of the holes at Troon, it wasn’t soaked in black ink. There were 26 bogeys or worse, balanced by 24 birdies. The Stamp, at only .07 over par, was playing at third-easiest hole on the day.
To Niemann’s enormous credit, he didn’t let the 8 ruin his round. He countered his front-nine 40 with a back-nine 31, and with an even-par result he was tied for 11th heading into the weekend.
• • •
Is it the British Open or the Open Championship? The name of the final men’s major of the golf season is a subject of continued discussion. The event’s official name, as explained in this op-ed by former R&A chairman Ian Pattinson, is the Open Championship. But since many United States golf fans continue to refer to it as the British Open, and search news around the event accordingly, Golf Digest continues to utilize both names in its coverage.
• • •
MORE GOLF DIGEST BRITISH OPEN COVERAGE
British Open 101: Answering all your frequently asked questions
How to watch the British Open on TV and streaming
Power Rankings: Every player in the field at Royal Troon
Video: Every hole at Royal Troon
How hard can the 123-yard Postage Stamp hole really be? Our deep-dive explantion
Tiger Woods and when enough is enough
History of the claret jug: 152 years of triumphs, dents and lots of drinking
How Brian Harman (aka ‘The butcher of Hoylake’) beat the British tabloids
Rory McIlroy’s media blowoff reignites debate about obligation in the face of frustration
Links golf interactive: What shots you should play on a links course
This article was originally published on golfdigest.com