The 2023 US Open will have even more intrigue than usual as it takes place at a venue hosting a Major for the first time.
Los Angeles Country Club was established way back in 1897. Still, despite that long history, and its North Course’s reputation as one of the best in California, it has remained largely closed off to the outside world, with its members keen to retain its exclusivity and privacy – entirely in keeping with its location close to the movie-star mansions of Beverly Hills.
That began to change in 2014 when the USGA opened discussions with the club on the chance of it hosting a future US Open. An agreement was reached a year later – it would host the tournament in 2023.
Two years after that historic announcement, the club hosted the Walker Cup featuring future stars of the game, including Scottie Scheffler, Collin Morikawa and Will Zalatoris.
There have been other memorable tournaments at the club, including the 1930 US Women’s Amateur Golf Championship and five editions of the Los Angeles Open (now the Genesis Invitational) between 1926 and 1940. However, aside from those, the club has remained largely closed to high-profile events.
A precursor to its eventual success was found early on in its history. It began as the nine-hole Windmill Links (which got its name after the clubhouse was built from the bottom of an abandoned windmill) on a far smaller site before its popularity determined a need for a new home just a year later.
Another nine-hole was opened, this time called The Convent Links, for its location behind the convent near Rosedale Cemetery. Once again, though, its popularity ensured it was a short-lived home.
Finally, it moved to its current home – clubhouse and all, which was expanded – and reopened in 1911 as an 18-hole course, with another added later, leaving the North and South Course.
Both courses were redesigned between 1996 and 1997 from a plan developed by John Harbottle, but perhaps the catalyst for the change in approach from the club was a Gil Hanse redesign of the North Course in 2010. Hanse restored the course to something closer to the original George C Thomas design, with advice from Thomas’ biographer George Shackleton. It reopened in October of that year.
Given the club’s long love of privacy, details on the…
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