I first ventured to Scotland to play golf in 2008. My son Tim and I were lucky enough to hit the lottery on that trip – the one that gets you onto The Old Course at St. Andrews. (The lottery is known at St Andrews as a “ballot.”) It cost me less than £100 each for our round in 2008, and I thought it was a bargain; today the rack rate is £320, or a little over $400. Not sure it is still a bargain.
As I stepped onto the first tee box and looked out at the double-wide fairway before me, I felt a frisson of embarrassment. The fairway, which comprises both the first and 18th holes, is the widest in all of golf, 129 yards from the fence guarding the right side of the 1st hole to the fence guarding the left on #18. Most pulled tee shots by right-handed golfers might make it to the midway line on the 18th fairway but you would almost have to be aiming 45 degrees away from the first green to get it to the fence that guards the road that runs behind the green on the famous Road Hole (#17).
But the enormity and anxiety of the moment in 2008, when I stood on the first tee of a golf course I had dreamed of playing for more than 40 years, pulled my hands as quickly to the left as a Hank Aaron home run swing. As I watched in horror and embarrassment, my ball rolled to within 10 feet of the fence guarding the road. (Note: In 1995, golf pro and then former Open champion Ian Baker Finch pulled his tee shot farther left than mine and out of bounds. His round and, not long after, his professional career – he shot a 92 in the 1997 Open Championship at Royal Troon -- were doomed. Yet I was left with a surprisingly routine approach shot over the Swilken Burn to the first green. I wound up making bogey and was delighted after my pitiful drive.)
Ask me how I did on the 18th hole, and I cannot begin to recall a thing. One or two good shots can make you forget the bad that came before; it is one of the reasons golf is the greatest sport of all. I could never presume to hit a high hard one in baseball or crash through the defensive line in football or run a four-minute mile. But in golf, if you are good and lucky, you can make a shot that produces as good a score as any pro has ever made. (What is better than a hole in one, eh?) And you could also birdie the Road Hole at The Old Course which, in the final round of The Open Championship, any professional would be glad to enter on his scorecard.