SAN FRANCISCO — The U.S. Golf Association wanted to make a splash in its selection of sites for the new U.S. Amateur Four-Ball championship announced earlier this year.
And it believes it has done just that.
Just a year after hosting the U.S. Open, The Olympic Club in San Francisco was selected Monday to host the inaugural men's four-ball championship in 2015. Bandon Dunes Golf Resort on the Oregon coast will hold the first women's event that spring.
Winged Foot Golf Club just outside New York City will be the site of the men's tournament in 2016, while the women will go to the newly designed Streamsong Resort near Tampa, Fla., that year.
"When we set forth to identify those sites for these new USGA national championships, it was our goal primarily to create a wow factor when announcing these sites and conducting these inaugural championships," USGA senior managing director John Bodenhamer said at a news conference at Olympic Club. "And I think with these four announcements we've done that."
It's the first time since the State Team Championships in 1995 that the USGA has introduced a new championship.
Adding these two tournaments means the end of two others, however. That includes the U.S. Amateur Public Links, which dates to 1922 and has a list of winners that includes Trevor Immelman, Tim Clark and Brandt Snedeker. Also being abandoned is the U.S. Women's Amateur Public Links, where Michelle Wie made history in 2003 at age 13 as the youngest winner of a USGA championship for adults.
USGA Vice President Thomas O'Toole Jr. said the better-ball format for the U.S. Amateur Four-Ball Championship — announced as replacements to both in February — should lend to more exciting golf. He also said it was gaining in popularity, with more than 150 tournaments using the format in state and regional competitions last year.