Golf News for Wednesday, July 23, 2008 | Courses

Fred Dickman prepares Broadmoor course for U.S. Senior Open

The Broadmoor Resort's East Course will have a decidedly different look and feel as the USGA returns to the Rocky Mountains to conduct the 29th U.S. Senior Open Championship July 31-Aug. 3.

Significant changes, including the addition of 36 bunkers, have been implemented since Annika Sorenstam won the 1995 U.S. Women's Open. Overseeing the renovation for the majority of the time has been The Broadmoor's Director of Golf Course Maintenance, Fred Dickman, a certified member of the Golf Course Superintendents Association of America (GCSAA).

Broadmoor East will play at par 70 and 7,253 yards, with Poa annua greens measuring 11 on the Stimpmeter. The ryegrass fairways have been narrowed for the championship and for the first time at a Senior Open, the bluegrass rough has been given the USGA's graduated cut with the first 20 feet at 2 1/2 inches and 4 inches thereafter.

"Our biggest challenge has been the dry summer we are having," said Dickman about the area's fourth driest summer on record. "We are six inches below normal annual precipitation, which is a lot considering our annual average is only 17 inches."

When completed in 1918, The Broadmoor East Course was the highest golf course in the United States at 6,400 feet in elevation. It is now a combination of the original Donald Ross creation combined with holes designed by Robert Trent Jones in 1965.

"We wanted to get the East back to more of the Donald Ross look versus the RTJ look that had kind of been evolving over the years," Dickman said. "Much of the renovation emphasized Ross' trademark shallow bottom bunkers with grassy banks. It's totally changed the look of the course."

Dickman is a 21-year GCSAA member and has been GCSAA certified for 13 years. Prior to arriving at The Broadmoor in 1997, he was superintendent at the Phoenician Resort in Scottsdale, Ariz. East Course superintendent Mike Sartori is a five-year GCSAA member.

For more on Dickman's preparations, read GCM Senior Staff Writer Terry Ostmeyer's U.S. Senior Open preview "Majors heat up in July," published in the July 2008 edition of GCSAA’s monthly magazine.

The 2008 U.S. Senior Open will be the sixth USGA Championship staged at The Broadmoor, as the 1952 and 1967 U.S. Amateurs, 1962 Curtis Cup, 1982 U.S. Women's Amateur, and 1995 U.S. Women's Open were held there. The U.S. Women's Open returns to The Broadmoor in 2011.

GCSAA is a leading golf organization and has as its focus golf course management. Since 1926, GCSAA has been the top professional association for the men and women who manage golf courses in the United States and worldwide. From its headquarters in Lawrence, Kan., the association provides education, information and representation to more than 21,000 members in more than 72 countries. GCSAA’s mission is to serve its members, advance their profession and enhance the enjoyment, growth and vitality of the game of golf. The association’s philanthropic organization, The Environmental Institute for Golf, works to strengthen the compatibility of golf with the natural environment through research grants, support for education programs and outreach efforts. Visit GCSAA at www.gcsaa.org.

For more information contact:
Fred Dickman, CGCS, director of golf course maintenance, The Broadmoor Resort, at 719-577-5841 or fdickman@broadmoor.com

Contact: Jeff Bollig, GCSAA director of communications
800-472-7878, ext. 4430 or jbollig@gcsaa.org