Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Johnson refuses to worry about past

Bill Dwyre Los Angeles Times

UNIVERSITY PLACE, Wash. – There will be golf fans who watched Dustin Johnson’s tremendous start Thursday in the U.S. Open and will be skeptical about his ability to also make a tremendous finish Sunday.

Some will be skeptical about Johnson, no matter what.

Which is sad, but maybe earned.

Johnson shot a 32-33-65 on Chambers Bay’s weird, wacky and wonderful golf course and shared the first-round lead with Henrik Stenson. It was, and is, a performance worthy of high praise.

Chambers Bay is a course that doesn’t just challenge players. It eats them. There are enough mounds, funky fescue and impossible angles to prompt an additional tour employment hire this week in western Washington: psychiatrist.

Will we easily forget poor Camilo Villegas, taking a seven on the 12th hole Thursday, with various drops into a trap and scuffs out of it? Or Tiger Woods’ flying club as he slashed out of an off-the-fairway jungle?

In the face of all this, Johnson was superb.

He fulfilled the promise that this was a course for the big hitters by driving it an average of 336.5 yards and by playing the course bogey-free until his final hole, the par-3 ninth. At one point, he was 6-under par and led by three.

“I had a good feel for the golf course,” Johnson said, “because I’m swinging it well.”

He is a tall, lanky, greatly athletic 30-year-old – he can still dunk a basketball. He has won nine times on the tour and has won at least once in each of the last eight PGA Tour seasons, best of his peers.

Johnson also has imploded twice at times that, had he not, would have elevated him to another level on the tour and in people’s minds. Those were in 2010, at the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach and the PGA Champion- ship at Whistling Straits.

At Pebble Beach, where he had already won twice, he led the Open after 54 holes and shot an 82 on Sunday. That closing disaster round included a triple bogey on No. 2 and a double bogey on No. 3. His shot-and-club selection in that round, not to mention his thought process, were puzzling.

A few months later, all he needed to win the PGA title was a decent second shot and a two-putt on No. 18. He made the decent second shot, but he had grounded his club in the sand trap where he was standing, a spot he didn’t think was a sand trap because he had failed to read the well-posted course rules. Instead of a major title, or even a spot in a playoff that would still give him a chance, he got a two-stroke penalty and an early shower.

Much has been written about that, including a piece by ESPN.com’s Gene Wojcie- chowski, who characterized what Johnson did, or failed to do by not reading the rules, as “Roberto De Vicenzo-dumb, a sin of laziness.”

De Vicenzo was the Argentine who signed a wrong scorecard that cost him a chance to win the 1968 Masters.

Since then, Johnson has continued to win tournaments, place high in others, win millions of dollars and even challenge in majors. When asked about any demons from 2010, about whether he looked at majors now as a chance to get those monkeys off his back, he said, “No. I’m here to play golf and to put myself in a position Sunday to have a chance to win. Whistling Straits was a long time ago.”

He used the same “long time ago” phrase later when asked about his 2010 Pebble Beach travails.

He also muddied the perception waters by dropping off the tour for six months after the British Open last summer. Johnson said he needed to address “personal challenges.”

His fiancee is Paulina Gretzky, who is the daughter of some old hockey player you might have heard of. Johnson and Paulina have a 5-month old son, Tatum, to whose presence Johnson attributes a new inner peace and perspective.