Lowry Looking To Feeling ‘Comfortable’ On Dye Designed Kiawah Island

It’s not lost on Shane Lowry in heading into this week’s 103rd PGA Championship his best two finishes this year have been on Pete Dye designed courses.

Two months ago, Lowry posted his first PGA Tour top-10 since winning 2019 Open Championship in finishing a superb eighth at the Tour’s flagship Players Championship at TPC Sawgrass in Florida.

Five weeks later, Lowry bagged a second top-10 with a share of ninth place in the RBC Heritage on the Harbour Town Links at Hilton Head in South Carolina.

Both courses were designed by Dye, who passed away early last year.

Shane Lowry on route to a share of ninth on the Pete Dye designed Harbour Town course and venue for the RBC Heritage

Lowry did not qualify for the 2012 PGA Championship on the Ocean Course at Kiawah Island, and a course designed by Dye, and with help from his wife Alice, in 1991 and in time for the ‘War by the Shore’ Ryder Cup later that year.

The Ocean course boasts the most seaside holes in the Northern Hemisphere with 10 hugging the Atlantic Ocean and the other eight running parallel to those. Although it was originally planned to sit the course behind the dunes, and like the ‘nature-made’ links gems in Ireland but Dye’s course designer wife, Alice, suggested raising the entire course to give players unobstructed views of Kiawah’s stunning coastline from every hole.

Kiawah Island, and named after the Kiawah Indians, itself encompasses just 39.21 kms with 28.23 kms of land and the rest water and with a highest point of just highest cut shy of four meters, meaning it’s open to the elements as was evident on day three of the 2012 PGA Championship when strong winds forced play to be suspended until early Sunday morning.

Though is being reminded of his successes this season on Dye-designed lay-outs, Lowry was not aware of Dye’s Kiawah connection.

Alice and Pete Dye – co-designers of Kiawah Island.

“I didn’t even know Kiawah was a Pete Dye course, so thanks for pointing that out and that’s a little bit more pressure I can put on myself for this week”, said Lowry laughing.

“Well, it’s clearly going to be quite different than Hilton Head.  It’s going to be one of the longest golf courses ever.

“In playing Sawgrass and Hilton Head you have to position yourself around both course and you hit a lot 3-woods and 5-woods off tees but given this week is going to be so long, it’s going to be driver on every hole.

“So, maybe it’s a coincidence I do play well on Dye-designed courses and maybe we’ll be talking about it being a good coincidence late on Sunday night.”

As Lowry mentioned, Kiawah will the longest in major’s history and set to play 7,156-metres and that’s 135-metres longer than in 2012 when Rory McIlroy won.

It’s also 441-metres longer than Royal Portrush where Lowry was handed the gleaming Claret Jug while the USGA rate the Ocean course 79.1, and that the highest course rating in the States.

It’s why Lowry headed north from his Florida residence on Sunday in the company of coach Neil Manchip and caddy ‘Bo’ Martin and squeezing in an afternoon practice round, and in a first step in getting ‘comfortable’ with Kiawah while he was out practicing alongside World No. 1 Dustin Johnson on Monday and the first official day of practice.

Shane Lowry and World No. 1 Dustin Johnson out on Kiawah Island Monday for the first day of official practice for the 103rd PGA Championship. (Photo – Getty)

“We decided to get to Kiawah on Sunday so we can get to know the golf course as best I can and get comfortable playing it,” said Lowry.

“I feel like I am playing well but I also think if I feel too comfortable, I get complacent so it’s nice to have a bit of anxiety there and a bit of nervousness there about how you were going to play. It kind of switches you on a little bit.

“I have been like that over the last week not really overly happy with everything I but I know I am doing things well I’m swinging the club well.  I am working away on my putting and chipping and I feel like that’s coming together nicely.

“I think just getting there and trying to get comfortable around the golf course. I think there are a couple of blind tee shots next week that you just have to get comfortable with so I am trying to get comfortable with how I am hitting the ball and what I am doing out there, allowing myself to play my best golf.

“You need to get comfortable to allow yourself to make mistakes, allowing yourself to make bogeys and allowing yourself to hit bad shots. And I think when you get comfortable doing that, that’s when it leads to your best golf.

“So, it is all of the above and all of those things and hopefully, I can shoot a couple of decent rounds the first two days and put myself there or thereabouts come the weekend.



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