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SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. — Was that a … water bottle? A water bottle tossed 30 feet in the air from the middle of the 10th fairway? One of those silver, aluminum water bottles the USGA gives out at the U.S. Open?

Yes, a water bottle was flying through the air, and multiple times at that, because Xander Schauffele’s caddie was scouting Shinnecock Hills’ par-4 10th hole. Why was he using a flying water bottle, you ask? You can read along about that and four other early observations from the U.S. Open below.

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Caddie Cooperation 

Really, Austin Kaiser was just trying to communicate with his fellow looper, Joe Greiner, who stood back on the 10th tee, about 240 yards away. The 10th hole is unlike any other at Shinnecock, where big swooping mounds give way to a massive drop-off of fairway that slopes into a pit of turf. Adam Scott said it’s a unique one, having a wedge in and maybe feeling scared about it.

The goal? Get your tee ball down into that pit of short grass, making for a tiny, smooth wedge. The problem? Part of that fairway kicks right and into the rough. Schauffele’s hybrid ended up there Monday morning. On the left side, the rough cuts in along a bank and pushes balls toward a brutal bunker. They watched Chris Gotterup smash 5-wood in that direction, coming up short of the speed slot. So that’s why the water bottle was flung into the air. Kaiser stood on the downslope of 10, well out of eyesight from the tee box, but he was on the phone with Greiner, who stood on the tee with a range finder. Kaiser tossed the water bottle upward multiple times, up over the hill where Greiner could see it and clock the true, proper line for the center of the hidden part of the fairway, right where they wanted to land their tee balls. Whatever it takes to get the job done — that’s what caddies were out doing Monday afternoon at the U.S. Open.

Xander’s coy thoughts Tuesday morning? “That’s just Austin acting like he’s doing work.”

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Will Monday matter?

We’re only a day and a half into U.S. Open week, and you’ve probably already consumed some wind content . Perhaps even some created by GOLF.com (embedded below). But that’s good — it was windy on Monday, only making an already brutally difficult course that much more impossible.

Read the full article here

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