Sunningdale Old
Most of you will know more about this course than me, so I'll keep the commentary to the minimum. Willie Park first laid it out in 1900/1 and Harry Colt redesigned the course in the 1920s. What Tom Simpson may or may not have done to it subsequently is a matter of debate in another thread.
The photos come from the middle of the round, the problem being that I was invited to play by someone I didn't know. He was a friend of a friend and I made up their four-ball. The course was busy and it was difficult to take photos without getting in someone's way.
4th green. Short hole (161 yards) played from a tee out to the right. 5th fairway beyond.
5th tee looking out on one of the most famous holes on the course (419 yards par 4).
5th fairway. Right hand bunkers visited by match in front. Little hope of making green from there over early man0made water hazard.
6th green. Tough hole in its heyday, 415 yards with fairway interrupted by heather short of green and four bunkers in front of and alongside green.
7th. Exciting hole for shorter hitters with need for big drive to carry blind hill from tee, before plunging down through mounds and heather to green (402 yards, par 4).
7th. Getting nearer, showing how easy it is to be cut out on the approach by trees or sand.
7th. One of the protective bunkers.
7th. View looking back up fairway.
8th. I rather liked this 182-yard par 3, with a tee shot over the corner of the hill to a ledge green.
10th. The view most frequently seen in the coffee table books. Our friends in front have again found the sand, this time on the left. Note how close to the trees the tee markers have been set. (478-yard par 5).
11th. Only 325 yards but still a fine short par 4, with a narrow drive and tricky pitch to the little green.
13th. 185-yard par 3 played from an elevated tee, with everything in view.