I hope it's ok that I post some of these pictures as some others have already done so....
I had the pleasure of enjoying a great day on the Monterey Peninsula with our good friend Mr.Huntley and the newly built Shore course (Mike Strantz). The course was in tremendous shape and very firm & fast (although Mr.Huntley & playing-partner believe it should be
much firmer).
In general the course is alot of fun to play, and the views along the ocean are breath-taking. I could see this being at least a 6-4 vs. Dunes (Dunes is slightly easier to walk), although it would be a nice problem to have for MPCC members...Dunes or Shore....Shore or Dunes...or just play 36
Strantz did a great job keeping things very natural looking and inline with the surrounding area. And while those large rocks look imposing from 17 Mile Drive, they never really come into play except for the most errant of shots.
Early feedback at MPCC (from some members) is that the course might not be long enough due to firmness of the turf and the subsequent roll, but I'm not sure I completely agree with that, especially if the wind blows. At 6800yds, it still required plenty of length off the tee, and accuracy is a must. I thought the Par3s were outstanding, and the Par4s had good variety and that the firmness of the course made you think about all your approaches.
The greens are very large, and while they don't have alot of internal contours, Strantz does a good job of using various slopes to make them challenging. Because of their firmness, he probably spent more time trying to build contour that would allow balls to be funneled to different parts of the green or off the green, so accuracy of approach shots is critical. But more than anything, the conditions of the greens were
incredible!!. They were easily the truest greens I've ever played. It's fun to know that if you get the line and speed right that you could make putts on these greens from 3' to 50'...they just roll so perfectly!
Tee-shot on the #1 hole (Par5). From the tee, it looks longer than it actually is to clear the bunkers on the right.
Approach to #1 from about 200yds away.
Holes #1-4 re-used the original Shore routing corridors. Holes #5-16 are all completely new routing by Strantz along the ocean.
Tee-shot on the #5 hole (Par4). Just as Strantz did at Tobacco Road, the fairway width is obscured by waste-area bunkers, but is actually quite wide.
Approach to #5. The bunker on the right is about 50-60yds short of the green.
Approach to #7 (Par5). The green is two-tiered with a large slope between the tiers. The rocks behind the green are probably 50yds behind the hole and serve as the back-tee on #11 (Par3).
Oh to spend your days on the Peninsula...
Looking back across the 6th green, with the surf and CPC #16 in the background...
Our esteemed host with a short pitch left after a huge drive on the 470yd Par4 8th. [NOTE: The course is very walkable, but unfortunately my host's trolley had a mechanical failure and was offered the buggy as an alternative]
Uphill approach to the skyline(!) #13 green (Par4)
Approach to the #13 green from the left-side waste bunker. Don't be long of this green or you'll end up on one of the access roads off 17 Mile Drive.
Tee-shot on #15. The hole appears to be a dogleg right, but actually is a dogleg left and the fairway pitches to the left. The best line off the tee is the middle or right edge of the large waste-bunker.
Approach to #15 from inside the dogleg. With that view, you could stand out there all day and hit approach shots.
Many thanks to my host for another enjoyable day and excellent company, and thanks to Mother Nature for once again cooperating during my visit to Monterey.