Matt:
You've not answered MY questions. Rather, you've made up your own questions and answered them. Very weak.
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Hey Lou it's been a while, nice to see your post.
(1) There appears to be a preference on this board for courses which look way more difficult than they actually play.
You've lost me already. Take the subject hole. It looks very difficult in the photo, yet I wouldn't be surprised if it is easier than it looks
for the accomplished golfer. Somehow I doubt this is the preference to which you refer.
Resistance to scoring is a negative criterion. As a rule not without some exceptions, modern courses tend to be more difficult than the much prefered classical courses. . . .
Sure, changes equipment and maintenance may have made some classic courses play easier. But if we could somehow correct for these variables, then I agree and disagree.
For mid-handicap golfers and up, I agree that modern courses tend to be much more difficult classic courses. However, for very accomplished golfers, I doubt that this is the case. Take the subject hole. It certainly looks harder than a many great classic holes. But let's break it down a little. (Note I havent played the hole so I am just theorizing from what I have seen in the photos, and from what Matt has told us. Feel free to correct me if you have better information.)
The major threat appears to come from the forced carries, where the golfer gets into trouble by not carrying the ball as far as they need. Yet while the penalty for failure is harsh and final, it is rarely dished out to accomplished golfers, who generally have pretty good distance control, at least on the short end. They may not get their distance exactly correct, but they also generally avoid chunks, tops, blades, near whiffs, and the other types of shots that end up in the bottom of canyons. So absent a complete choke on the part of the accomplished player, the danger forced carries is largely illusory.
In contrast, the danger is very real for the unaccomplished golfer. Chunks, tops, blades, near wiffs, etc. are far from extraordinary. And when the hack hacks a fat one into a canyon, he suffers not only from failing to advance is ball very far, but he also suffers the punitive lost ball or hazard penalty. And he still has to try to catch one clean to make it over the canyon.
So this particular modern hole might be more difficult for the hack, yet not necessarily more difficult for the accomplished golfer.
So is resistance to scoring positive or negative? Well, I for one don't like it when designers make scoring more difficult for the hack, especially when they dont make it more difficult for the accomplished player.
(2) The higher handicap golfers as well as the shorter hitters don't necessarily prefer easier courses which offer few consequences to their dribblers and skanks. This is purely anecdotal, but as a starter in the mid-1970s at the Ohio State Scarlet and Grey club, I was constantly amazed that so many duffers would wait for hours to get on Scarlet when they could play the simpler, kindlier, and yet intersting Grey course without delay.
Does the Scarlet present a number of hazards from where one can no longer continue to golf their ball? Is it possible that they just like the design better, regardless of difficulty?
In as far as the hole pictured on this thread, the second shot strategy is quite apparent. If you want a shorter 3rd shot to the green with perhaps a better angle, you hit to the right and traverse the canyon twice. If you're long or more timid, you hit directly toward the green and maybe introduce eagle and bogey into the equation.
I agree that the more timid player has the option of laying up his second shot on the first fairway, then trying to make the long carry to the green on his third. But for the short hitter there is a very good possibility that the 'timidity' is based on sound judgement and lack of carry distance. So this "timid" golfer may well have to hit his third over the canyon to the lay up area right, before trying to make the last forced carry to the green.
So let's go to the question Matt refused to answer and play it through:
two low handicaps, one a long hitter and one a short hitter, playing the back tee (556 yds) (we all know that long hitters feel cheated if they cant play the back tee.)
Long Hitter: First shot bashed drive. Second shot tough uphill mid- to short-iron to green (Matt hit a seven iron.)
Short Hitter: Drive to fairway (230 yds). Carry to second fairway is around 200, so golfer lays up toward the end of the first fairway, leaving 180-190 yards uphill to the green. Third shot over canyon to layup area. Fourth shot back over canyon to green.
I agree with rewarding distance, but doesnt this seem a bit extreme?
Personally, I don't know that I care to play a course where it is possible to do so with just a putter. Something about variety.
But you would never play the hole with just a putter, nor would many others. So aren't you effectively saying that
you have no interest in playing courses where lesser golfers are generally able to golf their ball from the first tee to the 18th green?