Coming up with some sort of "par" number during most of St. Andrews history was unheard of. Even when they started considering "bogey" it was with the concept of one shot, two shot and three shot holes. By the 20th century it was generally considered that St. Andrews had two one shotters, two three shotters, 13 two shotters and one that would change depending on who was playing or conditions. Get a couple old timers like Cotton and Sarazen in 1962 and they would probably consider it a three shotter. Get the Open contestants out there and it would probably be considered a two shotter.
I'd like to spend more time looking into it, but I doubt they had par numbers on the scorecard until tourism really took off at St. Andrews sometime around the mid-1960s.
Forrest Richardson writes:
some more information on this change -- what drove it, who drove it, etc.I don't have anything to back it up, but my guess is American tourism. American's coming over would have wanted some sort of par number so they could compare themselves to the "so-called" expert golfer.
I think I need to go searching through some more books to see when exactly did St. Andrews have a permanent par number.
It's kind of a shame we went to a more stringent method than they had in days gone by.
Patrick_Mucci asks:
How did the hole originally play when the golf course was played in reverse ?You'd play from the first tee to what is now the 17th green and then from around the 18th tee to what is now the 2nd and 16th green. Coming back you'd play it similarly to how it is now, but I think the hole was a little more straight away. This is one of the reason the reverse course got less play, as the links got more crowded the crossovers such as first tee to 17 green became dangerous.
What is now the first green wasn't created until around the 1870s I believe. The 17th green was then shrunk to around its current size.
Dan King
I got no pride on the hole. It's a par-5 and I play it that way. A four is a birdie.
--Lee Trevino (on the Road Hole at the Old Course at St. Andrews)