Wayne,
"Since I have never been inland to play in Great Britain, I can't say for sure. But, are the greens on flatter ground at the West course modeled after courses in that area of the world? The first hole comes to mind with its wonderful "trench" and the #10 ? where a lump sits in the middle and the fairway goes right off the back of the green into the next tee. I also loved the downhill hole that has a green that looks like "floppy" hat. It sits a few feet off the ground with no bunkers.
The uphill greensites are challenging such as #18 and the long dogleg left uphill hole, but the "flattish" ones are simply divine."
Mike,
Do you have a million monkeys sitting at keyboards typing this stuff for you? It doesn't make much sense to me. Try getting a few more monkeys
Here's a photo of the 9th green and the 10th tee melded into the green complex. Note the mound on the front left (our right) of the green...it is a cool old feature that just works on that throwback course. It is not in the middle of the fairway as you recalled.
How could and why would you speculate about greens on flatter parts of the course being modeled after something you've never seen before?
With that aside, why do you think the greens on the flat holes are divine and the greens on the hillier parts of the course not as much so? I think they are all very interesting in their own way. The 12th is one of my favorite greens on the course.
I thought you believed that flat holes were uninteresting and you needed dramatic undulations for great or divine holes. What are you saying?
The downhill green that looks like a floppy hat? I have no idea what that is, can you offer a bit more information so I can try to figure it out?
This defensiveness and the reference of you not ever being in England all goes back to your analysis of Hidden Creek, such as it was. You made comments and the support you gave was just too weak to give credibility to your statements--even when there is room for subjectivity. You said at the time that the trees were all of the same height and that was a bad thing. Come on, that kind of thought process contains little thought. Make bold statements, that's a lot of the fun on this site, but have some evidence that supports them and doesn't question your analysis methods.