The players:
Watching Tiger Woods hit a golf ball is to glimpse another, counter factual universe. In short, it is unreal. Nothing you have ever seen before prepares you for it.
The fact that he did not win changes none of that.
The course:
I did an informal survey of new trees. There more new trees than reported. Many more.
- There are new "fill-in" trees on virtually every non-par 3 hole. By "fill-in" I mean young trees planted slightly ahead of the old tree lines that will grow in the next decade to either pinch the fairway or create a new tree line to serve as a basis for new, narrower fairway edges.
Little has been said about these trees but they are almost everywhere and will increasingly impact playing corridors over the years. They are the prelude to a much tighter ANGC that will happen without the need for announcing it. If in five years you are scratching your head, wondering what looks different, remember this feeble warning.
- The worst hole at ANGC was always the 7th. Unfortunately, it has become the model for biggest changes on the course. (See discussion below.) Fifteen years ago, mature pines over-hung the fairwy. At 60 or so feet up, they almost met. The hole was impossibly tight, so most played irons or 5 woods off the tee to stay short of the worst of it. Those older pines have been cut back, with younger "fill-in" pines now in front of them. With the new back tees, I thought the hole bordered on the silly. In five years it will be much sillier.
- The new forests at 11 and 17 have turned wide fairways into narrow ribbons. Only the best golfers in the world will be able to find them on a regular basis. I do not understand how a bogey golfer plays those holes. MacK is spinning (or worse) in his grave. In the end, Cliff Roberts won.
Based on what I saw this weekend ANGC's ranking falls precipitously. Maybe as far down as the third ten. On the Michelin system, it goes from a 4 star to a 3 star. More than ever, it is now a mess of styles, strategies, ad hoc solutions and short term thinking. There are more not very good holes.
Based on Hootie's and Fazio's vision of the future, more not very good holes are coming when the trees grow in.
A question for the treehouse:
Can anyone think of another architect whose name is associated with the addition of massive numbers of trees to a top 25 course in the last couple of decades? I can't.
In the end, I left ANGC saddened. Something has died.
Bob