Always good to read a discussion of two of my favorite courses, and Kingston Heath.
As far as quality short P4's go - I'm glad you feel that #3 at KH is exceptional and for mine #9 isn't bad either ? Woodlands has some good short P4's as well #3 and #13 spring to mind but there's too many of them ie: 4 holes under 340m and another just on 350m.
This is where I see Woodlands strength, it has many more shorter holes than KH. And 4 shortest fours are only a quickstep from a birdie to a triple, demanding fairly precise execution, particularly with the approaches. The extra shorter holes bring the length back to the 6100 metre mark, making it a much more pleasant walk. I know plenty of people who rate it amongst the most difficult on the sandbelt, yet at that length it is still playable for Mackenzie's seemingly forgotten "inferior" golfer, ie, most golfers. This is the type of course we should be building, not 6500 metre+ slogs.
A good way to look at it is that C'wealth etc... probably have some holes that are as good + more spectacular than KH. But each of these courses have some significant shortcomings that KH does not.
Anthony, could you please elaborate what shortcomings Woodlands has in an architectural sense that KH doesn't.
IMHO RM, KH and National Moonah are the 3 must plays in Victoria.
If you are coming for quality architecture then you would only play National Moonah to see how it shouldn't be done, badly routed and an exhausting walk. From my perspective it represents a lot of what is wrong with much of the current thinking. At about 6600 metres its length makes bugger all difference to the pros this is supposed to address but is exponentially more difficult as handicaps rise, turning what should be fun into an often arduous grind. A terrible waste of a great site.
But the architectural edge should go to KH over WL because of the two KH has the best par 3 (15th) the best short par 4 (3rd) and the best par 5 (14) -- even though WL is strong in all these areas. And KH has a better opener and and a better finish (I even like 16 and 17 -- particularly 16)
I'm not sure that a methodology for assessing the architecture based on three holes is best, but what the heck. I've never figured out the fuss about 15 KH, but I'll pay that one because everyone says so. I prefer 4 and 13 at Woodlands to 3 at KH because the greens are a much more tempting target than 3 at KH. You would have to be Robert Allenby or a nutcase (or is that one and the same?) to take driver on 3 at KH. And it is an exercise in splitting hairs with between 14 at KH and 15 at Woodlands. Woodlands also has the better mid length par 4 in 7 (340ish metres) and the better shorter par 5 with 2 (460ish metres) and the better longer par 3 in 5 (170ish metres).
(3) Poor routing? Hello ... Planet Earth to Mars. Its routing cannot be faulted! Actually KH's routing is a relatively
greater acheivement than RM West's, because that property truly is vast. KH is much smaller, yet somehow the golfer's journey seems totally non-claustrophobic and relaxed. We can only hope in future that all courses are routed as "poorly" as KH.
We have been over this a hundred times by why is the routing 'bad'
Well I guess I'm a Martian. Personally, I think that Soutar was delivered the worst possible brief, to deliver a course that would "stand the test of time" (or a monster). This resulted in a n unbalanced routing and a lack of variety. It is the management of vegetation, the stunning (though often overdone) bunkering and conditioning that gets people excited, not the quality of the architecture. And a lot of you guys should know better.
On the routing, this is some of what I wrote on it last time, in comparison with Woodlands. "Woodlands has significantly greater variety because it has imo the vastly superior routing. Par 3's of 139, 154, 168 and 197 metres which run in three different directions. Three sub 300 metre par fours, again, play in different directions. A couple of very good mid length par fours in 7 and 14. Unsurprisingly moving opposite. Three 400+ par fours that basically triangulate. Two 4.5s in 2 and 18, playing in different directions and two strong 3 shot holes in 6 and 15, which, you guessed it, oppose one another. This is what I'd imagine textbook stuff to look like. And into the mix the gentle(ish) opening, providing opportunity for early birdies before settling into the tougher holes and it just strikes me as a Golden Age classic. Of course that would be pointless box ticking if the holes were no good, but in this case they are, with super holes at every length. Just looking at the short fours 3,4 and 13, are all holes where it is possible to write pretty much any number on your card. 4, at 251 metres with no greenside bunkers begs to be taken on and provides infinite short game options. For mine it is clearly superior to the much vaunted 3rd at KH, which is pretty much 4 iron, SW, two putts = par four each time.
I just don't see anything remotely approaching the same variety or balance at KH. The kindest word I can think for the routing is pedestrian. I think the example in the history illustrates why Soutar had no idea. To walk into the middle of the property, say this is the ideal spot for the short 10th hole (what is the thought process there?), do the plans and then have to reverse the hole due to the setting sun provides some indication that he may not have been on top of the basics of routing. And into the mix all the completely unnecessary blind holes and little effort to mix up the directions on a property that was largely flat, practically presenting a blank canvas, would have me giving him a resubmit. It certainly doesn't conform terribly closely to the principles of the period expounded by MacKenzie, or judging from James Bennett's earlier thread, Robert Hunter. Soutar is actually one of the earliest Australian examples of the perils of hiring an architect based on their public profile and playing deeds." It is all in here, so we don't need to rehash it again
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