behind those incredibly brilliant SKYLINE greens ?
Time and time again I come across brilliant skyline greens, like the 17th at Belmont.
And, time and time again, some green committee has planted pines or other trees immediately behind them, to frame or define the green.
WHY ?
And more importantly, why do those trees remain ?
Is it the Americanization of skyline greens.
The need to frame and clearly define the target.
Playing Sand Hills was a great experience for me and the skyline greens at Sand Hills made the course more enjoyable and more challenging.
However, I feel that I'm in the great minority amongst golfers.
Few see that a green is a skyline green, and I wonder how many, upon having the green pointed out to them, would advocate tree removal behind the green ?
Most skyline greens sit on a promontory, and as such, they are usually more subject to one of the great elements in golf, the wind. However, trees behind the green impede the winds ability to influence the play of the approach, which is another reason they should be removed.
Why aren't more of these great holes being returned to their intended design and purpose ?