Pat,
As an example Pat, help me understand where that ideal 20 yard strip would be on the 1st hole of The Old Course?
Mark
Jeff Brauer,
Remember, I'm being player specific.
JES II
I agree, the trickle down effect is an unfortunate by-product of almost everything done to challenge the superior player.
Pat,
I think I was with you, unless you are talking of pro or high level am tourneys. I was thinking of design for better club players, for club level competitions like the mens championship, etc., or even for the every day $5 nassau, which is unrealistically important to so many golfers.
Exactly what level were you thinking of?
As I said, we know generally narrower fw happened. Did they decide to do it every day as being the "greatest good for the greatest number" or was it, as you suggest in your comment to JES, just a byproduct of the best players at a club dictating design and doing what was best for them?
BTW, I think 20 yards would be too narrow in any case, at least on most holes. And the trend was to be say 30 yards at the 275 mark, but wider further back to introduce full length vs layup strategy, rather than left to right strategy, and with angles, maybe a combo of the two.
As to which side you would put it, it seems counter intuitive to put the 20-30 yards on a bad angle. That means that architecturally you are giving the golfer no good options - its either good angle from the rough or bad angle from the fw. In my mind, the narrowed fw should reward hitting to the good angle, increasing the problems from the wrong side through reduced spin and angle as equipment gets better.
Conversely, with similar rough on both sides of the fw, it would better reward the player going for the extreme edge of the fw and missing in the rough to that side, at least with angle. With lighter rough or wider first cut on the premium side, it would still put a premium on being on the correct side of the narrower fw, but it would just be tougher.
On the other hand, it would be a greater dilema if the or lighter rough or wider first cut on the non premium side - I guess if you were wild one day, you would play to miss for the lighter rough, if at all, angle be damned. Playing down the premium side, knowing that a miss puts you in deep doo doo would only be an option if you were driving well. Would the angle advantage of being in the fw be worth it?
Either way, its using light rough to enhance the advantage of a particular angle of play, rather than allowing the player a fw lie with a wild or lesser placed drive. Again, maybe a logical evolution to clubs and ball technology, and the ability of greens to hold shots, since they are now sand based.
I suppose it would vary every day.