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Ryan_Simper
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« on: August 08, 2007, 01:24:01 PM » |
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Just returned from my first trip to Prairie Dunes and I've got to say I was more than impressed with it. While I've always heard how highly regarded it was, I've always thought that I'd find it good but maybe not quite my cup of tea. I found it to be exactly the opposite - immediately one of my favorite courses and a place I think everyone should go if they are able. Without getting too much into discussions that have been had before (or overlapping Ran's writeup) I'd say that the things that struck me most strongly were these: 1) The course is nowhere near as narrow as reputed - You can lose a ball on every single hole, sure, but you know you've hit a very poor shot if you do. The corridors are much wider than I'd imagined them to be. 2) The greens are possibly the best I've played - my favorite thing about them is that they are contoured without being crazy (like a Doak green, for example). Often times a single feature dominates the playability of the green and even your approach shot. The thought process is much more complex than simply being on the right level or in the proper quadrant of the green. Take, for example, the hump short of the 11th green - You have to start thinking about this single feature from the tee. Same goes for the fall-off left of 18 and even the hump on the right side of 1. 3) The course is much more fun that I'd thought it would be - when considering it against other highly regarded middle-america courses (Ballyneal, Sand Hills) which have been built with the fun factor looming large, I'd imagined Prairie Dunes to be the antithesis of fun - long, windy, narrow, and difficult. While it is at times long, certainly windy, and without a doubt difficult, it's not narrow and it's a ton of fun - from the rolling fairways to the greens that have just the right amount of contour to them, to the various chipping areas and the often awkward recovery shots from them, it's just through and through a fun (and extremely challenging) course. As for the pics (Sorry, don't have a scorecard in front of me for yardages) 1st tee just after sunrise  Behind the 1st green  2nd hole  3rd tee  4th hole - par 3  5th hole - par 4  6th hole - par 4  8th hole - par 4 - one of the best holes I've ever played  8th green - Can't even begin to capture the contours here  10th hole - par 3  12th hole - par 4  14th tee - very confusing on the first play  15th tee - par 3 with a menacing chute of trees to navigate  16th green  17th fairway - Par 5 - 517 yards  The extremely difficult 17th green  18th hole - par 4  Behind the 8th green with the 9th and clubhouse in the background 
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Mike_Cirba
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« Reply #1 on: August 08, 2007, 02:55:32 PM » |
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Speaking of Prairie Dunes, where the hell is Tom Paul with his review and analysis??!??!  Great pics, Ryan!
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Jon Spaulding
Full Member
 
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Posts: 944
Billy Bell is the Gene Simmons of bunkering....
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« Reply #2 on: August 08, 2007, 03:25:58 PM » |
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Awesome photo work....I love the native grass framing; the par 4's look especially strong. Hope the trusted 3-metal served you well. ....and when will the write up be posted on greenskeeper.org  ?
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D_Malley
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« Reply #3 on: August 08, 2007, 04:23:16 PM » |
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are both 2 & 4 par 3's? isn't that a pace of play issue?
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David Stamm
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« Reply #4 on: August 08, 2007, 05:03:10 PM » |
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Magnificent! Great photo work Ryan. What a treat that must've been!
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"The object of golf architecture is to give an intelligent purpose to the striking of a golf ball."- Max Behr
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TEPaul
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« Reply #5 on: August 08, 2007, 05:37:05 PM » |
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I'm sorry, MikeC, my review of Prairie Dunes is procrastinating---like everything else with me. But I promise I will do it. Actually, I started it and copied it to WORD.
Ryan:
I went out there myself for the first time within the last month and I felt that golf course was some of the most sophisticated application of really good golf architectural principles I've ever seen in my life, and believe me I have seen just about all the great golf courses and architecture.
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Mike_Cirba
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« Reply #6 on: August 08, 2007, 06:19:35 PM » |
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I went out there myself for the first time within the last month and I felt that golf course was some of the most sophisticated application of really good golf architectural principles I've ever seen in my life, and believe me I have seen just about all the great golf courses and architecture.
Tom, That's exactly why I'm being such a pain in the ass to get you to write it. As someone who loves virtually everything about PD, with the exception of the severity of the gunch (which, with your straight ball I'm sure you never saw), I'm really eager to compare notes.
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jsiskind
Jr. Member

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Posts: 233
I love GCA!
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« Reply #7 on: August 08, 2007, 06:23:16 PM » |
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Great pictures and great analysis. I have a friend who visited last year and hasn't stopped talking about it since, definitely a place I would make a special trip to. Thank you for taking the time to post.
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Patrick_Mucci
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« Reply #8 on: August 08, 2007, 06:56:58 PM » |
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Ryan,
Thanks for the pictures.
Prairie Dunes is a wonderful golf course, although, with the newly NARROWED fairways I don't think it's as good as it was when it had more generous fairways.
Why do clubs that host big tournaments, that prepare the golf course specifically for highly specialized and superior field, leave the course as it was prepared, for vastly superior golfers, when the vast majority of the club members who will play the golf course for the next decade are average to high handicappers ?
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Brad Swanson
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« Reply #9 on: August 08, 2007, 07:03:18 PM » |
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Great photos Ryan. I'm with Pat regarding the fairway mow lines. Some of the fairways look mighty narrow, and the disconnect from the "fairway" bunkers and the fairway is dubious (speaking not from playing experience, however, but just photographic evidence).
Cheers, Brad
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ed_getka
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« Reply #10 on: August 08, 2007, 07:26:24 PM » |
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Ryan, Thanks for the post. After my first trip there I started a post about what keeps PD from being the best course in the US. I too think it is an exceptional test of golf while still being quite fair and enjoyable. As you stated you have to hit a pretty poor shot to be in serious trouble. The course can be summed up in 3 words, ....no let up. All four aspects of your game will be equally tested: driving, approach shots, short game and putting. The other course I put in this category is Royal Dornoch.
Patrick and Brad, I don't think the fairways are much if any narrower than when I was there a couple of years ago. #17 is the only one I see in these pictures that looks a bit narrower. Some of our resident members will have to chime in with the definitive answer.
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"Perimeter-weighted fairways", The best euphemism for containment mounding I've ever heard.
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PPallotta
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« Reply #11 on: August 08, 2007, 07:45:28 PM » |
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Patrick, Brad
I can't speak about the narrower fairways from any kind of architectural or playability angle, but on first seeing Ryan's pictures (thanks Ryan) my 'eye' was certainly thrown off by the rough/narrow fairways. In picture after picture, it just felt like the fairways were meant to extend all the way to the fescue/gunch. I can't properly explain why, but maybe it's the overall feeling of 'expansiveness' that I get from the property/site that makes very wide fairways make 'sense', or at least makes narrower fairways seem 'disproportional'. I know this is a very poor way to put it, but in the face of so much open space and air, some of the fairways seem 'stingy'.
Peter
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Sean Leary
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« Reply #12 on: August 08, 2007, 07:51:07 PM » |
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Ryan,
Thanks for the pictures.
Prairie Dunes is a wonderful golf course, although, with the newly NARROWED fairways I don't think it's as good as it was when it had more generous fairways.
Why do clubs that host big tournaments, that prepare the golf course specifically for highly specialized and superior field, leave the course as it was prepared, for vastly superior golfers, when the vast majority of the club members who will play the golf course for the next decade are average to high handicappers ?
Pat, Do you feel the same way about Merion? PD and Merion are similar in this respect with narrowed fairways. PD's rough is usually kept shorter and less penal than Merion's (of course Merion does not have the gunch)..
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« Last Edit: August 08, 2007, 08:34:34 PM by Sean Leary »
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TEPaul
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« Reply #13 on: August 08, 2007, 09:16:50 PM » |
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"As someone who loves virtually everything about PD, with the exception of the severity of the gunch (which, with your straight ball I'm sure you never saw), I'm really eager to compare notes." MikeC: I do admit I was inordinately straight once, but even with that I would probably feel then as I do now about that. That gunch out there all over Prairie Dunes doesn't bother me (and I sure did get in it last month) and if you noticed a simulacrum of it is actually their logo. What I didn't like about PD, and I believe the only single thing I did like, were those really wide swaths of rough cut on either side of that gunch on most all the holes (par 4s and par 5s). I actually wrote an email to the guys I went out there with and the PD GM saying I didn't like that and why. And when I talk to Bill Coore (or Ben) I'm going to tell them the same thing. The reason I didn't like it is it didn't look right to me and it also, in some instances, took away the most perfect risk/reward areas for even good golfers--like on #1 left, #8 right, and perhaps #3 right. Other than that those really wide rough swaths took away some really great conservative risk/reward areas like on #6 left and #11 and #12 left. I said although I realized it was a cost item I thought if a course had gunch that penal and ball-eating there should be a ton of fairway latitude to off-set the penality of that gunch and those really wide rough swaths were a serious aesthetic and strategic compromise to that. Nobody answered me so I guess my suggestion was like a bad smell. That's OK with me. You know, the deal with this kind of thing is sort of Max Behrian-----eg it's not about the degree of penalty of the hazard feature---it's about the amount and degree of latitude to let any golfer feel like he has the CHOICE to avoid it. 
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David Kelly
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« Reply #14 on: August 08, 2007, 09:18:10 PM » |
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In picture after picture, it just felt like the fairways were meant to extend all the way to the fescue/gunch.
They weren't meant to extend all the way to the gunch and they have never been cut out to the gunch. If they were then they would have been some of the widest fairways in golf. I think what you are seeing especially with regards to the pics of 17 is kind of a forced perspective. There is a fairly large landing area available off of the tee on 17 because you are teeing off at an angle. After that the fairway does tighten as it gets closer to the hole but as there are no trees, fairway bunkers or cross-hazards on the hole the narrowing fairway is one of the major defenses of the hole. That and the wind which is generally in your face and the diabolical green. I agree with Ryan that there is ample room off of the tee and the fairways are more than wide enough.
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"The nature of the land must be the generator of the architect's work." - Frank Lloyd Wright.
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TEPaul
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« Reply #15 on: August 08, 2007, 09:37:25 PM » |
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I don't care if those wide rough swaths on either side of the gunch (and fairways) is the way it's always been at PD.
This is a good example of how maintenance practices today can make some courses, even great ones, better than they've ever been.
This is a time and a great example of how the thoughtful "minds" of this unusual website can and should speak up about how architecture (and particularly through maintenance practices) can be better than it's ever been.
Those really wide rough swaths at PD are BS aesthetically and strategically in play, whether they're traditional or not.
Take those things out and I can't imagine a single reason why that golf course is not IDEAL.
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John Kirk
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« Reply #16 on: August 08, 2007, 09:43:48 PM » |
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As I said before, I enjoyed the course very much when I played it. I also found it to be quite difficult.
I made a long post late last year. In my post, I mentioned that I witnessed 18-20 balls hit into the gunch in 45 holes of tournament golf with 0-5 handicap players. Therefore, the chances that a low handicapper would spray the ball into the gunch was about 10% per hole. Most of these balls were not found.
The fairways are pretty wide. The course is a gas to play. But the long grass areas come into play regularly.
Doak may build wild greens, but I have never seen a Doak green more severe or punitive than the #2 green at Prairie Dunes.
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"Wait a minute, did I hear you say you're going far away again?"
-- Herb Pedersen
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Adam Clayman
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« Reply #17 on: August 09, 2007, 05:42:16 AM » |
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Patrick, I don't disagree with you but it should be pointed out that Stan George did widen the mow lines after the Senior event held there recently.
I feel like Peter that covering that wonderful terrain with rough grass is an example of a blight on the modern maintenance presentation.
The picture of the little fairway rolls, visible in the picture of the 17th, that extend into the rough, is likely the spot where I came to this realization.
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If we have never had a bad lie we are not likely to appreciate a good one, moreover, the ability to play from a bad lie differentiates between a good player and a bad one. We might also remark that good and bad lies differentiate between good sportsmen and bad. ALISTER MACKENZIE
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Patrick_Mucci
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« Reply #18 on: August 09, 2007, 06:20:34 AM » |
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Ryan,
Thanks for the pictures.
Prairie Dunes is a wonderful golf course, although, with the newly NARROWED fairways I don't think it's as good as it was when it had more generous fairways.
Why do clubs that host big tournaments, that prepare the golf course specifically for highly specialized and superior field, leave the course as it was prepared, for vastly superior golfers, when the vast majority of the club members who will play the golf course for the next decade are average to high handicappers ?
Pat, Do you feel the same way about Merion?
Absolutely. And, I've posted my objection numerous times. If you read my last paragraph, it's a universal criticism, not a select one.[/color] PD and Merion are similar in this respect with narrowed fairways.
Are you saying: If Merion makes a mistake and other courses make the same mistake, that it's not a mistake ?
Or, are you saying that hallowed Merion gets an exemption, and therefore, that exemption inures to the benefit of courses that follow suit ?[/color] PD's rough is usually kept shorter and less penal than Merion's (of course Merion does not have the gunch)..
I've been in the "thistle" at PD and it's no picnic. On the other hand, when looking for a ball in the "Thistle" perhaps taking a picnic basket wouldn't be a bad idea.[/color]
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Patrick_Mucci
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« Reply #19 on: August 09, 2007, 06:31:41 AM » |
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David Kelly,
If the fairways are "wide enough" now, why were they much wider years ago ?
Do you think Maxwell erred in designing the original playing corridors ?
Adam Clayman,
Your statement is one of relativity, not absolutes.
If a fairway was narrowed from 40 to 26 yards and then widened to 30 yards, you're not going to tell us that the fairways have been returned to their original widths, are you ?
Saying that they've been widened since the departure of the Senior Open is misleading as the viewer might interpret that as going back to the original widths, which they haven't.
The question I posed in the last paragraph of post # 8 remains unanswered.
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« Last Edit: August 09, 2007, 06:32:57 AM by Patrick_Mucci »
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Scott Szabo
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« Reply #20 on: August 09, 2007, 06:52:23 AM » |
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I've never been there, but the rough appears totally out of place. Is it thick enough to keep balls from rolling into the gunch, thus making the course more playable? I'm thinking the rough may be a savior for many balls heading for their death in the gunch.
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PPallotta
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« Reply #21 on: August 09, 2007, 07:39:04 AM » |
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"The picture of the little fairway rolls, visible in the picture of the 17th, that extend into the rough, is likely the spot where I came to this realization."
Adam - good catch; I didn't 'see' those myself the first time around, but I think you're spot on.
And I think TE puts it the better way, i.e. instead of the 'narrow' fairways, it's the 'wide rough swaths on either side of the gunch (and fairways)' that don't fit/please my eye...for the reasons I already mentioned
Peter
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Joe Hancock
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« Reply #22 on: August 09, 2007, 07:45:08 AM » |
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Is the "narrow fairway/wide rough" look unusual though? I think that is the same wardrobe that Merion wears......
If that is todays business attire for championship golf, I'm all for a more casual sun dress...not just for looks, but for comfort as well....
Joe
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Hi from CPC. 1st tee: WTF? 18th tee: WTF? Everything between: OMG! Luv it 4evr. Gud fud, 2. Later.
Dan Kelly, April 1, 2009 (Fittingly!)
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KBanks
Jr. Member

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Posts: 205
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« Reply #23 on: August 09, 2007, 07:55:49 AM » |
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How long was PD nine holes? When did Press Maxwell build the second nine there?
What a great looking course.
Ken
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Sean Leary
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« Reply #24 on: August 09, 2007, 08:55:17 AM » |
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Doak may build wild greens, but I have never seen a Doak green more severe or punitive than the #2 green at Prairie Dunes.
FYI. #2 green is being softened by Bill Coore next month to create more hole locations.
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Ryan_Simper
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« Reply #25 on: August 09, 2007, 08:59:40 AM » |
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A few of my opinions/responses to some of the points raised here...
(and I also have about 150 more photos if anyone cares to explore a different angle on a hole - the photo of 17, as David Kelly says, is misleading because it's taken from the white tee box, not the blues, and from the blues you are playing a very similar tee shot to the 1st hole - that is to say diagonally with gunch obscuring any line played at the swath of rough)
Take this with whatever grain of salt you'd like - I played 6 rounds, 4 from the blue tees and 2 from the white (original) tees and all were in at least some version of a south wind.
Judging the course as too narrow/intimidating from these photos is precisely the same mistake I made before my trip. I, too, thought that I'd do nothing but lose balls. And, while lose balls I did, I found that very rarely was such a fate the result of a merely average or below average golf shot. You have to hit it pretty poorly in order to find the gunch most of the time. Problem is, we all hit it poorly fairly often.
Anyone who knows my game knows that I hit it fairly far and very wild, a bad combination for a course like this. For me to find that it was without a doubt playable I think is a high endorsement.
The only two spots where I can immediately recall the large swaths of rough issue is left of 1 and left of 17 - similar tee shots. While appearance-wise it might not look ideal, playability-wise I think it's the right decision...moreso for 17 than for 1. If you are able to aim 40 yards left of the current line on 17 and still hit the fairway, you'd be cutting 60+ yards off an already short par 5. That hole, to me, is near perfection as it is (and I never made a par on it in 6 rounds into the wind).
The rough was not overly penal - a challenge, yes, but not too long. Due to the heavy rains this year, the course was on the whole softer than usual and while I am sure the rough slows balls down heading for the gunch, there were a fair share of balls that bounded through the rough like pavement and went on their way to lost-ball-dom in the gunch.
One thing I would definitely agree with is that the wide rough areas make the fairways look more narrow - that's true I think, but I don't think it makes them objectively narrow - they are not.
Ed - you are right, there really is no let up. It's a tough course from start to finish and I really thought the only easy holes were 7 and 14...and 7 only due to the length (but hitting the narrow fairway is the challenge that hole presents...that, and staying patient)
With a south wind, I believe that even though I've heard that the 8-11 stretch is the toughest 4 hole salvo, it is the 15th-18th that will really beat a guy up. 16 and 17 are both made significantly more difficult playing into the wind, and 18 is made tougher playing downwind, as you either have a tough time holding the green or the run-up shot you are forced to play has a greater probability of catching the slope off the left of the green.
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Kalen Braley
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« Reply #26 on: August 09, 2007, 10:16:28 AM » |
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Some interesting use of the English language in this thread.. gunch /guhnch/ To push, prod, or poke at a device that has almost (but not quite) produced the desired result. Implies a threat to mung. I guess it sounds like TEPaul would love to "gunch" the rough until it meets up with the "gunch"..  Bonus word: Mung - To destroy, usually accidentally, occasionally maliciously. Once again, I'm sure TE would love to "mung" the rough until it meets the "gunch"
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"After all, I didn't object when TEPaul showed up in a skirt and we played in the USGA Mixed Championship together."
- Pat Mucci
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Tom Huckaby
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« Reply #27 on: August 09, 2007, 10:31:16 AM » |
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Great stuff, great pictures, great discussion.
But I still don't get how this course is a ton of fun... losing golf balls so often just doesn't fit my description of that word.
Ryan or others - is it just so great in every other area that you get over the lost ball situation? I can sort of see that... but I really hate losing golf balls so frequently... so it's hard for me to really "get" from pictures and descriptions.
TH
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Ryan_Simper
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« Reply #28 on: August 09, 2007, 10:51:37 AM » |
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TH-
I lost golf balls often because I hit a block 40 yards right of my line, or because I hit a 40 yard hook with a 5 iron into a par 4. Is losing a ball under these circumstances a design flaw? Hardly so - it's pilot error, and the balls that I lost I'd be hard pressed to find ANY course where I wouldn't lose the ball hitting the same shot.
The 2nd at Pacific Dunes is considered by many to be a great golf hole, yet I believe it takes much less to lose a ball on that hole than it does at most of the holes at Prairie Dunes.
To me, it's tons of fun because I control my own destiny. The aspect of chance is certainly present (rolling fairways, ground game) but you really feel like you are in control of taking calculated risks and approaching the element of chance from an angle of your choosing.
I witnessed David Kelly play, I believe, 2 full rounds without losing a ball. I had separate stretches of between 10 and 13 holes played with the same ball. Sure, it's not the most forgiving course on the planet, but I believe it gets a bad rap on this narrowness stuff.
Let the record show that of my lost balls in the first 2 days, only 1 in 36 holes came as a result of my tee shot. The others were poorly executed or overly risky shots (trying to juice a 5 iron from a hanging lie, a hooked hybrid, an ill-advised 3 wood on the 17th hole).
I think it's a reasonable expectation of a player that his shot to the green be held to a higher standard of accuracy than the tee shot, and in my 6 plays I found that the area of my game which was most lacking was my accuracy from 150-200 yards, and that was the area where I suffered the most punishment.
Why is it fun aside from this? As I said, the course itself and the narrowness aside, the movement of the land (FAR more than I'd ever imagined in Kansas) and the movement of the holes, the bending of fairways, and the small but ingenius greens, were a continuous challenge - a challenge you always THOUGHT you could solve, but far less often actually could. That, to me, is part of my definition of fun: Makes you think you can, and gives you a chance to do so, but doesn't necessarily allow you to succeed too often.
EDIT-
This definition for me mostly applies to near and around the greens....and my "one-feature" analysis on the greens.
The other thing that makes it fun to me is that this one feature can often times dominate your thinking even on the tee. I.E. the 18th hole, if you have a back pin you are thinking about how close to the right edge of the fairway you can get. If you are on the 11th tee and you (somehow) know that the pin is back right, you are thinking about how you can get your ball as far right as possible to avoid the single hump short-middle. This, to me, is great design and smart contouring (as opposed to making a wild green where 98% of the emphasis is on how precise you can make your approach shot to the green).
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« Last Edit: August 09, 2007, 11:03:41 AM by Ryan Simper »
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George Pazin
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« Reply #29 on: August 09, 2007, 10:54:46 AM » |
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Thanks for sharing the photos and thoughts.
Wasn't there supposed to be a Faldo course opening next door? Whatever happened to that?
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« Last Edit: August 09, 2007, 10:55:30 AM by George Pazin »
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Big drivers and hot balls are the product of golf course design that rewards the hit one far then hit one high strategy. Shinny showed everone how to take care of this whole technology dilema. - Pat Brockwell, 6/24/04
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Tom Huckaby
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« Reply #30 on: August 09, 2007, 11:05:42 AM » |
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Ryan:
That's a very fair explanation. Just do note I never stated that any part of this was any "design flaw" - I was just wondering why you could call it a "ton of fun" given the lost ball potential on seemingly every shot. Note also I made no distinction between tee shots and approach shots - in fact, what makes me ask these questions is the seeming situation where a ball can be lost on EVERY shot. That just gets to be too much, as I view this crazy game.
So I still get that it's not as bad as you expected it to be in this respect, but as I read the descriptions, see the pictures, read the takes of others... I just can't see it being my personal cup of tea. I can see it being fun, for sure... but what I can't see is it being in the very upper pantheon of fun courses. Challenging, yes. Thought-provoking as one tries to meet these challenges, yes. "Ton of fun"? That I can't see.
But that's cool, I've never been there and damn likely never will.
And I also like NGLA significantly more than Shinneock.
Prairie Dunes to me seems a lot more like Shinnecock than it does NGLA. Which to some is a compliment and the highest praise... just not to me.
TH
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« Last Edit: August 09, 2007, 11:13:35 AM by Tom Huckaby »
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Ryan_Simper
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« Reply #32 on: August 09, 2007, 11:13:50 AM » |
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Ryan:
That's a very fair explanation. Just do note I never stated that any part of this was any "design flaw" - I was just wondering why you could call it a "ton of fun" given the lost ball potential on seemingly every shot. Note also I made no distinction between tee shots and approach shots - in fact, what makes me ask these questions is the seeming situation where a ball can be lost on EVERY shot. That just gets to be too much, as I view this crazy game.
So I still get that it's not as bad as you expected it to be in this respect, but as I read the descriptions, see the pictures, read the takes of others... I just can't see it being my personal cup of tea. I can see it being fun, for sure... but what I can't see is it being in the very upper pantheon of fun courses. Challenging, yes. Thought-provoking as one tries to meet these challenges, yes. "Ton of fun"? That I can't see.
But that's cool, I've never been there and damn likely never will.
TH
Huck - Trust me when I say this - I thought the EXACT SAME THING as you before I went. Hell, I sent you and several others emails wondering if I'd ever break 90 out there. After coming into the trip with a no-confidence mindset and downright fear (especially after leaving the dozen extra balls I'd intended to bring on the floorboard of my car) that I'd spend more money on balls than I would on the trip, my mind was completely changed. Remember, I'm the same guy that hits the "if you miss this 80-yard wide fairway you should be shot" 1st fairway at Rustic Canyon 1 in 3 times.
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Tom Huckaby
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« Reply #33 on: August 09, 2007, 11:16:51 AM » |
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Ryan:
I know all of that.
I just remain unconvinced. All you've convinced me of is it wasn't as bad as you expected. I'm reading nothing that tells me it's a "ton of fun."
But you might want to read my late edit to my last post... this likely comes down to personal preferences, and what one considers fun in golf.
See, I don't mind losing a ball now and then, and I surely don't mind shooting bad scores.
"Relentless" courses just aren't my cup of tea. I kinda like a break now and then... I kinda like a lucky bounce... I kinda prefer whimsy to tests of skill.
I'm not seeing that at PD... not to the extent that puts it in the upper echelon, anyway.
TH
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Ryan_Simper
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« Reply #34 on: August 09, 2007, 11:35:50 AM » |
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Ryan:
I know all of that.
I just remain unconvinced. All you've convinced me of is it wasn't as bad as you expected. I'm reading nothing that tells me it's a "ton of fun."
But you might want to read my late edit to my last post... this likely comes down to personal preferences, and what one considers fun in golf.
See, I don't mind losing a ball now and then, and I surely don't mind shooting bad scores.
"Relentless" courses just aren't my cup of tea. I kinda like a break now and then... I kinda like a lucky bounce... I kinda prefer whimsy to tests of skill.
I'm not seeing that at PD... not to the extent that puts it in the upper echelon, anyway.
TH
I do believe there is a difference between a continuous challenge and "relentless". Take, for instance, Olympic Lake and Prairie Dunes. Where can you lose more balls? Prairie Dunes by far - I hit 1 fairway at Olympic and still played the entire round with one ball. Yet, Olympic to me is the more relentless course by far - you can absolutely get away with shots at Prairie Dunes. Courses like Olympic and Congressional Blue are much more of a slog and a beatdown because they continually offer one challenge - hit fairway, hit green, make par. This is not the case at PD. You can miss the first fairway well to the left and be in great shape - I hit fan blocks with irons on 3 and 12 and made pars, a block off the 13th tee isn't necessarily lost. Likewise, an overhooked shot off the 12th tee of about 230 yards may find a nice grassy area between the fairway bunkers, and the 14th hole lets you blast it as far right as you want at your own peril in terms of second shot difficulty (but there is no lost ball potential to be had on such a line). Lost ball potential does not = relentless. There is lost ball potential on virtually every hole at Pacific Dunes, is there not? Certainly that is not a relentless course, and in fact, maybe it's one of the most fun courses in the world. To look exclusively at their difficulty, penality, or relentlessness, Prairie Dunes is more like a strict teacher looking over your shoulder making sure you're behaving whereas Olympic Lake is more like a Singaporean Police Officer flogging you with a cane. I realize I am not going to "convince" you of anything, but I'm just trying to be clear that if I, of all people, consider the course playable and fun given the average dispersion of my shots and my negative mindset going into the weekend, and I come out of it saying that its wonderful, fun, playable, and one of my top 5 easily, then I do believe that's saying something. I know you will continue to disagree, or at least not buy what I'm selling without caveat or disclaimer, and I'm fine with that, I wouldn't expect you to. 
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