Michael Rossi
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What the turf sees
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« Reply #35 on: November 03, 2009, 10:27:42 PM » |
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Kyle
Depending upon the sand 3 times per week is ample however depending upon the clientel it may not be enough.
I do not think that the bunkers would be unplayable, but if you are going to smooth them with your cleat why not use a rake for the quick once over?
Again not a tour smooth rake job. I still fail to see that if the bunker is unraked how this will get the player to try to execute his shot any less, or improve the game.
If you hit a shot at the flag, it strikes the flag and rolls off the green into a bunker and come to rest in a heel mark. From this lie you manage to get out as stated in an earlier post to say 40' then 2 putt. Are you happy? In another round same shot same hole same result with the exception of the heel mark in the bunker on a smoother sand lie do you think you could have a better chance to get up and down, and would you be happier?
I say raking could bring more enjoyment.
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"...made me want to bite a radial tire it was so boring." Jay Flemma Jan 10 2010
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Jason Topp
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« Reply #36 on: November 03, 2009, 10:28:18 PM » |
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Jason/Michael,
I'm curious just how bad you think bunkers would get with standard maintenance performed 2-3 times per week, with an emphasis on weekend play (the third day being Saturday afternoon/Sunday Morning).
Standard maintenance would mean: Hand raking or power raking as weather conditions dictate. Edging and trimming grass not accessible by riding mowers.
This moves bunker maintenance toward the "as-needed" section and away from the daily section from the superintendent's end, and places the element of unpredictability back within the hazard.
Keep in mind there is nothing in the rules that says the player shouldn't "smooth" footprint gouges, etc. Give your mess a quick overage with the cleat and call it a day.
Kyle: I would guess the bunkers would be in rougher shape than they would be if tended to every day. Raking is irrelevant to your proposed maintanence approach. The bunkers on a course could be maintained as you suggest with an expectation that players rake them. It would make the hazards marginally more hazardous but achieve the cost savings you espouse. I would guess that not raking the bunkers would place more pressure on the staff to maintain them.
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Michael Rossi
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What the turf sees
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« Reply #37 on: November 03, 2009, 10:30:22 PM » |
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Michael,yes I do.It feels right even if its dusk and the crew will be there the next morning.Sleeping well at night is the reward.
Glad to hear that, I am the guy on that crew that will be out in the morning.
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"...made me want to bite a radial tire it was so boring." Jay Flemma Jan 10 2010
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Kyle Harris
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« Reply #38 on: November 03, 2009, 10:33:20 PM » |
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Kyle
Depending upon the sand 3 times per week is ample however depending upon the clientel it may not be enough.
I do not think that the bunkers would be unplayable, but if you are going to smooth them with your cleat why not use a rake for the quick once over?
Again not a tour smooth rake job. I still fail to see that if the bunker is unraked how this will get the player to try to execute his shot any less, or improve the game.
If you hit a shot at the flag, it strikes the flag and rolls off the green into a bunker and come to rest in a heel mark. From this lie you manage to get out as stated in an earlier post to say 40' then 2 putt. Are you happy? In another round same shot same hole same result with the exception of the heel mark in the bunker on a smoother sand lie do you think you could have a better chance to get up and down, and would you be happier?
I say raking could bring more enjoyment.
Michael, Come on. That's a one in a million shot, maybe even more. If that happens, I'd take my lumps and play the lottery that night. But really, you're talking about striking 2 inch diameter pole with a 4 inch ball... Jason, The next golfer I see that does enough to a bunker to subvert the cost to maintain it will be the first. It seems this conversation is more about golfer responsibility than hazard maintenance.
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...And I ask myself what I now ask you: 'Why should I teach him the language of painting, since there seems to be absolutely nothing which he is desperate to talk about?'" kwh132@gmail.comAIM: Stonewall435
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Michael Rossi
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What the turf sees
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« Reply #39 on: November 03, 2009, 10:44:42 PM » |
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Ok then Kyle you hit a shot and it trickles off the green and lands in the heel mark as opposed to the smoother lie.
As a superintendent at a public facility I see players daily make a mess that increases the cost of maintenance. If the players would rake out I would also hear far less complaints about the bunkers. Less complaints more enjoyment.
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« Last Edit: November 03, 2009, 10:48:05 PM by Michael Rossi »
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"...made me want to bite a radial tire it was so boring." Jay Flemma Jan 10 2010
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Kyle Harris
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« Reply #40 on: November 03, 2009, 10:51:05 PM » |
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Ok then Kyle you hit a shot and it trickles off the green and lands in the heel mark as opposed to the smoother lie.
As a superintendent at a public facility I see players daily make a mess that increases the cost of maintenance. If the players would rake out I would also hear far less complaints about the bunkers. Less complaints more enjoyment.
Michael, Please understand I work at probably THE course for firm conditioning, at least in the Philadelphia area. That sort of firmness is a near requirement for our members. If such fate befalls such shot - so be it. Landing on the green and staying on the green are two different things.
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...And I ask myself what I now ask you: 'Why should I teach him the language of painting, since there seems to be absolutely nothing which he is desperate to talk about?'" kwh132@gmail.comAIM: Stonewall435
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Michael Rossi
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What the turf sees
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« Reply #41 on: November 03, 2009, 10:58:09 PM » |
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Glad to hear you have such a great job, and I too believe that the shot should hold the green not the green holding the shot, but back to the question.
Ball lands in heel mark as opposed to smoother lie. Which is a more enjoyable experience?
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« Last Edit: November 03, 2009, 11:09:24 PM by Michael Rossi »
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"...made me want to bite a radial tire it was so boring." Jay Flemma Jan 10 2010
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Scott Coan
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what a wonderful game it is!
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« Reply #42 on: November 03, 2009, 11:08:44 PM » |
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There's a key difference between not raking a bunker and neglecting a bunker. If the sand maintenance were to fall solely on the hands on the superintendent and on a 2-3 times per week basis - how bad do you believe bunkers would get? I, for one, am not advocating complete neglect, but only maintenance necessary for the preservation of the hazard (object).
One of the original rules of the game was to play the course as one finds it. Your slippery slope argument aside. The ethic here is not to make hazards more "penal" but instead more "unpredictable" and "rote." Encouraging creativity in both challenging a hazard and playing from the hazard.
Here's how bad the bunkers would get - they would become completely unplayable! An unmaintained bunker becomes one thing; more and more unplayable as more and more hoof prints dig into it. May as well make them water hazards...
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« Last Edit: November 03, 2009, 11:10:17 PM by Scott Coan »
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DMoriarty
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« Reply #43 on: November 03, 2009, 11:48:28 PM » |
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Geez, with these comments you'd think that golf would never have survived without those rakes.
From The American Golfer, October 1912:
EMASCULATING BUNKERS. On all the Western courses they have a penchant for raking- bunkers. So much so that in nearly all cases the ball is practically teed. Which utterly defeats the purpose for which a bunker is intended—a penalty for a poor stroke.
At the Chicago Golf Club, just prior to the Olympic team match which preceded the national amateur championship, attention was drawn to this unfairness and accordingly the sand was so raked into small mounds and hollows as to make the playing- of the shot mean something. Of course this aroused considerable resentment. But the Olympic match was started under these new conditions. Before it was half over, however, orders were issued to smooth out all inequalities and restore the surface to its original lovely pristine state, and the novel sight was witnessed, during a medalplay competition, of some of the earlier players vigorously attacking the ball in these billowy surfaces—and just getting out—only to be followed by others playing from the same bunkers, freshly smoothed, and having no trouble at all getting out with ordinary irons, and in some cases wooden clubs, and securing the same distance as though the ball were teed up in the fairway. Which, strictly speaking, rendered the whole competition null and void.
When a bunker permits a player to use a wooden club, or anything except a niblick and by a skillful stroke with the latter only enabling him to get out, that bunker becomes a travesty and fails to accomplish its object.
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Kyle Harris
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« Reply #44 on: November 04, 2009, 04:45:24 AM » |
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Glad to hear you have such a great job, and I too believe that the shot should hold the green not the green holding the shot, but back to the question.
Ball lands in heel mark as opposed to smoother lie. Which is a more enjoyable experience?
For me, one is not more enjoyable over the other. When my balls lands in a bunker, I'm ready mentally for whatever fate my befall it. Scott Coan, They're getting raked every two days or so. Do bunkers really get THAT much play in 2 days?
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...And I ask myself what I now ask you: 'Why should I teach him the language of painting, since there seems to be absolutely nothing which he is desperate to talk about?'" kwh132@gmail.comAIM: Stonewall435
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Scott Warren
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« Reply #45 on: November 04, 2009, 05:05:43 AM » |
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Ball lands in heel mark as opposed to smoother lie. Which is a more enjoyable experience?
Why are you so concerned with players having an "enjoyable experience" in a hazard. Do you dye the water blue so they can lose errant balls in pretty water? IMO, when good amateurs and tour players are screaming "get in the bunker" when it's a case of finding bunker or rough, it is time to act. So either get rid of the stupid rough around the greens and have bunkers surrounded by tight fairway lies, or throw away the rakes from any bunker shallower than three feet. I favour the former, but would settle for the latter. From a 5ft-deep links pot bunker, I can understand that making a golfer play from a footprint is probably a bit silly, but from a shallow greenside or fairway trap, golfers have it too good, IMO. Bunkers are there to be avoided and add risk for some reward if a shot flirts but doesn't fall in. But I fear US country clubs will keep doing what their wealthy clientele wants, and much of the golfing world will continue replicating whatever the wealthy country clubs do.
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Paul_Turner
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« Reply #46 on: November 04, 2009, 05:36:09 AM » |
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Alwoodley (1907) didn't rake its bunkers for years, Mark Rowlinson pinned down when the club started raking. From looking at UK photos in the 1920s and 1930s most bunkers look raked, you rarely see a rake in the photo so I'm assuming either that the bunkers were infrequently (realtively) raked by the greenkeeper. Were bunkers designed in the 1920s and 1930s with raking and better lies in mind? I would like to see some movement to less maintenance on the British links. The really deep pot with flat perfect sand has become boring. I don't think the bunkers would necessarily become over the top penal, none of the bunkers below would have regularly taken 4 or 5 shots to get out of:   
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« Last Edit: November 04, 2009, 05:38:16 AM by Paul_Turner »
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Donal OCeallaigh
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« Reply #47 on: November 04, 2009, 09:12:07 AM » |
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Paul:
Is that first picture from Royal Dublin?
Dónal.
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"It might well be considered to be a game ill-adapted to the fiery, imaginative, impulsive, and impatient Irish Celt" - H.G. Hutchinson
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Paul_Turner
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« Reply #48 on: November 04, 2009, 11:07:21 AM » |
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Donal
Yes it is Dublin.
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JMEvensky
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I'm a llama!
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« Reply #49 on: November 04, 2009, 11:51:58 AM » |
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I'm all for keeping the maintenance crew out of daily raking--but that's more of a budget priority issue.
If you don't "insist" that players,at least, smooth bunkers after they've played a shot,how do you follow the Golden Rule that each of us learned early--"leave the golf course better than you found it"?
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Jud Tigerman
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« Reply #50 on: November 04, 2009, 11:56:15 AM » |
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I say more strategic bunkers (raked or not) less water and trees.
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"The greatest courses create chances for players to show what they can do, instead of punishing them for what they cannot." - Tom Doak
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Dschmidt
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« Reply #51 on: November 04, 2009, 11:59:43 AM » |
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The only time I don't rake bunkers is when I'm the last guy on the course. At that point, what's the point? Let the Sand-Pro do it in the morning.
Otherwise, bunkers should be raked. Morning players in tournaments have enough of an advantage as it is. If bunkers went unraked, guys in the afternoon would unduly and unfairly suffer.
At a private club, you could probably get away with having a handful of bunkers that are extra mean, and never raked. All the members would know which ones they area and avoid them like the plague. It might even be a way to spice up a few really dull holes.
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Sean Arble
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« Reply #52 on: November 04, 2009, 12:05:15 PM » |
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Maybe I am misunderstanding this thread. I thought it was about how folks philosophical think bunkers should be maintained. Many seem to be focusing on keeping the course in good shape and not trying to screw the next guy in the bunker etc. Am I confused?
Ciao
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THE NEXT DOZEN: Brancaster, Silloth, Ganton, Berkshire Red, Pulborough, Sunningdale Old, Deal, Crystal Downs, Kingsley Club, Franklin Hills, Pasatiempo & Cypress Point
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Greg Chambers
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« Reply #53 on: November 04, 2009, 12:26:43 PM » |
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In my experience, people rarely rake the bunkers after their shots anymore anyway, even if there's a rake sitting right next to where they walked in. So then what's the point of having a bunch of stupid bunker rakes cluttering up the place. It's a pain in the ass for the maintenance crew to move them around to mow, rake, etc, then find three rakes sitting in the same spot later in the afternoon with a bunker that's been raked twice out of the seven people that have been in it. Do away with bunker rakes, smooth the surface with your foot, and let the maintenance crew tend to the bunkers a few times a week.
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"It's good sportsmanship to not pick up lost golf balls while they are still rolling.”
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Jud Tigerman
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« Reply #54 on: November 04, 2009, 12:45:38 PM » |
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by the way, one small bone to pick, should rakes be in the bunkers or out? every course seems to have a different opinion...maybe a good reason to get rid of them altogether!
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"The greatest courses create chances for players to show what they can do, instead of punishing them for what they cannot." - Tom Doak
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Greg Chambers
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« Reply #55 on: November 04, 2009, 01:30:03 PM » |
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by the way, one small bone to pick, should rakes be in the bunkers or out? every course seems to have a different opinion...maybe a good reason to get rid of them altogether!
The CGA and CWGA have always asked us to place the rakes outside the bunkers.
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"It's good sportsmanship to not pick up lost golf balls while they are still rolling.”
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Jud Tigerman
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« Reply #56 on: November 04, 2009, 01:40:41 PM » |
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should they not be placed outside and behind the bunkers so as not to keep a ball from rolling in?
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"The greatest courses create chances for players to show what they can do, instead of punishing them for what they cannot." - Tom Doak
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Scott Coan
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what a wonderful game it is!
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« Reply #57 on: November 04, 2009, 02:11:29 PM » |
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We place our rakes at the very bottom of the bunker parallel to the line of play. This takes away all interference of the rake outside the bunker.
Of course, we still have some idiot members that leave the rake on the downslope just as you enter the bunker. Getting your ball stuck there is even worse than hoof prints! Another reason to ban the rakes!! haha
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Michael Rossi
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What the turf sees
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« Reply #58 on: November 05, 2009, 12:19:37 AM » |
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Take your pick raked or not.
If players could rake as per the raked bunker in the image, it still gives the hazard the unpredictable lie without being unfair. IF the player is going to take the time to smooth with a cleat why not use a rake, either way at least clean up the tire tracks.
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"...made me want to bite a radial tire it was so boring." Jay Flemma Jan 10 2010
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