gut check [guht chek]
n. a test of one’s nerve, courage, or determination.
Gut checks are holes that ask you to make a decision based on your assessment of how well you're playing, specifically whether you can pull off a difficult shot.
Like the Tiger Nike ad puts it, "Weak...or strong?"
Q1: Do you sanction early round gut checks as good design? I know early round forced carries violate an unstated design "rule" - how many can say their range game = round game?
If the answer is yes, good design, then why don't you see it more often?!
Except…is Pete Dye Mr. Early-Round Gut Checker? Is this one reason Pete Dye uses par 5s early in rounds? Very sketchy memory here, but doesn't Blackwolf River start with a gut-check par 5 then follow that a few holes later (5th?) with a gut-check par 3 (water down the right)? I recall also the 2nd at Kiawah Ocean is a par 5 sort of gut check…
Other gut check examples:
1st Discovery Bay, RTJ. A par 5 that makes a sharpish left turn, the safe route is up the fairway corridor right. Gut check time: blow it over the trees in the dogleg or try for the corridor even further left. The latter route, to achieve the fairway, demands flying water, bushes, and finally a wall of grass, with grass bunkers and rough waiting at the bottom. Depending on the tees, the carry is roughly 245 yards to fairway, 230 or so to get past the major junk. Reward is a go in two.
Not the best of gut checks because the left carry looked daunting to me. But still, it's a lot more than most first tees ask of the groggy golfer.
3rd, Rockport, Bill Coore. Short par 3. Huge green segmented roughly longitudinally by a swale, with water left. Gut check time: flags left of the swale ask whether you've got the short-iron game, right now, to challenge the water.
Q2: Besides alternate routes (think we all get that one), what are other tools of the gut-check design trade? From the Rockport example, green segmentation appears one such tool…
Thanks,
Mark