Hole #14: “362 yards”
The 14th is a short par 4 that should be ripe for the picking. Conversely, bogey or worse awaits anyone guilty of carelessness. A small bunker sits on the ideal line in the middle of the fairway. While a drive of 260 yards will clear this sandy pit, stiff headwinds may suggest another strategy. Down wind, a long-hitter can pound one over the large blowout bunker (300 yards to carry) on the left up near to the green, but anything pulled slightly further left will be buried in the scrub. In other words, as with the rest of the course, variant weather conditions ensure that one will never succumb to boredom or repetitiveness through the course of multiple rounds.
From the front of the “340 yard” teeing area, the view of the green is obscured by the large blowout on the left. The shadows demonstrate the massive scale of the bordering dunes.
The Ballyneal website provides a slightly higher vantage point from which the green and central bunker are more easily perceived.
Though small, this bunker can have significant influence on the player’s shot selection off of the tee. The fall away fronting the green is clearly seen from here. The drop off behind the green is not. As such, distance control is vital from this angle, as anything long or short will be repelled away from the putting surface. Moreover, at 29 yards of depth, this is one of the smaller greens on the course.
Shying away from the dunes can leave one with a tricky recovery from the deep swales right of the green. This hole is cut in the flattest portion of the surface.
At one of the farthest points from the clubhouse, and with few if any players on the course, the quiet solitude is arresting.
From the website: A last look back. How I ache for a course closer to home with even an ounce of those fairway contours.