OR
Stroking egos amidst the ever-widening gulfs between levels of golfers
OR
How I learned to keep worrying and fear the state of modern golf...
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I had an interesting discussion with a friend a few months ago. We were catching up after we had each separately played Pete Dye Golf Club. He thinks I'm flat out crazy (nothing new there, I know) because he knows I love Oakmont with all my heart, yet was less than overwhelmed by Pete Dye GC; he seemed to feel both were very difficult and that if I loved one, I should love the other.
When I thought about it, time and time again, I came to the following conclusion: It's not the level of difficulty of the test, but rather
how one is being tested that matters.
At Oakmont, the test is complete - driving, recovery shots, short game interest, really just everything is tested, for all levels of golfers.
I realize I am simplifying things a bit regarding PDGC (that's what us math geeks do, simplify, test and analyze), but I believe the element that is tested to a far greater degree than all others at PDGC is distance control/consistency. This is an area that is heavily slanted toward the low handicap golfer, or at least golfers that get to play a lot (consistency being one of the side effects of repetition). I think it also explains why PDGC is very challenging - in a great way - to the single digit handicapper, while being very very difficulty to the less consistent high handicapper
and most tellingly, almost easy for the pro level golfer, as evidenced by how the Nationwide guys simply destroy the course every year.So I'd be interested in hearing your thoughts, both on the generic question of how one adequately tests each level of golfer, indeed all levels of golfers (let's leave out the beginners for now, folks) and on the specific question of how Oakmont compares to Pete Dye GC. No less an authority on Pete Dye than Tom Doak has posited that no one knows more about testing pros than Pete, yet they sure do go low at PDGC every year. Is it simply setup (in other words, too soft to defend)?
Call me crazy, call me a bleeding heart, call me an effin' idiot, whatever, just give my your opinion.