Well done, Sean. That must be you cut back down to a 9. Still a few strokes too high, but going in the right direction....
As for your report, shirley you exaggerate? A man of your length shouldn't need 7-8 wooden approaches on a normal day nor 15 on a day with a 12-15 mph wind. I can't hit he ball as far as you off the tee and from the 6600 yard tees on your similar course (Dornoch) there are only 2-3 holes (from 7, 9 and 12) that I will need a "wooden" club approach for my 2nd shot if I hit my drive on the proper line. Maybe 3-4 others (from 4, 11, 14, 18) if I push my tee shot high right. Certainly on a day where I score as well as you did yesterday I'd hardly use my fairway metals. Are you carrying a 7-wood? A 9-wood?
Slainte
Rich
Rich
Maybe the wind was a bit stronger, but I don't know how to check that - though it would be interesting to do just to compare what I "felt" the wind was as compared to what it really was. Does anybody know a site which stores the weather data?
Coming from the NW rather than from the SW (the direction I think the course is really designed for) definitely makes the course play longer in winter because the wind is against or left to right going out and right to left coming back - never very helpful. Even so, often times #s 2, 4 (par 5), 6, 7, 8 (par 5), 11, 12, 13 (par 5), 14 (par 3), 15, 17 (par 3) & 18 all can require some lumber from the fairway in the winter if one is back on the whites. Plus, I think the extra 300 yards from the daily tees (we play all the Stablefords from these tees) really makes a huge difference in winter. All this said, are folks in the UK finding the wind patterns just aren't nearly as reliable as they once were? It seems we often have northerly wind these days and its a serious killer when the northeasterly blows. I just know the course will be a nightmare on these days.
Yes, I do carry a 7 wood and 2i hybrid and no irons below a 5. Of course I didn't hit every drive well, especially on the front with the much more difficult (for me anyway) left to right wind, but none were awful. I can't think of any holes where I would have gone down to 5 iron if I hot the drive better. This is why I raised the subject. I was really surprised by how many times I used lumber because its very unusual for me. Many a time a don't have to use any fairway lumber except for par 5s.
I don't really know the story about handicap cuts, but I was on the cusp of 9 and I might be cut. Not a clever time to be cut when the finals of the winter 4somes knockout is two weeks away!
Jeff
Now I just need lessons on making sure I have the correct target lined up before chipping! In all seriousness, chipping is slowly getting better - its more a mental thing as anything else. Though now I have devloped this nasty habit of not staying down on the runners so they scoot a bit more rapidly then I would general like.
Ciao