I really dont think that they are comparable. OC is modern, on the ocean, has hosted major tournaments, has solid maintenance practices, relies on an ocean breeze every day while YH is old, rough, was undiscovered for years, is conditioned like a $20 muni and relies on it's greens as a defense. I'll really never understand all the love for Yeamans even though i've played there 6-8 times. I think that CC of Charelston is a better track.
Tony Nysse
Asst. Supt.
Colonial CC
Ft. Worth, TX
I would be interested to hear what aspects of the conditioning you found so repulsive at Yeamans Hall. Personally, Yeamans Hall is the best-conditioned course I've ever played. Certainly it is not immaculate in the sense of Augusta National. However, the day we played, the course was firm and fast. You could play all sorts of high short irons or low long irons into the greens. Lies around the greens were very tight and made you think twice flopping a wedge. The greens were fast and very true--some of the best I've ever played to be sure. The course is certainly rough around the edges. The rough is textured and patchy. However, I think is exactly how a golf course is supposed to be. Golf is an outdoor sport--it is not meant to look like Center Court at Wimbledon. The textures at Yeamans Hall fits perfectly of the setting. The golden brown marshes and the draped Spanish moss match the light greens and browns of the fairway and rough perfectly. Anything more is superfluous.
Regarding Yeamans Hall 'relying on the greens as its defense:" isn't this true of every great course? I assume you must not like Augusta National or Winged Foot much either. Defending par at the greens is ideal because it affects all golfers equally. Every golfer must deal with the green and its surrounds before holing out, whereas fairway hazards are out of play for a certain portion of the golfing population.
JNC,
So many of your comments are simply your opinion. You beleive that the golf course was the best conditioned course you've played. Just because it's F&F and brown, with tight cut chipping areas doesnt mean that it's finely conditioned, in my eyes. Keep in mind, I do this for a living, so finely manicured is probably MUCH different in my eyes than yours. I know that Yeamans Hall is a different experience that most golf courses, with their dirt road entrance, old style clubhouse and the low keyness of the low country. I also know that they budget doesnt over flow with money, either. It's more about the experience at Yeamans, than it is able being part of a great club. It's like Ballyneal-A smaller % of golfers like that kind of golf. I am not one of that percentage. That doesnt' do it for me. I'd rather play Friars Head, Kinloch, Pine Tree, Point O Woods, Shinnecock, Long Cove or Winged Foot.
Keep in mind, that I am a HUGE Raynor fan, intend to name my dog that someday. The coastal/commom bermudagrass roughs, that are as inconsistent as the highways in Michigan, to me, are not fair for a golfer. The level of detail isnt the strongest, weeds are allowed to be, nearly everywhere. many of the bunkers are not defined well enough for my liking. I've played there in spring, summer and fall and have found the greens to be VERY thin. But, so many on this site get off for this type of golf. I'm just not a fan. I think that Palmetto GC is a much better track, along with CC of Charleston. In fact, I'd rather play Cassique, Bulls Bay and even Cheorkee Plantation.
CC of Charleston, I believe, is a better restoration. To me, that is a much more enjoyable course, better angles and more options, better conditioning. I think that the flow of golf holes are better as well. I like the 2nd, short par 4, along with a neat little par 3, 3rd. $5 is a neat little par 5 with angled bunkers up the entire right side along with a par 3 that plays near the water. I dont think that par 3's at YH are even in the class of those ot CCC. I think that there is much more diversity and better angles than of those at YH.
Again, just another mans opinion.