I know that many of you are familiar with Pasatiempo, and I often get questions on how collegiate golfers fare when they play the course in a tournament...One of the members did some math and came up with the following results from the recent 3 day tournament...it's an interesting study on how a relatively short (6500 Par 70) classic course holds up to today's modern big hitters, and it helps answer the debate on whether the front nine is as hard as the back nine. If there's any interest, I will come back with the hole by hole averages. But here are a few interesting results from his study:
-- All of the par 3 holes played more difficult for the collegians than their relative "normal" course handicap rankings.
-- 4 of the 5 hardest holes for the collegians were on the back nine: 11, 16, 10, 18 and 14.
-- Par 3 # 3 played the most difficult, with an average score of 3.91
-- Their length made numbers 1 and 14 play much easier that we play them...on day 1 many of the golfers went driver, sand wedge on #1.
-- Especially tough greens made for high scores (18, 2, 5, 16, 3, 10, 11)
-- Even with their length, they scored very poorly on #11 (no surprise to Pasatiempo regulars)
-- Overall, they averaged 3.16 over par on the front nine, 3.62 over on the back nine. The par 3s averaged .48 over par, the par 4s .39, and the 5s .16 over par.
-- The winner, Diego Velasquez from Oregon State, shot even over the 3 days. Defending medalist and US Amateur champion Jack Newman of Michigan State finished in second at 3 over.