occured recently.
On one day I played in a greenskeepers revenge tournament at Mt Ridge and on another day I played in winds up to 40 mph at GCGC.
Both provided unique experiences that were incredibly enjoyable.
At Mt Ridge, a 1929 Donald Ross hidden gem, the holes were located in diabolical positions, near ridges, falloffs and contours.
The excitement, being aware of imminent danger and dire consequences was fabulous.
And, the greens were running at a very good, but not over the top pace.
Those locations accentuated the need for exceptional course management (strategy).
All too often today, hole locations are bland, catering to the lowest common denominator.
Architects create interesting greens for a reason.
Those putting surfaces are intended to present an interesting challenge, to make the golfer think and execute properly.
Locating holes in non-threatening locations defeats the architects intent, it mutes the challenge, excitement and fun.
Yet, I can almost predict Tuesday and Sunday hole locations at almost every golf course, and, they're practically the same, week in and week out.
Has golf evovled into catering to the lowest common denominator and whiners ?
Have interesting greens lost their appeal due to their challenging nature ?