I understand that this site doesn't benefit from "architect abuse" so I will not identify the course or the architect. But who can look at this hole and think a decent architect would ever design this garbage. It was not an issue of bad land or terrain. Instead the architect thought leaving a tree in the middle of the par 4 hole somehow enhanced the stategy
Here is a description of the hole:
Par 4, 453 yards from the tips and I played it in an event at 453, 418 and 398 depending on weather. The first pic is a view from the tee. There is water in the form of a lake all down the right side and a hazard/wetland area all down the left as well--water hazards along both sides.
The tree is in the middle of the fairway. Right of the tree is thick bermuda rough and of corse, the lake. If you placed a ball in the far left edge of the fairway and assuming the hole is cut away from the right, you may be able to hit your second shot and take direct aim at the green or hole.
Here is a pic from about 190 out:
Actually at 453 the second shot is from far enough back that a good player could have enough room to work his ball around the tree. The real fun is when the tees are moved up. Of course you can lay back to 190 to preserve that humdinger of an approach or you can drive the ball farther up the fairway. The tree sits at about 140 from the green and the fairway is MAYBE 15 yards wide at that point! Again, left, just left of the cartpath is an unplayable hazard.
For good measure, after this abomination, the next hole, a par three that has a 48 yard deep green and plays from 170 to 220 or so features a very severe green with a biarritz style swale about 2/3 into the green further complicating any attempt to reach the back right hole location. The green slopes severely to the right to the water and of course, with the hole back right, even teeing up on the far left of the tee box gives you a dog leg right par 3!
I don't get it. These would be two very good golf holes except for the idiotic trees. BTW, it is a residential development where thousands of trees were clear cut to make room for homes so I don't think there was any pressure to keep these or any other trees. Lastly, that stupid single tree was fortunately struck by lightning, lost many of its limbs (it used to really be terrible) and based on the scars at the base of the tree and the insect infestation, the "giving tree" should soon be in a Vermeer where it belongs
Another reason it is a bad idea to plan a hole around a tree--God is the ultimate architect and will take care of trees left in bad places
Does anyone like the tree?