The rear bunkers on Dr. Mac's 16th green at CPC are there to catch the aggressive player. Just like all of his rear bunkers. No?
Having a backside of a swale, where a ball hit from 200 yards, on a firm surface, would in all likely hood go bounding into those back bunkers, seems like a penalty not caused by being aggressive, but rather a bounce designed in. Would the good Doctor do such a thing? Did he ever do such a thing?
For that reason, because of those rear bunkers, I don't think a Biarritz inspired greensite/green on CPC's 16th works at all.
Adam, I don't quite follow you here. There is a bit of a swale already, isn't there? Just left of the green?
I think everyone is assuming that a biarritz is a much more stagnant concept than it really is.
The Back Bunkers.
- I agree with Adam that the bunkers were designed to catch the aggressive player, or at least give the player on the tee a reason not to just bang away with hall he's got. But with Mackenzie there was likely more to it than that.
- Much of the site is sand dunes and MacKenzie uses the large bunkers into the dunes and hillsides throughout the course to tie together the sections with exposed sand and the sections without. This to me is part of the brilliance of the course-- it flows from environment to environment seamlessly without the golfer ever feelling like he has left one setting for another. That is what amazes me most about these complaints about the back bunkers-- those complaining completely ignore the style and theme of the rest of the course.
- While there is no exposed sand, I think that this hillside is a sand dune, just grassed over.
- The bunkers in front were small and the bunkers in back were large, thus creating the illusion that there is less space between the front of the green and the back than there really was, and making the shot look even more difficult than it was and thereby increasing the thrill of a successful shot without really upping the difficulty even more. Look in 1934 photo below and how well the right bunker fit with the back right bunker. From a lower angle the left bunker would have seemed much closer to the back left bunkers that it really was. A terrific use of camouflage principles.
[The photo is the same one referenced above by David Stamm, and also appears (at much higher resolution) in Geoff's book. Note that the left second left bunker is not built facing the tee, but facing the fall off in the back.]