I had the great pleasure of playing Willie Park's Huntercombe today. I enjoyed a fine round with GCAers Philip Gawith, Sean Arble, and Tony Muldoon. After a fun round that included driving rain and glorious sunshine, I am compelled to reflect on the golf course a bit:
The layout is quite unlike anything I have ever seen. The course possesses 13 bunkers and one tiny water hazard. It relies almost exclusively on ground contours for interest and defense. The course is littered with hillocks, chocolate drops, and basins that make for very unique hazards. Going in, I was not sure that I would find this appealing. However, the grass bunkers define the holes as well as any sand bunkers might. They present a variety of recovery options as well. We speculated that these features also present fewer maintenance issues.
The green complexes at Huntercombe were among the best I have seen. Some rely on one simple but bold contour for challenge. Others are draped across the land with no evidence of man's hand. Of the three great courses I have seen in England (Huntercombe, Sandwich, and Swinley Forest), Huntercombe contains my favorite set of greens. I have never seen anything like the greens at 4 or 13.
Huntercombe compared VERY favorably with Swinley Forest. If pushed, I would have to say I preferred Huntercombe by a bit.
Huntercombe needs to be discussed among the best courses in the London area. Hell, I had not heard of the course until last month! It never gets mentioned or worshipped in the way that Swinley, Sunningdale, Pulborough, or Woking are on this site. I am guessing this has something to do with the location away from the main heathland belt. However, I suspect that the course is too subtle for most people at first glance. Huntercombe takes a bit of studying to understand its challenge and appeal. Clearly the course was influential among early English architecture. I took a glance at the winners of the club medal championship. One name, listed five times, was Colonel C. K. Hutchison, architect of Pulborough.
Why is Willie Park not appreciated as one of the great Golden Age architects? This question kept re-entering my mind as I made my way around Huntercombe. I would love to hear some thoughts on that one.
A few favorite holes:
#1: I thought it was great to start with a 150-yard par three. This hole is very unique, with a semi-blind tee shot that might require the player to land the ball short of the green in the summer months. It is a very unusual and inspiring start.
#2: A great example of sidehill architecture. Normally, the golfer tries for the high side of the fairway for the best angle into the green. However, this hole requires the player to challenge the boundary fence on the lower left side of the fairway to gain a good angle into the green. The following hole employs a similar strategy, albeit with a wilder green. These two holes possess the only major elevation change on the course, and they energize the golfer early in the round.
#4: The greensite here is first rate. The green is two-tiered, falling from a high left tier to a low right tier. Depending on the pin placement, the golfer can face a wide open pitch to the higher tier or an obscured approach to the punchbowl of the lower tier. The construction of the green itself is very simple. The variety that it yields is very complex.
#13: Another wild greensite. The green angles from front left to back right. It is almost entirely obscured by a small ridge that runs across the front of the green. This simple ridge makes the approach unsettling, maddeningly deceptive, and tons of fun.
#15: I just loved the punch bowl green on this par three. It is another hole that clearly favors the ground game over the air game.
#16: A very good short par 5 with two centerline hazards. First, the grass bunker in the middle of the fairway is exactly where the longer hitter wants to place his drive. Second, the deep hollow 20 yards of the green forces the player to hit a solid long approach to reach the green in two shots. Another wild green.
#17: Very short at 270 yards, this par four contains the only pushed-up green on the course. It takes a very nervy pitch to find this green. I am not sure that the hole is particularly strategic. Nevertheless, I absolutely loved the look of the green. My personal favorite on the course.
Overall, I am just a huge fan of the English attitude towards golf. I much prefer it to the American version of golf. The dog bowl outside of the Huntercombe clubhouse is something one would never see at a premier American club. I think American golf is all the worse for it.