Ian
You may or may not want to check out a thread I started due to your comments.
http://golfclubatlas.com/forum/index.php/topic,44087.0/From your Blog:
I was really looking forward to playing Pennard. I’ve always embraced some of the more controversial golf course designs and have never been troubled by blind shots or holes that are difficult to play due to some quirky features. I kind of embrace them. As long as the green site justifies the blind tee shot or the design accommodates the complications involved I’m quite happy to deal with a hole that requires discovery or an element of faith in my play. My top 10 courses include Royal County Down, Prestwick and North Berwick which all have unconventional holes.
Pennard is a golf course that makes me wonder if there can be too much quirk. There were a number of great holes like the 7th and 16th which featured some quirky features, that worked wonderfully because the holes were interesting to play, but also there was an opportunity to manage the more unusual features of the holes. But at Pennard, so many holes went beyond being quirky and in the case of a hole like the 17th simply cross the line into bad design.
The setting for Pennard is spectacular and you must play this course just to see the incredible views and golfing terrain. This is one of the most interesting links sites that I have seen.
The problem is with the routing and architecture. There are too many blind tee shots, too many safety issues, too many places where the grade falls the opposite way of the dogleg, too many steep slopes that run any shot into trouble, too many holes where there is no place to play to. I look at a course like Porthcawl that has all of those features, but the holes were enough well designed to accommodate them. The course is also so well routed that the rest of the holes provide some balance to the round. I think you can have quirk, but it can’t all be quirky, because at a certain point it moves from charming to disappointing. With a great architect Pennard would have been a much better course.
It is ironic that you mention Colt because his sort of design is exactly what I wouldn't want to see at Pennard! IMO. there are enough Colt inland courses and links to get a flavour of his design principles and concepts. The site at Pennard is wild enough (which makes me ask how the heck blind shots were to be avoided without significant dirt moving?) that I believe the right approach of hands off was taken by Braid. Mind you, he likely had no choice.
#17: Yes, from a design perspective it is a poor hole. To be honest, I don;t know how to play the hole unless it is downwind. Mind you, it has been altered from the Braid original enough that it could make a huge difference. Interestingly, a new tee is being put in on that outcrop to the right and back of the current tee which should bring back some of the Braid intent of the drive banging into the side of the hill rather than trying to go over it. None the less, 17 is for many the most memorable hole and even I have grown to appreciate it if only because it is one of two drives which is prescribed at Pennard - the 18th being the other. The rest of the course is left entirely up to the player how he wants to go about his business. For sure, there are best ways to go about one's business, but strategic golf is all about the options both laterally and aerially and nobody could say Pennard is short on options.
BLIND SHOTS: Yes, there are many blind shots - probably too many and likely for a good reason - the course is over 100 years old. However, I believe that there is only one blind shot which entails real trouble - the 17th and that is why I think this is a poor hole from a design perspective. Most of the blindness is good design or inconsequential unless one is uncomfortable about blindness.
#1 blind approach to a punchbowl green. Not so unusual nor difficult. Yes, the approach was softened just shy of the green to make the run-up a bit easier.
#3 is a blind approach only if the player drives his ball out of position - very good use of blindness.
#4 Going for the green in two is very dangerous because of the trouble beyond the green which runs front to back. One doesn't have to take this shot on even if it is a short, TEMPTING par 5 - good design. Laying up often leaves a blind third but one can hit a putter to that green!
#6 is a blind approach of one is out of position off the tee - good use of blindness.
#7 is a blind approach unless one can hit a long drive past a huge dip. Long ball gets an advantage of seeing something - good design.
#8 Blind drive, but wide open out there.
#9 Blind drive, but wide open out there.
#12 is only blind if going for the green off the tee. Not my favourite hole, but it was still a great idea to use this land because it leads to the 13th - a fantastic par 3 that used to be blind.
#14 is a blind drive, but wide open out there.
REVERSE DOGLEGS: Not my favourite type of concept and along with the blindness part of the reason #17 is head shaker. The other reverse dogleg is #9. However, that camber takes the ball to a better position for the approach. The inside of the dogleg is dead duck. We must remember that the hallowed Hoylake has two very well thought of reverse doglegs on the back nine and drifting to the optimum line of attack will likely be met will with an ever increasing array bunkers. I spose you include the 18th as a reverse leg because of the severity of the right to left terrain. For sure one must hit a fade into that hill to hold the fairway. I have always thought an upper fairway should be built where the right rough is. You are left with a longer, but flatter approach. All that said, I like the approach and don't really mind the drive because there are only two drives on the course where the shot has to be hit a certain way. The 2nd shot on 16th is also a reverse dogleg, but there is so much room out there that it doesn't really matter.
I am not sure what is meant by the following comments:
"too many steep slopes that run any shot into trouble"
"too many holes where there is no place to play to"
"too many safety issues"
So far as I know, none of these comments have ever been an issue except for the 17th being too steep of a slope for the drive especially when blind. Yes, 17 is a freak of penal nature in that water nor oob are an issue, but it is dead easy to lose a ball.
While I can readily accept your opinions (many people hold the same opinions) I wonder if you looked at the course from a golfer's perspective or an archie's perspective. For sure Pennard is a polarizing course, but that is the essence of its charm and exactly why the land needed to be totally respected and built around. To be honest, imo, the course isn't all that crazy and after a few years playing it I began to see the ultimate strategies involved in playing Pennard. Pennard is a classic example of "yes, you are fine over there, but..." Pennard is one-off and a course that likely wouldn't be built in this day and age - which is a great shame.
A word of advice, never visit Painswick nor Perranporth. If you couldn't get yer head round Pennard those two courses will give you a headache.
Ciao