What makes playing a golf course attractive to us ?
I want a course to make me think about the shot at hand. Sometimes I want options. Should I hit it here for the best angle into the green or best place on the green for a birdie putt? Sometimes I want the architect to demand a certain shot: ie a fade or draw or distance control. I don’t want either exclusively.
I want the greens complexes to allow for creativity. My favorite shots are the short par saving shots when I miss the greens. I love being able to visualize a shot from off the green to set up a par save. I don’t just want easy chips or bunker shots. I want long rough, closely mown grass, bumps and hollows, deep greenside bunkers, and bunkers that are set away from the greens. I like smallish greens that demand accurate iron shots. I really do not like big greens that allow a poorly hit shot to be putted. I do realize that putting on huge greens like the ones on the Old Course, require imagination, but I want more than imaginative long putts.
Therein lie the fun and challenge for me.
I played Atlantic the year it opened and a few years ago. It has gotten better, but I liked it the first time I played it.
I like a lot of Fazio, Rees, Nicklaus, and even Art Hills, who have taken hits on this site. They also have some courses that I found almost dreadful.
Let me just pick Black Diamond, which is one of Fazio’s more heralded designs. I think the holes around the quarry are tremendous and the back nine very, very strong. I found the front nine rather forgettable.
It is indeed a big world out there. I can love a course like Westward Ho! and its patchy conditioning and very odd holes around the great sea rushes and a finely manicured parkland course like Kinloch. The reason is because both do what I described above.