Prior to leaving for my last golf trip, Jim Briggs asked me to post some of my thoughts on Pete Dye and hopefully get a nice discussion going. Well, given I just read the section entitled “Lessons from My Mentors” on Tom Doak’s website and in that section he says the following, “I owe whatever I have achieved in the business to Pete and Alice Dye,” I figured tonight would be as good a night as any to start this thread.
My first experience with a Pete Dye designed course was when I played Kiawah Ocean course in August of 2009, while on a
golf trip family vacation. To say I was impressed would be an understatement. From the first tee shot to holing out on 18, the course is an intense challenge.
Just a few weeks after that I had to get up to West Virginia to play The Pete Dye Golf Club of WV. Golfweek ranked it higher than Kiawah Ocean and if that was an accurate ranking, I just had to play it.
A few months later, I trekked all over Florida and made the time to play TPC Sawgrass.
Early this year, I had the good fortune of hitting Harbour Town with the fellow GCA’ers.
Then came Paiute (Wolf). Every March I like to make a trip to Vegas to partake in some college basketball betting and a little golf. My good fortune would have it that my golfing buddies lined up this hidden Pete Dye gem.
Then this summer on another
golfing trip family vacation I had the unbelievable good fortune of playing The Golf Club in Ohio.
Thus far that is the extent of my playing experience regarding Pete and Alice Dye designed courses. Frankly, I find common themes in each one…but yet some very unique aspects to each course as well.
Now bear in mind, I am not the all-knowing golf architecture expert. I am simply a guy that has a deep
sickness passion for the game of golf. Why? I really don’t know. I get asked this all the time. Why do you get so into all these weird aspects of golf? I have no frickin’ idea. I am
sick passionate. What can I say?
Nevertheless, here are my thoughts on the courses I have played and my observations relative to Dye courses.
Kiawah Ocean is an unrelenting test of golfing skill. The routing of the course is off the charts with the key ingredient being how he twists and turns those holes to allow the wind to mess with the golfers mind/game. I would say, in general, the internal contours of his greens are not that extreme. He seems to make the greens interesting relative to where they are in relation to the tee and how those greens are protected with angles, bunkers, and some internal contours. But again, I can’t say his greens are wild once you are on them.
The PDGC Of WV is another unrelenting test of golfing skill. It is very similar to Kiawah Ocean in many regards, but instead of being on a beach this one is in the mountains. Both courses are stunningly beautiful, but The Ocean course has the massive winds and therefore I think just a bit more difficult. I think the 17th green at the PDGC of WV is the most “wild” Pete Dye green I have ever seen.
But it is at the end of a short par 4, so I think it is very “fair”. And you know what, I think Mr. Dye’s courses are very “fair.” Many people hate that term, but I really think it is applicable.
TPC Sawgrass is to date my least favorite Pete Dye course. I found its mounding being a little to fake looking and many of its features being totally unnatural looking.
Frankly, many of those features were very geometric in appearance and reminded me of some of the features I see on Raynor courses. Now don’t get me wrong, they make for “fun” shots…they just catch my eye in such a way that I notice how “unnatural” they look.
This was the first Pete Dye island green I played. To be blunt, I hate it. I love Pete Dye courses. I like TPC Sawgrass in many instances…but I really dislike 17. It looks unnatural. It feels contrived. 16 is a GREAT hole. 18 is a GREAT hole. 17 is not my cup of tea.
Harbour Town will live forever in my mind as the first great example of “pacing” rather than routing I ever noticed. It starts on a tightly wooded and tree lined hole and continues for quite some time with this claustrophobic precision required strategic golf style.
Every once in awhile things will open up and you will get a sense you are out of the woods and into the open, but only to be drawn back into the tight tree lined fairways. Then you hit 16. It feels open. It feels like you are out of the forest/woods. But oh no, there is a tree right in the middle of the fairway blocking the approach to the green. And even though you feel you’ve made it out of the woods, you are quickly reminded that you haven’t. And then it happens. The walk to the 17th tee opens the course to the waterway and the trees give way and you are free. My host described this walk as the “Stairway to Heaven” and he is right. That feeling is quite overwhelming.
After that hole you are on to 18 and that is the widest fairway on the PGA Tour. What a mind blower that is. I found this course to be amazingly unique to any course I’ve ever played and certainly unique to any Pete Dye course I’d played to date.
Paiute (Wolf) was a total trip. We’d played Shadow Creek, Cascata, and Bears Best on this Vegas trip and my buddies squeezed in this course on the last day. Frankly, I wasn’t excited to play it. It was the most inexpensive, I hadn’t heard of it, it couldn’t be good, right? WRONG!!! It may never be Top 100, but it was fun!!! Fun, fun, fun!! Quirk here and there, solid routing to take advantage of the desert winds, and a lot of cool holes.
Now it does have its issues. It has that island green that Dye is famous for and that hole is COMPLETEY out of place on this course and it has some of the over the top and unnatural looking mounds that I found on TPC Sawgrass. But hey, it was a really fun course. So, I can live with it.
And The Golf Club. Oh my God, The Golf Club. To date, the most perfect golfing experience I have ever enjoyed. Frankly, it felt a little similar to Harbour Town in that many of the early holes were in the woods and at hole 13 the course opened up in a dramatic shift. The vastness and seclusion of the property is off the charts. And the feeling of being out there is amazing. Perhaps a critic could put down a few holes here or there or say negative things about this or that, but that is okay with me. This is THE golf course for me.
I suppose I’m getting long winded again…apologies. I guess to wrap things up, I’ve enjoyed each and every Pete Dye course I’ve ever played. I find that he has a few “template” style holes that he likes to repeat from time to time, but at the same time he has the ability to bring a new and unique feel to a course when he wants to. I also think he really relishes the chance to test the best golfers, but I also get a sense that he takes pride in giving higher handicap golfers a chance to enjoy his work if they simply play the correct tees.
Please feel free to weigh in on this topic with any and all question and comments. Those in the know, please say what you will. I would love to know anything and everything about The Dye’s and their work.