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Mac Plumart

  • Karma: +0/-0
Wild and Fun or Crazy and Stupid?  And why?





























Sportsman/Adventure loving golfer.

Adrian_Stiff

  • Karma: +0/-0
Nice array of some good, some bad.
A combination of whats good for golf and good for turf.
The Players Club, Cumberwell Park, The Kendleshire, Oake Manor, Dainton Park, Forest Hills, Erlestoke, St Cleres.
www.theplayersgolfclub.com

Greg Tallman

  • Karma: +0/-0
Wild and Fun or Crazy and Stupid?  And why?



Did not care for the hole to begin with and to be honest don't remember the green



Looks fun from that angle



Looks fun



looks funky - not sure



Uhhhhhh... no



looks cool from the angle and distance


Cannot tell much



I really don't know what I think of this green other than to say it has never bothered me that much when playing it.






Mike_Young

  • Karma: +0/-0
After reading all this stuff..three things...
IMHO..
1.  The architect that gets by with the most due to "fan club status" re getting by with greens that are over the top/crazy stupid/ whatever you call them is not TD...try Mike Strantz....with respect...
2.  At the end of the day one may call a particular green "wild and fun" over "crazy and stupid" due to one thing..where the supt places the pin...if you get the wrong guy cutting pins a good solid green can become stupid....
3.  IMHO I have found the shaper to have a much greater role in determining a "wild and fun" green vs. a "crazy and stupid" green.  If you have a shaper that understands golf/ plays golf at a high level and can shape..then you are much less likely to have a "crazy stupid" green than if you are working with a shaper you haven't worked with and knows the machine better than the game.  Now this is not to say that the architect can't sit there and work with such....he can but it will still not flow like the former....JMO
As for fan clubs and the average golfer on a green committee and what they are programmed to think...I go with the Milgram Experiment...we all have to realize what they consider the AUTHORITY..USGA and tour players...think about it..... ;)

"just standing on a corner in Winslow Arizona"

Mac Plumart

  • Karma: +0/-0
1.  The architect that gets by with the most due to "fan club status" re getting by with greens that are over the top/crazy stupid/ whatever you call them is not TD...try Mike Strantz....with respect...

I agree with you Mike...100%.  I've played two Strantz courses and I just don't get the fascination with them at all.  I'll chalk it up to different strokes for different folks and I respect each and every one's right to like what they like, but Strantz is not for me. 
Sportsman/Adventure loving golfer.

Matt_Ward

Mac:

Have you played Bull's Bay ?

Curious to know the two Strantz courses you played.

One size doesn't fit all -- that's for sure.

Mac Plumart

  • Karma: +0/-0
Hey Matt...

I've played Tobacco Road and Stonehouse. 

I've heard Caledonia might be more up my alley, but haven't had the chance to play it.

Sportsman/Adventure loving golfer.

Matt_Ward

Mac:

Strantz isn't the only guy with weird greens.

No doubt it's in the eye of the beholder.

Try Bull's Bay when you have the chance -- it's far from a low country type course but it's clearly unique and Mike S did a very solid job there.

John Moore II

After reading all this stuff..three things...
IMHO..
1.  The architect that gets by with the most due to "fan club status" re getting by with greens that are over the top/crazy stupid/ whatever you call them is not TD...try Mike Strantz....with respect...


You are probably correct with that. However, speaking only for myself, from the first time I played Tobacco Road, I liked the style. I didn't walk off the course thinking any part of the greens and their undulation was stupid or how the course was laid out was stupid. My opinions have not changed. I did think some things were bad about Tot Hill Farm, but nothing that couldn't be fixed by eliminating a bunch of trees. And I saw many of the same features at RNK. Of course I tend to keep more of an open mind than most. I certainly don't judge based on designer as many seem to do. I think a lot of my thoughts on course design were changed by going to the Crump Cup. Pine Valley is quite the exercise in opposites: both exceptionally manicured and yet ragged; not monstrously long but very difficult/testing; very penal if offline yet very rewarding if online; isolated but wide open. To see those things made me rethink what I thought was great, good or bad about a golf course. I see a lot of those things in Mike Strantz's golf courses, and that is a good thing.

Mike_Young

  • Karma: +0/-0
Mac:

Strantz isn't the only guy with weird greens.

No doubt it's in the eye of the beholder.

Try Bull's Bay when you have the chance -- it's far from a low country type course but it's clearly unique and Mike S did a very solid job there.

Matt,
Bulls Bay is nice....and you are correct..not the only guy with weird greens....but IMHO he has enough weird ones for me to stand by my post...and as I said..JMO....
"just standing on a corner in Winslow Arizona"

TEPaul

Mike:

I just noticed this thread and haven't read it all but I wonder if your definition is the same as mine for "greens within a green" and if so what you think about the concept or philosophy.

Sean_A

  • Karma: +0/-0
After reading all this stuff..three things...
IMHO..
1.  The architect that gets by with the most due to "fan club status" re getting by with greens that are over the top/crazy stupid/ whatever you call them is not TD...try Mike Strantz....with respect...
2.  At the end of the day one may call a particular green "wild and fun" over "crazy and stupid" due to one thing..where the supt places the pin...if you get the wrong guy cutting pins a good solid green can become stupid....
3.  IMHO I have found the shaper to have a much greater role in determining a "wild and fun" green vs. a "crazy and stupid" green.  If you have a shaper that understands golf/ plays golf at a high level and can shape..then you are much less likely to have a "crazy stupid" green than if you are working with a shaper you haven't worked with and knows the machine better than the game.  Now this is not to say that the architect can't sit there and work with such....he can but it will still not flow like the former....JMO
As for fan clubs and the average golfer on a green committee and what they are programmed to think...I go with the Milgram Experiment...we all have to realize what they consider the AUTHORITY..USGA and tour players...think about it..... ;)



I have only seen two Strantz courses.  Bulls Bay didn't have anything which was ott in terms of the greens, but I do question a few of the par 5s.  Tobacco Road does have some greens which are ott.  Two issues:  1st, the can't get there from here deal.  More than one of this sort of green is imo ott.  2nd, the wide, but not deep combo - too many of this sort of green on the course.  That said, this extreme concept of defending par at the greens does balance the short yardage of the course for the better players.  Only thing is, I think for the better players these issues with the greens aren't nearly as problematic as they are for a 15 capper.  Consequently, I think the slope rating for Tobacco is very skewed to be accurate for higher markers, but not accurate for scratch like players.  A proper scratch player should eat Tobacco Road for breakfast. 

Ciao
New plays planned for 2024: Nothing

Mike_Young

  • Karma: +0/-0
Mike:

I just noticed this thread and haven't read it all but I wonder if your definition is the same as mine for "greens within a green" and if so what you think about the concept or philosophy.

Tom,
What is your definition?....IMHO greens within greens came about as a cop out when one was going to send drawings in to be bid and they were not going to be there enough to work the "transitions" within the green...plus some bigtime signatures decided playing to "tiers" within a green via the correct distance was more critical than placing the shot below the hole.  BUT all of that is just my opinion.. ;D ;D
"just standing on a corner in Winslow Arizona"

Chris Johnston

  • Karma: +0/-0
A couple of details to add on about that green at Tot Hill Farm. The hole plays 535 according to the card, but it plays on a fairly large dogleg/cape where you can cut off a fair amount, plus it plays downhill. So, if the hole is cut up front, you can go for the green in two and have an easy pitch from short of the green over the creek. If the hole is cut in back, then the proper play is to lay-up short of the creek and hit a good wedge into the back portion of the green. The green dictates the strategy of the hole. Sure, the green site is somewhat extreme, but whatever. Sometimes I like stuff that way. Its not out of character with the rest of the course.

Tom Doak-At the risk of being skinned like Matt Ward, it does happen on here that people will praise the features of a course by one designer and complain about those same type features at another course by a different designer. I detailed that in my Pine Valley thread. Like I said there, I can't give specific examples because those little tidbits were picked up from reading thousands of threads over the past three years on this site. As to whether or not someone would think less of a green built exactly the same on the same site by yourself and someone else, I can't say. But I have seen 'this' feature at a well regarded course said to be good, while 'that' feature at another course, which is essentially the same as 'this' feature on the well regarded course, is said to be bad. If you have never seen that in all your reading here, then I am not sure what to say.

Through this thread what comes to mind the most is Dismal River.

Dismal River was designed to be a experience different from what you get at home.  Holes were designed to provide variety - the overall experience is MORE than spectacular.  The greens are a blast but you must put the ball in the right place to score.  Early on, Dismal did a lot of things wrong but the course wasn't one of them.  Several greens were softened due to impact on play from the wind and in consideration of pace.

The most "wild and fun/crazy and stupid" greens I have played are at Augusta National - food for thought.

Who cares if there may be designer bias or favorites here or anywhere else?  From ice cream to blue jeans, we all have our favorites - why should golf design be any different?   IMHO - some here are a bit harsh on Jack and his extensive body of work over decades.  When he steps out of his comfort zone at a place like Dismal River - many seem to pan him merely for that effort.  Is if fair?  Does it matter? Nobody likes everything!  Golf is a game.  Me? - I like and very much appreciate variety and diversity.

Dismal is often compared to two other "greats"; Sand Hills and Ballyneal.  That is very flattering even though all three are very different.  Being mostly third in that discussion is just fine.

We close today and I, for one, can't wait until the spring!  I hope many here can make the trip out to see us next year!  As a good friend at Callaway Golf once told me..."we aren't curing disease here...we sell fun".


Sean Leary

  • Karma: +0/-0
Sean,

Glad to hear you also found that pin ridiculous, the Tetherow folks seems to think we are just being wimps.  ;)

I also thought the 7th green was a little too harsh, there is a spine running through it and to be on the wrong side of the pin renders a two putt nearly impossible.

I need to get back there and see what changes they've made since opening.  What did you think in general?

Like it?  Hate it?



Mike,

I liked it quite a bit. Just thought a couple of the greens were over the top. They changed the green on the first par 3, and changed a bunker on the first par 5 on the back side, plus scalped all of the tufts of grass in the fairway. Doak 7 in my book.

Brian Joines

  • Karma: +0/-0

Greg Tallman

  • Karma: +0/-0

Tom_Doak

  • Karma: +2/-1
There is a variety of approach angles because that is a short par 4, the seventh at Ballyneal.  But most people are approaching from 20 or 30 degrees to the left of the picture.

Eric Smith

  • Karma: +0/-0




From what angle is the approach?
I believe that is my photo from a round in August, which shows you my angle of approach from greenside right.  Three putted from there.  Did that a LOT that day!

Definitely one of the coolest greens ever.

Eric

Kevin Lynch

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: The thin line between “wild and fun” to “crazy and stupid” greens?
« Reply #119 on: November 12, 2010, 05:11:00 PM »

A Kyle Henderson photo of Tot Hill.  I'll let you decide which category this green goes in.

yikes!

whats the point of building something like that?

Paul-how many Mike Strantz golf courses have you played? This green actually fits right in with much of the work he does and much of what they have at Tot Hill Farm. However, note the thick trees. Because of the trees, they actually struggle to grow grass in places. There is a tee box directly behind this green that had no grass on it last time I played there. And part of the 13th green was closed off because of turf conditions.

As to the main question, where is the thin line. Well it has to do with green speeds first off. The speeds must fit the contours and the greens must be big enough to support both the contours and the speeds. The line is crossed when you try to put large contours on small greens and still run high speeds. This leads to very small portions of the green being reasonably pinable. And that is when you get the crazy and stupid greens.

Of the three Strantz courses I have played, they all have size enough to support nearly any speed on the greens, at least for a short period of time.

Sorry to come so late to the party - I disappeared from the site since the PGA because of OTT work requirements, but am now able to breathe again and hope to chime in.

When I look at greens like the one above and consider their place on the "fun vs stupid" continuum, I need to see much more than a picture of the green alone.  IMO, the most important consideration are the shots that lead up to the approach. 

In the case of this hole (Tot Hill #5), I have no problem with the green, because this is a fairly reachable Par-5.  It provides two fairly precise targets (front tongue or upper deck) which completely change your strategy for playing the remainder of the hole.  I thought variety was something we applauded in the GCA world.

I've played this hole twice, with a pin on top and below, and had completely different strategies both times.  When the pin was up top, I had the option of a traditional aerial approach from 110 yards, but I also dropped a second ball and tried a long punch 6-iron that skipped into the bank.  With the pin below, I had similar options in my approach, as well as numerous options for atacking the hole (lay back to 100 yards short of the creek pictured, or go for the green in two with plenty of safety short right if I want a little pitch shot).  The 30 yard pitch shot may be great for a lower pin, but can be tricky if the pin is up top (especially if just past the fall).  The extremely narrow width of the lower tongue places a premium on planning your angle of attack.

Yes, Stranz can create extreme-looking greens.  But I think it is too simple to dismiss them as "aesthetic-only gimmicks", especially if you don't factor in the strategic considerations that result from them.

A picture of the green alone is never enough to assess "fun vs. stupid."  The same green can be considered fun & strategic if it is usually approached with a short-iron in regulation or provides numerous options, but stupid and OTT if the hole requires a medium-long iron approach. 

From my experience with Strantz, many of the more controversial greens fall in the former category, but I think the strategic implications are overlooked due to the shocking aesthetics. 

To Tom Doak's point about Tot Hill - I wouldn't be surprised if most of the pictures he has seen of THF are exterme.  Those are typically the ones that are used to get people talking.  But for the most part, each one has some strategic implication that shouldn't be dismissed so easily. 

Besides, if you want to find something to criticize about the picture, the shape and slope of the green is the least of my concerns.  The rock outcroppings from the bunkers on the other hand....   :o


Kevin Lynch

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: The thin line between “wild and fun” to “crazy and stupid” greens?
« Reply #120 on: November 12, 2010, 05:24:38 PM »
On that Tot Hill green, if you putt from the upper part to the lower, and miss the cup, where does your ball stop rolling? 

I'm also curious to know what putts are like from the lower to the upper. 

Without ever playing the hole, I agree with Wade.  Strantz made it real clear where not to miss, and from the looks of it, gave plenty of room to do so.  I also note that 16 at Pasatiempo -- on more than one "best 18 par 4s played" lists -- features a green that one GCA member putts off of intentionally, so he can try to chip close and hopefully save a 3 putt.  Showing that the line between "wild and fun" and "crazy and stupid" is, like beauty, often in the eye of the beholder.   

From my limited experience with the hole, I recall that a ball from the top will still stay on the front half of the lower tongue.  You wouldn't be able to stop it next to the pictured pin, but I know of many "traditional" green designs that will punish you similarly for missing a back pin position long (and most of those don't give you the "last chance" backstop for a slightly thin approach).

I was also able to 2 putt from the lower to the upper deck, but there could be a scenario where you wouldn't be able to get to certain pin positions on the upper deck with a putter.  I'm generally not a fan of those types of scenarios (i.e. needing a wedge on a green).  However, given the short length of the intended approach, I don't find the severity of that punishment to be disproportionate to the difficulty of the required shot.

Brian Cenci

Re: The thin line between “wild and fun” to “crazy and stupid” greens?
« Reply #121 on: December 02, 2010, 07:54:19 AM »

What is the difference between the greens that Doak, Hanse, & C&C create and are generally accepted and those that are built by other modern firms that go too far?


The politically correct answer is that the contours on a Doak, Hanse and C&C course are either natural, look natural or blend in with the surrounding natural environment and the wild contours by the others do not.  Therefore, the greens are wild and fun rather than contrived and unrestrained. 

I will agree with you that it is often difficult to understand why a course like Kingsley Club is criticized for lack of restraint and courses by the architects you listed above are celebrated.

I agree with you completely on Kingsley....and to some extent Greywalls too and the criticism of its greens.  I find it sort of funny when people say Kingsley's greens are too extreme and 40 miles away is a course everyone praises that has some crazy greens (just a lot older), Crystal Downs. 

I think that some architects get carried away but I recently played Harbor Shores and really thought the greens were a breath of fresh air from a Nicklaus course (except for a few holes like #7).  Were they crazy, Yea!, but interesting, Yea to that one as well.  There were things I didn't like about the course but overall the greens weren't one of them.

Matt_Ward

Re: The thin line between “wild and fun” to “crazy and stupid” greens?
« Reply #122 on: December 02, 2010, 10:24:29 AM »
Brian / Pat:

Who designs a course often sets in motion the underlying preferences / biases that people then bring to the table. If someone could play Kingsley and then Lost Dunes and not be told who designed the course it would be interesting to see the reaction -- ditto Crystal Downs.

Kevin L:

In the pic that's been posted -- someone has to explain to me what the theory is in having the bottom portion of the green. Frankly, all that's missing is the clown's mouth and the loop-to-loop !

PCCraig

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: The thin line between “wild and fun” to “crazy and stupid” greens?
« Reply #123 on: December 02, 2010, 10:26:13 AM »

What is the difference between the greens that Doak, Hanse, & C&C create and are generally accepted and those that are built by other modern firms that go too far?


The politically correct answer is that the contours on a Doak, Hanse and C&C course are either natural, look natural or blend in with the surrounding natural environment and the wild contours by the others do not.  Therefore, the greens are wild and fun rather than contrived and unrestrained. 

I will agree with you that it is often difficult to understand why a course like Kingsley Club is criticized for lack of restraint and courses by the architects you listed above are celebrated.

I agree with you completely on Kingsley....and to some extent Greywalls too and the criticism of its greens.  I find it sort of funny when people say Kingsley's greens are too extreme and 40 miles away is a course everyone praises that has some crazy greens (just a lot older), Crystal Downs. 

I think that some architects get carried away but I recently played Harbor Shores and really thought the greens were a breath of fresh air from a Nicklaus course (except for a few holes like #7).  Were they crazy, Yea!, but interesting, Yea to that one as well.  There were things I didn't like about the course but overall the greens weren't one of them.

Brian:

What didn't you like about the 7th Green?
H.P.S.

Sean_A

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: The thin line between “wild and fun” to “crazy and stupid” greens?
« Reply #124 on: December 02, 2010, 10:37:11 AM »
Aren't "crazy greens" more a matter of quanity (and green speed for that matter) than style?  I think most people can accept a few or a small handful of crazy greens, but certainly not a majority.  Otherwise, how in the heck does North Berwick's 16th or even the 13th ever get love?  Furthermore, crazy, wild, stupid and fun all are really the same thing.

Ciao
« Last Edit: December 02, 2010, 10:40:27 AM by Sean Arble »
New plays planned for 2024: Nothing

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