http://jayflemma.thegolfspace.com/?p=3967From the Interview:
Should golf’s governing bodies focus a little more on golf course architecture when selecting venues for major championships?
MC: The Open Championship rotation is great and they usually get the set-up right. Turnberry in 1986 and Carnoustie were the aberrations. Augusta is Augusta. Pinehurst is the next U.S. Open that has a chance to show golf can be great without the fixation for defending courses with long grass and narrow fairways. Those who pick the championship courses in America need to show there is another way – and if a course of 7,400 yards cannot defend itself without having to resort to long grass and narrow fairways, it shows what a poor job the administration has done with equipment regulation.
JF: Well then what did you both think of Atlanta Athletic Club for the recent PGA Championship?
GO: Well Atlanta Athletic Club wasn’t my favorite. It’s difficult just to be difficult in a lot of places and frequently it didn’t make a lot of strategic sense.
JF: Explain what you mean by “strategic sense.”
GO: Well for example, the green opens up if you take the tiger line off the tee, but if you take the safer option, the second shot is harder. It’s in the way the fairway bunkering and the way greens were set up and working together, like 13 at Augusta. Things like when you take the risk, you have a flatter lie or a better angle and/or a shorter shot in. Atlanta Athletic Club didn’t have anything like that. It wasn’t interesting to play, there was very little where you had to make decisions and use thought to approach the course. It just asks you execute great shots, but didn’t ask you to make strategic decisions. I think people were complaining that although it’s difficult because it’s super-narrow and super-long, it doesn’t hold your interest. There were some interesting short holes, but as a general rule, when they had a choice, they just made it long and narrow.
That’s where some people get architecture wrong. It’s one thing to be hard, but hard doesn’t mean good. Look at Oakmont, it’s one of the hardest courses in the world, but it’s also one of the greatest courses in the World.
JF: Is that because of the terrific green contours and fairway undulations?
GO: There’s that, but it’s also about the angles, and coming in from the correct angle is crucial to playing Oakmont. Also, it’s all about the short grass around the greens, all those great greenside slopes and contours that allow you to play any number of different recovery shots – putt, bump and run, pitch and check, lob. Golf is more interesting with the short grass hazard, it may be the most strategic element in golf. Everyone fears that ball trickling back to your feet, or down to the bottom of a hill, or slowly rolling into a bunker…
JF: …behind you…
GO: Exactly. Horrifying. A golfer’s worst nightmare.
JF: What about the Ryder Cup/President’s Cup venues? Does the President’s Cup play better courses than the Ryder Cup?
GO: In recent times, the President’s Cup has been played on better courses. Royal Montreal is a great golf course, as was Harding Park. Royal Melbourne will be wonderful. The Ryder Cup lately hasn’t showed the best courses each country has to offer. The Belfry isn’t the best course in the U.K. – a long way from it actually. Celtic Manor? Not wonderful. Valderrama is fine, but Europe still hasn’t shown its best. It has the odd good course here or there.
In America, Oakland Hills was a great course. The others? Not so much. But the Ryder Cup is such a big event, the course really isn’t the star. At the U.S. Open or PGA, it’s about the course and how the players will handle it. At the Ryder Cup, it’s about how are they going to deal with the other players and the pressure, but of course it’s always a more interesting event when played on a more interesting golf course.
MC: The last Ryder Cup played on a proper course in Europe was 1981 at Walton Heath. Was the last great course to host a President’s Cup Royal Melbourne in 1998?