Seed #4 - Old Macdonald 16th
Tale of the tape: Par 4, 455 yards
Why: From Ran - One of the fascinating aspects of National Golf Links of America is how Macdonald interpreted certain features from classic United Kingdom holes and incorporated them into his holes in the United States. For instance, with the Leven, he turned one of the landforms perpendicular to how it was at Leven Links in Scotland and walled off the seventeenth green at National Golf Links of America. In regards to the Alps, the one at Prestwick became famous in part because of its uncompromising nature. Not only does the golfer have to carry a tall hill with his approach shot but there is a hidden deep bunker that walls off the front of the green as well. Doak and Urbina’s interpretation of the this superb hole is more strategic and in keeping with the one at National Golf Links in that the golfer talented enough to hit a drive long down the right can often times get a good look at the day’s hole location.
Best Comment:
From Mr. Urbina - Prestwick was the very first golf course I visited on my tour of links land golf in the middle 80s and I have a picture of me and Perry Dye on the tee next to the Alps hole at Prestwick
Karl Olson gave me a tour of The National and one of our first stops was the 3rd hole "The Alps"
When I convinced Tom to move the routing to the North it was because of the natural hollow for a green and ground that I thought would be an ideal location for the Alps hole.