I recall some healthy back-and-forth a year or two back on just how involved Harry Colt was in the design of The Addington south of London.
I was re-reading this morning (inspired by all of Pat Mucci's threads) some info on how Pine Valley came to be and came across the passage on Colt being the one who found the 5th hole, connecting the opening four-hole loop with the final three holes of the front nine up on the upper ridge.
I've always thought it remarkable how similar PV #5 and The Addington #13 are and this morning it hit me immediately (somehow it never did the first few dozen times I read it!) upon reading the above passage that the common link between those two holes has to be Harry Colt.
Does the common DNA of these two holes prove Colt's significant input at The Addington?Now that I consider it, the 8th at The Addington bears certain resemblance (on a smaller scale) to 13 at Pine Valley.
What say the Colt-ophiles?Pine Valley #5 and The Addington #13Both holes play to about 230 yards. The land is extremely similar, dropping away quickly before climbing slowly to a green at more or less the level of the tee. Both holes are bunkeres severely at either side of the green and feature steep, vicious putting surfaces that folow the general fall of the land (R-to-L at The Addington and L-to-R at Pine Valley.
The Addington's 13th:Pine Valley's 5th:Pine Valley #13 and The Addington #8Both holes feature blind drives to hogsback fairways, before the hole kinks left for the long iron approach to a "peninsula" green that falls away on both sides. I don't have extact lengths to hand but I have Pine Valley's 13th in mind at about 440 yards and Addington's 8th at perhaps 410, but more severely uphill and with a narrower fairway and smaller green.
The Addington's 8th tee shot:Pine Valley's 13th tee shot:The Addington's 8th approach:Pine Valley's 13th approach: