Terry: How many courses have been designed by those who we recognize as gca experts - do you think that Ran can intelligently critique a course design, how about Tom Doak when he wrote the CG - just because you don't design courses doesn't mean that you have no credibility in when you critique a course. Mickelson gave the opinion that AAC is an extremely difficult course that is not member friendly - what do you disagree with in that statement? I am in agreement with most on this site that every course that I can think of which hosted a major championship in the US did not become a better member's course after the event. I wouldn't want to play AAC on a regular basis without an unlimited supply of free golf balls.
Because the USGA now knows the course gets under the skin of some temporary members of the PGA Tour, they
should host the US Open there. From the start the course would have a bunch of them mentally half-baked, and golf being a mental game, this would just add to the test. Seeing the level of complaint, perhaps it isn't suited as a Tour Stop, it's too much for the guys who are used to playing resort courses.
As for courses delivering nondescript winners, like ACC; it happens, even on courses the masses overwhelmingly love, and especially today when the talent pool is deeper than ever. It doesn't indicate much of anything any longer, and think we can come up with a fairly long list. Who stomped the field at The Old Course? Louis Whoziun? Augusta? Charlie Schwartzadinger?
From the article ... I'll pay Devil's Advocate:
http://golfinchicago.wordpress.com/2011/09/14/players-pillory-dubsdread-in-advance-of-western-bmw/ “I’m not a fan of deep bunkers and ridges in greens,” Donald said. “There are certain shots out there, certain carries, just the way you have to fit some of the shots into these tight pin locations, it makes it a little bit difficult.
Luuuuuuuuuuuuuke... you're a pro. Show us your skill. And you ever think there are times you shouldn't aim for the hole?
“There’s not a lot of strategy. Like the 18th, you can’t hit 3-wood short (of the bunkers) because you’re hitting a 4-iron into a green that’s very slopey, so it forces you to take on the tighter (part of the fairway). Just from an architectural standpoint, I think there are a few flaws.”
Hitting the fairway with a 3-wood and having a 4-iron instead of bombing a drive and increasing the chances of hitting it in the bunker is a choice. It's not like the US Open (or most modern courses) allows you to pick sides of a fairway. Suck it up pro. They once said the US Open was to "Identify" champions.
“There’s really no shot-making here that’s required,” Mickelson said. “It doesn’t really test our ability to maneuver the ball because the fronts of the greens are blocked, and the only shot is to hit a high flop shot that stops.”
This was proven to be pure BS as noted by the author of the piece who wrote : "Actually, you can run a shot onto the green on 11 of the 14 par 4s and 5s, but Mickelson was rolling here."
“But being able to maneuver it doesn’t really matter,” the left-hander went on.
How many US Opens really let you work the ball to one side of the fairway or the other? This from a guy Johnny Miller called The Human Haymaker for his wild driving abilities.
“That’s basic stuff. Chipping areas, shot value around the greens, penalties for certain misses, all that stuff wasn’t really well thought out.
Phil is the King of the Lob. Pinehurst may have introduced short grass around the greens, but before that, the US Open was known for it's standard chop-it recovery from inches off the green; Watson's recovery from the back left of Pebble's 17th wasn't a chipping area, it was ankle deep rough. TC Chen didn't chilly-chop it from a tight greenside lie. Phil had played and watched many a US Open with these conditions.
If Phil's short game were so stupendous, he'd have won numerous Open Championships. Except for this year he hasn't sniffed the trophy. It seems his short game, which is stellar stateside is more suited to US conditions.
“Where this golf course really is going to show some teeth (is) because of the green design, because if the greens are really firm there’s some pins on every green that just are not accessible, that you can’t aim at,” said Jim Furyk, who won on the pre-renovated Dubsdread in 2005. “That’s not going to change really whether I’m hitting 7-iron or 9-iron into the green.”
There might be some positions like that, and they just might use them to sucker idiots, punish those who fail, and to strike fear into the hearts of the players who know the price of executing poorly. Psychologocal warfare isn't just allowed at this level, it should be mandatory.
Jim, I'm sure there are enough hole locations where they can find appeasing locations for the coddled ones.
“I guess to play it well you’ve got to hit it out of the fairway bunkers, (which are) in play on almost every hole,” Ogilvy said. “And the greens, you can get some pretty crazy putts if you miss the pin by a long way on the greens. So I guess a lot of these greens, you’re better off to miss the green on the pin side of the hole. Does that make sense?”
At some US Opens guys were hitting irons or fairway woods off a lot of tees because the rough on both sides was so deep. Hell, it even happened at Muirfield during the Open, where Nicklaus hit 1 or 2 drivers per round. It's your choice pro. As far as choosing where to miss, that's also your choice. And if it isn't your choice, you're not likely to win that week, even if you're playing the BC Open.
Sometimes the US Open tests should be brutal. It's the US Open, and that was the order for Rees Jones it seems. I'd rather have that than what we saw at Congressional this summer. Anyone here play Oakmont and Dubsdread, and can they compare the severity of the greens?