Some course statistics from the two rounds of medal play that might be of interest (presumably Mr. Davis may look at the course stats as the USGA "tweaks" EH for the Open in six years):
-- EH averaged just over 75 strokes per round, +3. The front nine (37.891) played more than a half-stroke more difficult than the back nine (37.243).
-- The two easiest holes were #s 1 (the par 5 opener) and #11 (shown extensively during yesterday's Golf Channel coverage -- the mid-range par 4). Not terribly surprised by either hole; despite some of the wildly off-line tee shots in yesterday's playoff, #11 has a gathering fairway and a not-terribly-difficult green to negotiate; #1 played as the shortest of the course's par 5s in this set-up. One wonders if Davis might lengthen #1 to provide more of a challenge at the US Open; it played at 563 yds for the Amateur, but can be pushed back another 70-75 yards.
-- The two most difficult holes were #s 8 and 3 -- not surprised at #3, a 500-yard par 4 into the wind with fierce bunkering and a very good and challenging green. #8 was a bit of a surprise, playing nearly a full half-stroke over par, making it the most difficult hole on the course. But, if you don't catch the downslope on that fairway with the drive, you're left w/ a long approach off a potentially downhill lie to a green above you that's pretty shallow and bunkered in front. I guess I can see why it might be hard.
-- EH started off soft -- #s 1 and 2 were two of the four easiest holes on the course during stroke play -- then smacks you with #s 3 and 4, two of the four hardest holes on the course. An interesting ying and yang to start off the round. By and large, the front nine looks like the test you have to get through in order to keep your round in shape; only one of the six hardest holes on the course (#10, the one featured in yesterday's TV coverage -- a whopping 526-yd par 4) was on the back nine. In fact, once you get through hole #12, you've played 7 of the 9 toughest holes on the course, and all six of the most difficult.
-- The two short, gambling par 4s -- #2 and #15 (both set up at 370 yds or shorter, which is short for EH) -- played much differently. #2 played just slightly over par (4.016) as the fourth-easiest hole on the course; it yielded one eagle and 55 birdies, along with 48 bogeys and 7 double-bogeys. This, to me, is the mark of a very good short par 4 -- it yields under-par scores with good execution, but penalizes loose or poor play (note the under-par scores nearly exactly equaled the over-par scores). Golfers were far more careful, it seems, with #15 -- only 28 birdies, with 67 bogeys and 8 doubles (it played as the 8th-toughest hole during stroke play). The stats for the two holes reinforces my view that the green surrounds at #15 are too penalizing for the golfers to take on the risk-reward approach seemingly built into that hole; the risk-reward equation seems to work out much better on #2. Further justification for my view that #2 is one of the best holes at EH.
(Paging Pat Craig.
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Stats here from the USGA:
http://www.usga.org/ChampEventScore.aspx?id=17179869326&year=2011&type=coursestats