I was playing a modern links course a couple of weeks ago, a course that is renowned for its width. On the day in question it was pretty breezy with what the guy in the pro shop estimated to be a 30 to 35 mph wind. Certainly I found it to be at least a four club wind. Due to the layout where most of the holes run in parallel with the shore line, and due to the direction of the wind, the wind was mostly either directly in your face or directly behind.
Now like most modern courses, each hole has numerous tees that produce the potential for the hole length in each hole to vary quite substantially depending on where the markers are placed. On the day in question, the holes with the wind were all from the very back tees and the holes into the wind were from some of the very front tees.
As a UK golfer, who most of the time plays on older courses with limited number of tees on each hole and at typical members clubs where markers rarely get moved from the same teebox, it struck me as very odd. Typically, at your usual links course the elements aren't allowed for, you just get on with it. Some days just keeping the ball in play is the name of the game, others the weather is a benign and the course is at your mercy. Its that variation which I think makes it so wonderful.
I can't help thinking that to try and neutralise the weather so much by super wide fairways and changing the tee positions so greatly is dumbing down the game. Its like golf for beginners or riding your bike with stabilisers. What could have been a great golf experience becomes a bit insipid.
Thoughts ?
Niall