These changes all sound like they are geared towards removing the temptation for players to challenge the waste area down the right side in attempts to drive the green.
They would also seem to remove the incentive for laying up as close as possible to the right side for a better angle to the (no longer) left-to-right sloping green.
Am I correct in my conclusions?
Why do you think these changes will make for a better hole?
Kyle:
You are correct in your conclusions.
I don't know that these changes will make the hole better than Alex Russell's original hole -- probably not. However, we don't really have any choice in the matter. This hole was deemed a major safety problem by the club, because the distance from the centerline [on the bee-line to the green] and the road on the right is only about 35-40 meters ... which makes it inevitable that people trying to play down the right side, as the original hole rewarded you for doing, will too often hit the ball o.b. right.
After identifying the problem, the club made some changes to the hole about five years ago, adding a sandy waste on the right and rebuilding the green, but neither of those things did much to reward the player for going left, so the safety problem still existed and the hole was neutered of its old interest. Our mission was to find a way to redesign the hole to reward play down the left side ... not an easy task on a 277-meter dogleg right!
Our loose model for the hole is the 10th at Riviera, which is almost exactly the same length. We didn't make the green as skinny as at Riviera, because that would be out of character for Royal Melbourne; but we did tilt it from right to left, to make any approach from the right side harder. The bunkers we added are there to discourage the average club player from trying to drive straight toward the green, and to make a transition from fairway to native rough, through the "sandy waste" area which they have struggled to establish as something in keeping with the character of Royal Melbourne.
I wish I could have put back the old hole instead, but the day it was deemed "unsafe", it was history. Perhaps someday I'll find a good situation for it with no boundary issues. Hey -- maybe I'll build it in Rio!