To all of you who don't see narrow fairways coming onto club golf, you've gotta get out here in the Midwest.
I have paced off fairway widths at no less than a dozen unimposing little courses, because I couldn't believe how narrow they were. I have seen landing areas as narrow as 12 paces, with 20 to 25 being commonplace.
These often aren't fancy country clubs, and a lot of them don't even host state-level events.
But then we have Topeka CC, which is a Perry Maxwell that had hundreds of oak tree planted on it in the 40s. The widest fairway on the property is 30 yards, with several in the 22 yard area. And since they started irrigating the rough, it's typically thick and lush.
Hell, the "other" course in Hutchinson, Kan., Highlands Golf Club, is built in the dunes like PD, but it's overgrown with trees, and has fairways that are all under 30 yards, lined by deep rough.
I played both PD and Highlands last spring, and there's no doubt that Highlands is more difficult--but it's about as much fun as wisdom tooth extraction.
Narrow fairways and deep rough are a scourge on the game and they have proliferated like rabbits.
K