Play it as it lies. Is there any single aspect of the game that is more reflective of the challenges, joys and learnings that are at the heart of golf? Tonight, I find myself thinking not, i.e. I find myself thinking that playing it as it lies is the very soul of the game, the single most vital experience that golf affords us, and that which makes the game unique. The bad bounce, the unlucky break, a wrong decision/choice, too bold/aggressive a play, the vagaries of nature (wind and sand and tall patchy native grasses) -- all these engender the requirement to play it as it lies. In turn, the wonderful recovery, the compounded error, the smart and modest pitch out, the call on our skill and imagination, the humility the game forces upon us -- all these emerge out of the same ethos to play it as it lies. (Was it Harry Vardon who said "The game is master of us all"). And so: are many of the world's finest courses precisely those that very often call on the golfer to play it as it lies, and yet at the same time -- and almost as often, but not quite -- provide him with a chance to experience wonder and imagination, and to develop humility? On another thread, Mark B mentioned both Pinehurst #2 and RM Composite as two undeniably great courses; and it struck me that it may be because both courses/designs embody the play it as it lies ethos so very very well. The Old Course is another wonderful example of that same ethos (but then, TOC is the answer to just about any question ever raised around here!); I'm convinced that the old Scots who created TOC felt deep in their hard-nosed yet pious bones the value and efficacy of training the human spirit to play it as it lies.
Just thinking out loud a little tonight. What do you think?
Peter