I remember Ben Crenshaw telling me once that he thought most good greens held a little bit of fear that you might putt off them. And even he putted off the 11th at Crystal Downs that day.
I putted off a couple of greens at Wolf Point today, and had a blast anyway. But, I'm pretty careful about minimizing those chances in my own designs. It's one thing to have a putt you can't get close, but it's another to have a green so severe that it's tough for a good player to keep the ball on the green from above the hole.
When I read Mike's opening post I had the same thought: #11 Crystal Downs. My one round there we had a front pin. I was tickled to A&E a bogey!
Tom, I would love to hear your thoughts on Wolf Point. I too had a ball there, and think of it as America's St Andrews Old. Where did you putt off the green? Was that your first trip to Texas?
Bill:
I will post some thoughts on Wolf Point another day. I loved the course, but I am not going to do it (or any other course designed by a living architect) the disservice of comparing it to The Old Course at St. Andrews. The greens were even wilder than I anticipated from previous visitors' comments, and they were pretty fast today, too ... there were a lot of interesting shots around the greens today. It worked great for a little match, but if it were held to a medal play standard I think there would be a much more serious level of scrutiny. Luckily Mr. Stanger doesn't care about that.
Tom might have putted off a couple of greens (both putts were the up and over types, not down hill screamers) but he also chipped in twice, with a 4 iron! He also made about every 6 footer he looked at and they were not straight putts. He is the first visitor who had the greens figured out on his first play.
What I find interesting about WP is almost everyone goes away saying they had a great time, but also saying the course is too severe for use as a daily fee or busy private club. Just about everyone who plays has fun; I have a number of buddies who play a lot all over TX and they never turn down an opportunity to play WP.
So, does it say more about WP, or how we view golf in general, when you have a course that most enjoy very much, but is generally considered too extreme for the general public?
Sometimes I think we in golf over value our percieved knowledge of golfers, and under value the opinion of the everyday golfer in favor of the expert player who knows what a good course should be.
With a few minor tweaks, I believe a course built and maintained like WP would be well recieved. Don't think we'll see it anytime soon as its not a safe choice, but really, how safe have the choices been to go with the norm?