I was up in St. Andrews Tuesday for the first time since Armageddon, and after some business and a plesaant lunch in the Links Clubhouse I decided to brave the chilling winds and walk out to the reportedly horribly disfigured 2nd green on the Old Course.
As it turned out, I emerged from the gorse separating the New and Old courses into the middle of a three-ball of reasonably good golfers approaching their 2nd shots, waited for them to play and then walked towards the green with them.
Firstly, the pin had been cut that day at one of the "Sunday at the Open" locations, 10 yards or so to the left of the 3-4 foot high sharp rise which bisects the green. From where each of the players were hitting their second shots (far left, middle, tight right), the pin was only partially visible due not only to the elevation but also the large hump protecting the left side of that green. I had forgotten how intimidating that combination of features was to that (or any left) pin, regardless of one's drive.
Secondly, even from the tight right 2nd shot approach position, the new bunkers were virtually invisible--more of an adumbration than a menace--particularly given that day's pin location.
Thirdly, walking up to the green towards the supposed desecration I first saw only a revelation--the four hideous and useless bunkers 20-30 yards short of the green and so far right that they would only menace the 2nd shot hack-slicer or third-shot shanker had bave been filled in and sodded over, leaving only some lovely mini-humps and mini-hollows that will give frissons of excitement to the higher handicap players and be esthetically admired but strategically ignored by the better ones.
Fourthly, as to the bunkers themselves, they are proper pots, built to current standards which only serve to enhance the challenge of the hole. As has been discussed before, their existence will allow for some interesting pin placements on the heretofore bland and largely un-used right side of the green during elite competitions and also give some challenge to those players (good and bad) who hit their second shot short right and weak, regardless of the pin position.
I say well done Mr. Hawtree et. al.
Rich