Got an off line email from our old buddy Tom Paul, which got me to thinking in my response to him.
Actually, we had both figured someone on golf club atlas had made up the "top shot bunker." However, he recalled seeing it in a Wayne Stiles report and also saw it in some Ross writings.
I recall the early days (I was 12…) of my interest in golf course architecture, when my Dad had gotten me several articles and I vividly recall one espousing the theory that a topped shot should never be allowed to run on greens, thus frontal bunkers left and right. I suspect that the same theory may have held true for tee shots, especially back in the days when getting a driver airborne was a lot tougher than it is today.
That said, I do know Mac (ANGC) and Tilly (the great tour) changed their mind about such things in the great depression.
It does raise the great question about original intent vs. changed paradigms, especially when those changed paradigms come about through harsh reality of depression era cost. Even forgetting that, why build a top shot bunker on a 1928 course when by 1931 the gca had probably changed his thinking to a more “final” design philosophy?
I think a lot of architecture buffs have trouble thinking in the fourth dimension of time, since all the “olden days” get compressed to a mental time frame of being the same day.
Which goes back to my thinking that other than in preserving some great old course with historical value, do we design for today's game? In my mind, you almost have to, even if removing some great looking old features sure can be tough some times. I doubt most members (or public course owners) get all that teary eyed about a bunker 100 yards off the tee, if it slows down play, frustrates customers and cost a few thousand a year on top of it. Not sure its entirely right, but saying that's the way it probably is. However, not everywhere, and long live the differences of opinion!
It does remind me of a two hole addition (make up for loss of other holes) that I did years ago. Owner sees a fairway bunker on the right side of the first hole and criticizes it for being too much in play. I figured he would like the next hole with its fw bunker left, but he criticized that one, too, as "it would never come into play on the hook side...."
It seems like they get removed for extremes of too much and too little play. So, I always wonder, what is the "proper amount of play" a bunker should get?