Streamsong 6
By "solvable" I just mean: standing on the green, can you look back to the fairway or even to the tee and work out a *shot* or shots that, if you execute, will give you a reasonable expectation of a rational outcome, one correlating to your skill level? Not birdie and for whatever your talent level and the conditions of the day, maybe not even par. Just the "proper" outcome for executing shots using the correct strategy, for playing the hole as it was meant to be played by someone with your skill.
Not every putt has to be makeable. And sometimes a 2-putt should be a real accomplishment.
I felt playing left off the tee, even if I executed well, still gave me a second shot that was probably beyond my meager abilities, just in the sense of having the confidence I could hit the proper section of the green. My skill didn't seem good enough to overcome a random outcome. There didn't seem to be a lot of reward for placing my tee shot in the very best spot. Next time I play the hole I think I will just take a wedge, aim for whatever passes as the middle of the green and hope for the best. Ignore the hole, the slopes, and par. Don't create any decisions or choices because for me at least they're probably not there.
I wish the slope right of the green wasn’t bunkered and I wish the big mound short of the green provided a little more “help,” both for those having a go from the tee and for those trying to get the ball on the green with their second. I don’t think attempting the green from the tee is anything other than a death wish. I can't see the slopes giving most golfers the kind of help they would need. I thought maybe with a full measure of a slope over to the right I could hit my second into it and maybe have a better chance of ending up in the correct section. With the bunkering I didn't want to take that chance.
So it seemed most golfers would need just one strategy: left off the tee, wedge into green. And play in the air, not on the ground. The contours in the green, the overall slope of the green, the ground contours short of the green, the crap left of the green and the bunkering right of the green: I don’t think I want to knockdown, pitch, run, putt or do any of those things where the ball spends any more time interacting with the ground than it absolutely has to.
The risk-reward suggested by the short length of the hole, the high slope to the right that seems like something you’re supposed to use, the mound short of the green: all of these elements are “suggestio falsi,” fool’s gold. I resolve not to fall for this stuff the next time and if I'm playing for a score just play to beat a 6.
Don't mean to pick on the 6th, and again: these were just my impressions not cold, hard facts. I don't think that green was out of pattern from the others on the course. I walked of 18 with an unsettled feeling. The cumulative effect of those greens...got to me. I was pretty tired from all the decisions. Maybe it was just the conditions of the day. The ground was very firm. (The greens speeds didn't bother me...too much.)
That's me then. What was I missing?