Hole #10 (Par 3, 193 yds, 180 yds)
The drive – Armed with the newfound courage afforded by a cup of snack mix and a drink, the golfer exits the southern end of the clubhouse, follows the sidewalk to the right and climbs a small-ish mound to find the tenth tee. Mature trees hand overhead, and views of golfers on the left putting out on 15 and teeing off on 16 and golfers tacking the 18th green to the back-right offer pleasant diversions while waiting for the group to clear the 10th green.
The hole plays slightly downhill across a swale in the property to a large green stuck in the far northwest corner of the club’s southern property. OB in the form of a parking lot looms to the right, and in the form of 87th Street long. One bunker sits short-left of the large, oval-ish green, and another runs along its right side. Trees shoot upward along the left side of the green, providing both shade and protection to golfers teeing off on the 11th hole.
The hole will normally play a club shorter than the yardage due to the slight downhill nature of the shot, and the fact that one will want at all costs to stay below the hole.
The green – Following an earlier comment that asked “what makes a Beverly green,” the 10th to me is just that. Steep back-to-front slope, a vertical ridge that separates the space into two distinct sides, and smaller, subtler horizontal ridges that form ledges and define “micro-greens.” In addition, fronting traps that sit well below the surface and a pushed-up pad that complicates recovery shots from the back or sides.
Recoveries from the front traps or trees on the left are relatively straightforward: fly/run/chip/pitch your ball onto the surface and keep it below the hole. From the right, the flanking bunker requires a more lofted shot, which can prove especially tricky if short-sided. And from behind the green, the golfer should reset expectations and just try to have a putt for his next shot.
Uphill putts on this green are very makeable. Downhill putts must be played defensively. And cross-green putts require precise reads of both break – the quintessence of the “slider” can be found here – and speed, which one of my playing competitors yesterday executed to perfection to hole a testy 10-foot birdie to take six-for-twelve (we had, of course pressed the back) for twenty-four in our Scotch game, beginning a string of four very impressive putts made, two by yours truly.