... under Architecture Timeline and Courses by Country.
As we all know, golf’s trump cards are its ever-changing playing fields. How lucky we are that this is our chosen sport! That fact is highlighted by the back-to-back profiles of Castle Stuart (near Inverness) and Inverness (near Toledo). One set of fairways is about double the width of the other and the greens almost 50% larger. Yet golf excels at both!
Traditional clubs like Inverness often undertake work without generating or seeking attention. The flip side is that the club might not get the recognition that it deserves for successful change and I have noticed only periodic mention of Inverness’s 2013 work and conversion to Pure Distinction in this Discussion Group. If you haven’t yet played on this surface (not many places offer it), you are in for a treat. The greens are now in the class of Prairie Dunes – intermediate in size and yet 3 putts happen in a jiff. The interior contours aren’t big (or easy to photograph) but wavy Ross contours + Pure Distinction = golf the way it was meant to be (to paraphrase Ross expert Mike Fay). The putting surfaces at holes like 4, 9 and 16 are marvelous and their appeal grows with time, especially when compared against some of the sledge-hammer, three tier greens jammed onto the land in modern times.
Similar to Southern Hills, Inverness occupies a much prettier block of property than what people can glean from television. Some of that is due to the tree work that was begun after Inverness’s last big event, the 2011 Senior Open. Let’s hope that they stay the course. Evergreens that dot the hill left along 7 and those on the inside of the 8th obscure great long interior views and hinder an even better appreciation of the land.
This aerial from Chris Buie shows Inverness’s appealing river valley and how Ross used it. His 6th and dogleg left 7th are along the bottom and right. Inverness’s predominance of par 4s might remind some of Ganton but the appeal of this place for me is that it doesn’t really resemble any other course in the world, save itself. The star holes – 4, 7, 15, 17, and 18 – shine with mega-wattage (at least to me) and seem unique even within Ross’s own massive portfolio. The course starts with a shared ‘V’ fairway, ends with a sub-380 yarder and there’s a bunch of wonders in between – tell me another place quite like it?
Best,