The new Dismal photographs suggest extreme width, not unlike Streamsong. Even I only missed one fairway at Ballyneal a few years ago. Thoughts?
Bogey
Michael:
I think we have overdone the width here and there, but not on the courses you mention. When I saw Pinehurst #2 last year, I vowed to get the widths down on future projects.
Nobody has mentioned it so far, but it is crucial to consider width
in the context of what the rough is like. At places like Ballyneal and Dismal, the outside edge is native prairie grasses that we don't plan for the owner to maintain much or at all; and as someone just reported, this year those areas are pretty thick. So we made the fairways VERY WIDE to compensate. [I suppose some others would have grassed the corridors wide but left a good buffer of it as rough on either side to reduce mowing costs; we hate that esthetically, and between having the fairways in fescue and mowing everything at one height, we think the difference in maintenance cost is negligible.]
At Streamsong, off the grass is open sand and some thick native, more like Pinehurst. There are holes that could have been narrower, but my associates are always looking for a good place visually to stop the fairway, and sometimes we went further than necessary there. At Tara Iti in New Zealand, we have the same situation, and we've narrowed it up quite a bit, especially on the back nine [the first few holes were grassed prior to my seeing Pinehurst].
Years ago, I did lists of the widest courses I'd ever played [Royal Melbourne, Augusta, St. Andrews, NGLA, Kapalua, Pinehurst before the changes] and the narrowest [Marysville, Pine Bay, Olympic, Elk Ridge, Grand Haven, Boat of Garten]. That exercise led me to err on the side of too wide, rather than too narrow. Most golfers [and most of my clients] prefer this, and so do I. But, if they choose to narrow them up after the fact, as at The Renaissance Club, they certainly have the flexibility to do so.