Michael
The thing is that most of what you have said about the difficulties of the Castle could quite easily be said of the Old course.
Now, I'm not asserting that the Castle is the equal of the Old, but I do think it was designed to echo a lot of its themes. Consider: wide fairways, but plenty of trouble in the middle; landing zones that are obscured from the tees; ideal lines not obvious at first; big greens that are elevated above their surrounds, and with heavy contouring.
If you buy into this theory then the Castle takes on a slightly different hue. It has been noted on a number of occasions that old courses with quirk get a pass that new courses with quirk don't. Is this the case with the Castle? I don't know, but I think it is a question worth thinking about.
Adam:
Great minds think alike, or perhaps you already read my review:
"I'm with the starter on this one. I feel for David Kidd because a lot of the criticisms of the course are things one might say about The Old Course if it wasn't so famous: the greens are huge and wild, and it's hard to discern the strategy from the tee. However, the severe tilt of the land and the size of the greens yields a lot of recovery shots to greens that are up over your head, and the moonscape of the course is only appealing when you’re looking away from it, across the bay toward town. Trying to one-up Kingsbarns turned out to be a formula for excess.”
But I think I also addressed your question there. The recoveries around the greens of The Old Course are pretty much unequaled in the world of golf. The recoveries around the greens on The Castle Course are, emphatically, not.
Tom - I think I first wrote that imo the design of the Castle was a direct homage to the Old course about five years ago! I agree with your thoughts on the recoveries around the greens.
OK, I don't have a great mind
, but a Ford Fiesta has two doors and an engine, and so does a McLaren 650S, but each provides a different experience. Ultimately, it is the melding of terrain, grass, sand and water that creates the experience. Sometimes it works, and sometimes it doesn't.
And maybe the recoveries are the issue at Castle, along with the marginally receptive greens, that make the experience unpleasant.
I understand what you are saying about the hidden nature of the strategy at TOC, but is it really hidden? Don't you know what you are supposed to do when standing on the tee box? Of course, knowing what to do and doing it are two different things.
When looking at a yardage book, the route off the tee at TOC is fairly quickly discernible; from the ground it is a different story on some holes, but not on many of them from my recollection.
Even a hole as different as 17, when you are looking at a yardage book the obvious strategy is stay as far right as possible: left is junk and brings greenside bunker into play; just don't hit it into the hotel on the right and don't hit it thin. Executing the desired shot is a different story.
Then there is the approach. Hitting the 17th green must be one of the hardest shots in golf, but the shot has a bail out - short and away from the bunker (or long and left onto the 18th tee box; wind was blowing hard right to left and I got it hooking, landed in the middle of the green and ran straight off the green onto a tee box; easy chip back
), and the short play is fairly obvious from the fairway.
Aren't the approaches at 1, 2, 3, 9, 10, 12, 15, 16, 17, and 18 fairly obvious?
But others like 13 and 14 are blind, and 11 is deceptive.
In my mind, what makes TOC so great is that it has a little of everything.
If every green was like 11 or 12, wouldn't you get sick of the course really quickly? Or if every approach was as hard as 17? Or the burn came into play too often like 1?
But the course isn't that way - it has a some difficult carries over obstacles, it has some blind approaches, it has some blind tee shots, it is wide in some spots and narrow in others (although the bunkers, OB and most desirable angle on approach significantly narrow corridors of the course), and it has long holes and short holes. It throws something different at you on nearly every hole. And that is without having the wind change how it plays from day to day.
In contrast, if every hole was like 9, wouldn't we think TOC the dullest course on the planet?
In conclusion, I found the Castle a frustration, completely the opposite of TOC which is an enjoyable challenge. There was little enjoyable for me at Castle. Maybe Matthew (my son) is right, and just play it in match play.
Cheers.