A truly great hole by hole. Thanks for all your work, Tommy and Wade!
I’ve deliberately avoided posting in the middle of this thread, preferring to wait to the end and simply add a couple of “big picture” comments.
It seems that there has been a recurring theme of “unrecoverable” position complaints. I strongly disagree. Ballyhack is difficult, yes. The terrain is severe, yes. However the fairways are enormous as, generally, are the greens, and I can’t think of a single place on the course where (assuming you find your ball) recovery for a bogy is not a fairly simple matter.
I LOVE the mental aspect of golf. No other sport or game combines the mental discipline required with the physical execution. Ballyhack presents a rigorous test of both on virtually every shot. Tommy, Wade, and Kevin each alluded to this early in the thread:
(Tommy)
For me the challenge is to keep my head for 18 holes. When I do, I can score well. When I overreach I score poorly.
(Wade)
From the first through the eighteenth, Ballyhack requires an aggressive swing at a conservative target.
Get this backwards and the golf course will punish you.
(Kevin)
Put another way, the individual shot demands are not unreasonable, but loose swings get punished and can tend to compound.
What I’ve found is that the course is big and brawny enough that:
1) The fairways are huge and, played conservatively, almost impossible to miss completely. However,
2) Invariably there is significant advantage to playing to a particular portion of the fairway.
Attempts to gain that advantage which are poorly executed will often be punished with a poor stance, lie, or angle to the green. Poorly executed aggressive shots from these less than ideal positions may well result in an unrecoverable position.
Recovery from a loose swing, then, is simply to play a recovery shot to good position, then attempt to get up and down. Except for truly horrible shots, generally Ballyhack penalizes the first loose swing moderately, then imposes a severe penalty on the second (which was combined generally with a poor decision). That, in my view, should be an architect’s objective.
I truly love Ballyhack. The course is both beautiful and a blast to play, the club facilities are perfect for the golfer seeking a few days of great golf, fellowship, and good food, and the staff is exceedingly gracious.
Jamey