Fifteen is reminiscent of number twelve. It slings around a danger zone on the right, down then up, to a green hidden beyond the dog leg. As with 12, so many pine trees grow at the corner of the dogleg that the green and fairway up the right serve as no temptation. In this case, all they serve to do is push a tee ball to the left where, surprise, random plantings and rough await. It is this "needle in a pine stack"
approach to course maintenance that has removed the openness of the property, known by golfers until the mid-1990s. If the trees down the right were taken down ONLY enough to expose a view to the green (as with 12), the hole would regain a character intended by its architect.
At this juncture, we return to the ditch that we initially encountered behind two green and between three tee and green. It sits menacingly behind the 15th putting surface, necessitating the saving collar of sand that wraps from side around rear to other side. Three consecutive holes of complete, sandy wraparound might have been a bit much, so having an open front for a runner is appreciated. Be accurate on your approach, whether you play it as your 2nd, 3rd or 4th.
Hole Fifteen: Par Four_360_353_315Entire hole from skyFrom the tee, played best with a , controlled, left-to-right sliderUp the slope from the bottom, toward EverestThis narrow view brings the flag and front edge of green into perspectiveFrom the right front of the putting surface, where the wraparound collar comes into viewSixteen is a long par three, over a pond, to a green sited on a rise. What separates this hole from others of its length and appearance is the location of the green-near bunkers. They do not abut the putting ledge; instead, they sit farther below, with a tier of rough (indicated by green arrows below) between them and the putting green. If your tee ball is wide enough to find them, you'll have a 30-feet bunker recovery to play, rather than a 15-feet one.
I suspect that this green has diminished in size over the years, to a point where it does not have enough area to hold the requisite approach shot. It's a shame, as a green a la the 11th at Shinnecock Hills would serve this hole well, albeit one of depth and width appropriate to the length of the hole.
An alternative would be to extend the green toward the tee, allowing less club to be played to reach the front portion. It would allow for a greater number of chips and putts, although the option of playing short to the wide fairway exists, followed by a pitch shot to the green.
Hole sixteen: Par Three_196_190Entire hole from skyFrom the tee, over pond to elevated greenHere you see the bunker then tier of rough then green ascent