Two of the three people I played with shot their career low. So far I have played it with 8 people and 5 have shot their career low in their first round there!
I have never heard a figure like that about any course, much less a course that people are touting as a great course.
I'm interested to see it because of this feature. Plus I need to post a decent score again someday; Crystal Downs has been beating me up!
IMO, the low scoring was most influenced by the green surrounds. There is little if any rough around the greens, so putting was the preferred option, and that makes getting up and down much, much easier. I bet the scrambling percentages are off the charts for most players at GS.
The slow greens probably hurt me more than they helped me, because I left three or four short, and can't think of any avoidance of a three putt because of the slow greens.
So, with wide fairways and playable rough and sand traps, it was relatively easy to get greenside in regulation, and then with a putter in your hand, two putt for a par.
The combination of width and green surrounds makes it relatively easy to make a bogey, and it takes a pretty big mistake to make a double; not that I didn't card two on my way to a 75.
I didn't make any more birdies than I typically make to pull my score down, but I was able to make pars out of what would typically be a bogey when I missed the green: because I had a putter, and not a wedge from deep rough or a sand trap.
Also, I don't know that I hit any more greens in regulation.
Even though other courses are tightly mown around the greens, the greens are often raised, so you have the option to putt, but the putt is difficult so it is hard to get it within 3'. And any time an amateur has a wedge in his hand the outcome is dicey and getting it within 3' is far less common than with a putter. In other words, getting up and down is difficult at most courses.
At GS, it wasn't difficult, because the greens laid level with the fairway. That is not to say that there wasn't a lot of contour around the greens, but the angles were not sharp, so negotiating the shot - determining the break or where to land a wedge - was not difficult, even if you were 40 to 60 feet from the pin, let alone closer. Also, because of the big contours, the ball tended to settle into a lower, flatter part of the land. So it was a lot of up and down for par, versus up and
not down for bogey. In the end, IMO, the ability to scramble made the course easier and scoring better.