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Ran Morrissett

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Two grand essays by golf architect Ian Andrew now bracket 2015. An unabridged take on bunkers by the man who recently helped restore Stanley Thompson's masterpiece at St. George's joins his treatise on Jasper Park that graced our pages in February.

His analysis is broken into subsections: Origin of Bunkers, Why do We Need Bunkers, The Value of Depth, Fairness, Psychology, Strategy, Aesthetics and concludes with Are They Losing Their Value? That progression tells you all you need to know! While most would place aesthetics near the top I agree with Ian that it is of lesser importance than the other aspects. A bunker, like your house, has its value tied to location, location, LOCATION.

Hard to imagine a more scintillating topic for dorks like us. Think about great courses and golf regions and many first visualize bunkering. Ideate Sand Hills, Royal Melbourne, The Old Course, Riviera, Merion, the list goes on and on. Whether they are revetted pots, graceful capes and bays, or unkempt pits these sandy recesses punctuate, embellish, and almost define the golf course. I love this quote at the end from Ian:

It’s the one architectural element that creates contrast as it acts the counterpoint to all the other harmonious elements of a golf course. It’s the feature that clearly distinguishes one course visually from others. When exceptionally well used bunkers can take the most pedestrian piece of ground and leave the player with a complex puzzle to solve. When brilliantly placed, even a single bunker like the Road Hole Bunker can dictate the route of play on preceding shots. When deep and disastrous enough it can place doubt in the most confident swing but most importantly even the most egregious of hazards can be overcome with one single moment of brilliance. That’s the perfect balance. No other hazard has quite the same impact.

Clearly, his new dissertation is an amalgam of history, learned observation and personal philosophy. He shrewdly augments his prose and photos with quotes from the Masters. One of the best is by Ian's favorite builder of bunkers, Alister MacKenzie, who wrote: "No hole is a good hole unless it has one or more hazards in the direct line of the hole." How true, yet do ~2% of the holes in the world possess that attribute?!  >:( How have architects gotten bunker placement so wrong for so long?! :-[ :-\ Personally, I am suspect of the merit of any bunker that isn't surrounded by short grass - sadly, only a few are.

Happily, Ian enjoys composing these thought-provoking pieces as much as we like reading them. More writing is on the way next year from him too but in the meanwhile, see what you think. Here is the link:

http://golfclubatlas.com/on-bunkers-by-ian-andrew/

Who would argue with Ian's contention that bunkers are too expensive and too important not to be done properly? Yet, compare your local course's bunkering schemes/presentation to the tenets that he espouses and you will likely conclude that the art of bunkering a course has a disturbingly long way to come. 

Best,
« Last Edit: December 30, 2015, 04:47:15 PM by Ran Morrissett »

Guy Nicholson

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Re: Ian Andrew's Complete Look at Bunkering now posted under Best of Golf
« Reply #1 on: December 17, 2015, 07:50:37 PM »
So good, and so much implication beyond bunkering. Thank you Ian -- I'll be forwarding this one to some of my more obstinate friends. :)

Sam Krume

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Re: Ian Andrew's Complete Look at Bunkering now posted under Best of Golf
« Reply #2 on: December 18, 2015, 03:03:00 AM »
Couldn't agree more, especially that bunkers are a hazard, they are penal and they should more or less cost you a shot unless a great shot follows. I think that has definitely been lost somewhere along the line.
Nice essay

Thomas Dai

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Re: Ian Andrew's Complete Look at Bunkering now posted under Best of Golf
« Reply #3 on: December 18, 2015, 06:19:08 AM »
Very interesting and thought provoking. Well done Ian and thank you for sharing it with us.


I'm pretty sure that I've read that MacKenzie's early bunkers were sometimes referred to as "scabs", can't recall quite where I read it though.


And there's a Braid story of him staking out a course and after his departure being sent a letter from the club asking where they should put the bunkers and his alleged reply that they should play the course for a year and then place the bunkers where the most divots had been taken. True story or in jest?


Atb
« Last Edit: December 18, 2015, 10:07:24 AM by Thomas Dai »

Andrew Carr

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Re: Ian Andrew's Complete Look at Bunkering now posted under Best of Golf
« Reply #4 on: December 18, 2015, 09:11:49 AM »
Thank you Ian for this in depth analysis of the history and function of these hazards.  Somewhere in the Atlantic Ocean is the severed wire that is trying to communicate to the Colonies that hazards aren't meant to be aimed for, nor should they be perfectly manicured.

Jason Topp

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Re: Ian Andrew's Complete Look at Bunkering now posted under Best of Golf
« Reply #5 on: December 18, 2015, 11:24:25 AM »
Thanks Ian.  My favorite course for driving seems to always have a bunker at the exact spot where I would otherwise aim.  I wonder how an architect accomplishes such an effect when carry distances vary so dramatically without creating a million bunkers.


One underrated aspect of bunkering his how level the stance is within the bunker. Crystal Downs has a number of fairway bunkers that are just little scabs cut out of the ground.  Despite their lack of depth, they are pretty nasty hazards because one can face sidehill, downhill or uphill lies in keeping with the surrounding terrain.


I like the effort to explain why the artificial look of Raynor and others works despite breaking the "natural appearance" rule. 

Ed Homsey

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Re: Ian Andrew's Complete Look at Bunkering now posted under Best of Golf
« Reply #6 on: December 18, 2015, 06:03:17 PM »
Thanks, Ian.  A beautifully written, interesting, informing, and thought-provoking essay.  Have passed it along to several officials at my club, including the superintendent who hopes we can post it on our clubster site for all members to see.  He is well-aware of the impending need to renovate our bunkers, and in the process, rework the faces per your recommendations.

Jerry Kluger

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Re: Ian Andrew's Complete Look at Bunkering now posted under Best of Golf
« Reply #7 on: December 19, 2015, 06:37:42 PM »
I enjoy reading about hazards and recovery from hazards, unfortunately my club is loaded with water hazards and out of bounds hazards which make recovery shots non-existent. 

Yannick Pilon

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Re: Ian Andrew's Complete Look at Bunkering now posted under Best of Golf
« Reply #8 on: December 20, 2015, 09:29:17 AM »
Thanks Ian.


This is one of the most interesting articles I have read in long time. It is a great piece to understand the values of good bunkering while also exposing the detrimental effects that poor bunkering or crazy expectations can have on the quality of architecture a course can offer.


This is an article i will suggest all my clients to read, as i couldn't have said it better, myself!


Great job, my friend!
YP
www.yannickpilongolf.com - Golf Course Architecture, Quebec, Canada

Joe Sponcia

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Re: Ian Andrew's Complete Look at Bunkering now posted under Best of Golf
« Reply #9 on: December 27, 2015, 07:41:57 AM »
Ian,


What a great, thought-provoking essay.  Clearly presented and not a wasted word.  Thank you so much for taking the time to write this.



Joe


"If the hole is well designed, a fairway can't be too wide".

- Mike Nuzzo

Colin Macqueen

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Re: Ian Andrew's Complete Look at Bunkering now posted under Best of Golf
« Reply #10 on: December 29, 2015, 03:28:05 PM »
Ah, ah Ian. You have muttered in the past about producing a wee book on golf architecture. Well from where I am sitting this is one chapter done and dusted. A terrific synopsis of bunkering and a very informative and enjoyable read. Many thanks for this sterling effort. Onwards ever onwards!
Cheers Colin
"Golf, thou art a gentle sprite, I owe thee much"
The Hielander

Ian Andrew

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Re: Ian Andrew's Complete Look at Bunkering now posted under Best of Golf
« Reply #11 on: December 30, 2015, 07:22:46 PM »
Ah, ah Ian. You have muttered in the past about producing a wee book on golf architecture. Well from where I am sitting this is one chapter done and dusted. A terrific synopsis of bunkering and a very informative and enjoyable read. Many thanks for this sterling effort. Onwards ever onwards!
Cheers Colin

Colin,

My youngest son bought me "On Writing" by Stephen King. I read it over Christmas and would recommend the book, regardless of whether you're interested in writing.

I've always enjoyed a well-researched essay, but really find the idea of writing a book intimidating. The issue has always been how could you possibly take all these ideas and present them in a logical form. There are already some great golf architecture books that have done that very well. What I didn't want to do is follow any of those paths.

Let's just say Chapters have been easy. You have "part" of one. But each time I have settled in, I stop once I begin to think, "how will you pull this all together?" Lorne Rubenstein recommended just writing chapters all winter and then come back to that at the end. I had planned to do that.

After reading King's book, I experimented and simply wrote. What came out made a great opening. It was as funny as anything I've written in a while and presented me with an effective theme. I've had to put that aside for work, but I have somewhere to go.

The only issue is the main story that pulls everything in the first chapter together involves people in the golf industry that may not be as amused as the reader. I plan to write the whole thing for a few close friend and see where I get ...
« Last Edit: December 30, 2015, 07:27:10 PM by Ian Andrew »
With every golf development bubble, the end was unexpected and brutal....

Peter Pallotta

Re: Ian Andrew's Complete Look at Bunkering now posted under Best of Golf
« Reply #12 on: December 30, 2015, 07:39:11 PM »
Ian - if you have advice from the likes of Lorne Rubenstein you don't need any from me. But for what it is worth:

I think there are two extremes: at one end, the writer who has his entire story/book planned and organized down to the minutest detail right from the start -- the result being a story/book that reads that way, mechanically and pre-planned and with little life/verve (no matter how much so-called emotion or rhetoric the writer tries to inject into later). At the other extreme, the writer who thinks he has a great idea and simply starts writing, sure that his own brilliance and the strength of the idea will carry him through -- the result being a story/book that might start strong but then fizzles out and meanders and leads to nowhere but self indulgence. 

The middle approach, which I think you are already taking: write about what you care about in whatever form the material wants to take, i.e. long chapters, short chapters, small little vignettes, sidebars etc.  And when you are done, put that 'assorted material' away in a drawer for a month and let it percolate in the back of my mind. The assorted material will then also start telling you what form it wants to take (i.e. in terms of structure). Put it together and show it to one -- and only one -- trusted friend whose own writing (preferably a book) you think well of, and see if the structure you think best also works for him.

Best
Peter     
« Last Edit: December 30, 2015, 07:41:23 PM by Peter Pallotta »

Ed Homsey

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Re: Ian Andrew's Complete Look at Bunkering now posted under Best of Golf
« Reply #13 on: December 30, 2015, 09:59:22 PM »
Ian--Just to let you know.  I sent the link of your article to several of the folks who are mainstays of the current "power structure" at my club.  Each replied, and thanked me, and indicated that they would be putting the article up on the club's Clubster site.  Supported by our Super, and had one of our top golfers reply, with the wish that each of our members could read your article.   Thanks.
 

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