(I transferred this for Microsoft Word, and there are a few minor formatting problems)
Introduction
This February I met Ran Morrissett. During our brief conversation, I mentioned that I thought Ballyneal was the best course I had played for considering shot trajectory. Morrissett suggested The Old Course as one alternative superior choice. The exchange caused me to ruminate on the subject of trajectory control in golf. The resulting essay will hopefully be of interest. I will begin by introducing a few basic and well understood concepts.
Trajectory Control
Under typical playing conditions, relatively few golf courses require a decision to control the height of the shot. Distance control is usually accomplished by hitting the proper club, and making a full, repeatable swing. However, under certain playing conditions, controlling the shot trajectory yields a more reliable and accurate result.
Here are some methods I’ve used to control trajectory:
To hit the ball higher:
· Swing at full speed, or swing hard.
· “Hands high”, finishing the swing with hands held high.
· Place ball further forward in stance.
To hit the ball lower:
· Swing as less than full speed, i.e. the “change-up”.
· Keep wrist bowed through impact.
· Place ball back in stance.
· Flatten swing.
· Stand further away from ball at address.
(Note: Please suggest other common methods for flight control, if you think of any.)
Why Control Trajectory?
Reasons for hitting a high shot:
· Land soft, minimize roll after landing.
· Maximize distance of chosen club.
· Recognized as a good way to control distance on downwind shots.
Reasons for hitting a lower shot:
· Greater direction (and sometimes distance) control in both crosswinds and headwinds.
· Greater distance and direction control in headwinds.
· Maximize distance on shots into the wind.
What Features Discourage A Run-Up Shot?
I tend to divide lower trajectory shots into two categories, those that are intended to fly onto the green, and those that land short of the green. These course characteristics discourage the bouncing and running approach shot:
· Golf holes with narrow entrances to the green, perhaps flanked by hazards on each side, discourage the running approach.
· Large mounds, or other types of convex shaping which pushes bouncing and rolling balls away from the green, or into difficult recovery areas.
Discussion
The golf course needs two important attributes to encourage the consideration of trajectory. Wind is the most important. Without wind, there is little incentive to lower shot trajectory. Firm and bouncy turf increases roll, which enhances the possibilities for bouncing and rolling shots. Under soft conditions, a player may hit a low trajectory shot onto a green to control distance and direction, but is less able to play a shot that rolls a significant distance.
Not everyone manipulates the trajectory of their golf shots. Tom Watson was renowned for winning The Open Championship five times, while never attempting to manipulate the trajectory of his irons, simply choosing the club that best traveled the proper distance, given wind and other playing conditions.
I’m under the impression that most advanced players think of trajectory as a two or three option decision. Either the player will hit a “stock” or “full” shot, or they will hit a “punch” shot. You could expand this list to include a “big” shot, such as the difference between a “stock 7-iron” or a “big 8-iron” shot. Truly outstanding players can turn the ball in both directions for all types of shots. Let me introduce a fourth "hybrid" option, where the player hits a longer club with a controlled ½ to ¾ swing, a modified version of the chip and run shot.
The number of club choices that can be selected for an approach shot is limited by shot length. If a shot requires at least a full 4-iron shot, then the only alternatives are longer irons and woods, which have limited utility for this purpose. But a shot with a distance that can be covered with a full pitching wedge shot can also be negotiated with a numbered iron to control distance and direction.
I told Ran Morrissett that Ballyneal was the best course I had played for considering shot trajectory. Please allow me the benefit of the doubt on this opinion. I am a member at Ballyneal, and not as well traveled as many contributors here. Club members exhibit a bias for their home courses. On the other hand, being a club member allows me the luxury to experiment and try shots I might not try when playing a course a limited number of times. If I’m playing a great golf course just once or twice, I will be compelled to try and score my best, especially since I’m not familiar with the course’s finer details. I know few people willing to play a renowned golf course once or a precious few times, only to experiment with different shots. I played the Old Course once, and I wasn’t going to try and bounce one into the 16th green just because. With that said, the approach to the 17th green so strongly suggested a defensive, running approach that I did just that. I almost succeeded, running the ball halfway up the rise before falling back behind the Road Bunker.
Choosing Ballyneal as a great course for considering shot trajectory is not so far-fetched when you consider this — Ballyneal’s fairway turf is a combination of bentgrass, fescue and bluegrass, and is maintained a bit longer than the other modern links style courses built in the last twenty years. A few years ago, they were mowing the fairways at .500 - .750 inches in the summertime, but they may have lowered mowing heights in recent years.
Because it is kept a bit longer, the player imparts less spin on his irons, since he is not required to “pinch” the ball off an ultra-tight fescue surface. The extra cushion also affords a greater margin of error for attempting ½ and ¾ shots. On many occasions at Bandon and other modern fescue courses, I have misjudged a downwind short iron approach shot when the ball spun to a quick stop, well short of the intended target. I contend that a slightly longer cut of turf not only assists the less talented player, but also yields a less spinning ball flight that rolls longer and more predictably.
Ultra-tight lies affect an aging golfer like me. Greenside chip and pitch shots must be struck perfectly; skulled and sclaffed shots are common. Ultra-fast greens make short putts a test of nerves, and require such a tiny movement to propel the ball. I like fast greens, but I also like a true, medium speed green that allows me to “take the break out” and make a bigger stroke on a five to ten foot putt.
Designing The Ideal Course For Trajectory Decisions
I had an epiphany while on the same February vacation. I was playing golf at a seaside course high on a bluff above the ocean. The 10th hole was about 380 yards long, and I pushed my drive into the right rough, leaving me with about 165 yards to the hole, across hilly but predictable ground. I was in a beautiful fescue rough lie, with the grass leaning towards the target, so I knew the ball would fly. Even though the shot was into a 10 mph breeze, I selected a 7-iron, set the ball back in my stance, and hit a low bouncing "knuckleball" that flew 2/3 of the way there, and then bounced and rolled 40-50 more yards to the front of the green, where I sank a 35 foot putt for my only birdie of the day.
These types of shots, where I must read the grass lie and consider both the proper club and the swing speed, are perhaps the most satisfying part of golf. I knew that ball would travel a long way, even into the wind. I would rather play a game where all trajectories of shots are played, and not simply hit full, high shots all day long. There’s a minor resurgence in the use of hickory clubs for this reason, for golfers who want the joy of judging shots with greater roll.
I don’t much care for heavy rough lies. The range of lies in deep rough is such that success depends primarily on player strength.
Consider a golf course that has these characteristics:
A. Like the great modern courses of the current era, playing corridors are wide, averaging about 70-80 yards for par 4 and par 5 holes.
B. Fairways are narrow, only 25-40 yards wide, placing a premium on accuracy for skilled players who want to hit spinning approach shots. Expand fairway width as the fairway approaches the green, increasing roll for bounding shots.
C. The rest of the course is cut as short rough, which encourages a variety of different lies, with a high percentage of “flier” lies. Typically, this would be 0.75 – 1.50 inches for most grasses.
D. The course features a modest number of specimen trees to be navigated on a somewhat regular basis. The trees should be medium height, broad shouldered, with ample room underneath the foliage to stand, swing and play under. The average round includes two or five encounters where a tree’s presence must be considered.
E. The greens are surrounded by an equal measure of fairway and short rough for greenside recovery play.
F. Since the course encourages flier lies and long rollouts, the course should be long, perhaps a bit longer than the typical full-size course.
G. The ideal course also offers a grand variety of approach shots. The ideal course for considering shot trajectory merely shifts the balance to include a few more of these opportunities. This course should offer a comprehensive test of skill, with the occasional forced carry, and the approach shot that demands an aerial attack.
H. Everything else stays much the same as other great golf courses — undulating greens that dictate hole strategy, handsome sand bunkers at varying lengths from the tee and green, and natural tributaries — are all part of great course design. I can’t emphasize how much I've enjoyed the modern era of golf courses, and the state of the art agronomy that makes them firm, fast, and smooth.
Concluding Remarks
A stated goal of course design is to make the course difficult and challenging for an expert player, but playable and enjoyable (and not demoralizing) for the casual, less competitive player. The prevailing philosophy for deluxe designs is to provide a wide corridor for strategic positional play into difficult green complexes with undulating greens. Typically, these wide corridors are predominantly "ultra-short" grass with a narrow strip of rough between native ground and golf course. From ultra-short grass, a skilled player can execute a spinning shot to stop his/her approach near the point of impact.
Let’s consider an example hole, a straight par 4, with a green that slopes hard from right to left, with a large bunker guarding the right side of the green. All other things being equal, an approach shot from the left side is strongly favored. The expert player has great incentive to play left; even a wedge approach from the right rough won’t reliably spin to a stop. The casual player who misses right has a pleasing cushion of grass under the ball, and can more reliably hit a high, soft approach that clears the front hazard. From the left side, greater options from a short rough lie to bounce the ball in present themselves.
I struggle with short grass lies near the green, and believe they are generally more difficult for the casual player. A nightmarish scenario is being on short grass and needing to loft a pitch over a bunker onto the green. If the grass is long enough to offer any sort of cushion, it’s a reasonably enjoyable play with a lofted wedge, whether or not I am successful. But on short grass, my chances of a fat or thin shot are very high, perhaps 50% or more. I sometimes adopt a foolproof, less precise method of chipping, brushing the ground with a putting type stroke, just to avoid a bad outcome. I don’t practice the short game much, but it seems to me that only the best players are adept at short grass recovery shots with lofted clubs.
Do short grass green surrounds actually level the playing field for golfers? That appears to be the current philosophy. Or do they strongly favor the expert player, who can pitch the ball cleanly, and impart spin that makes the ball do the two bounce and check? Mishitting chip shots is demoralizing, and I question the modern design practice of ultra-short grass surrounding the greens. I can use putter for most of these shots, but that just means the green is effectively larger, and I’m just taking more putts per round, while only attempting a few chip and pitch shots each round.
To use a political analogy, short grass surrounds benefit the 1%. Remove the expert’s ability to spin the ball, and you take away a primary weapon. Make the expert hit a straight drive to gain that advantage. Don’t give the expert a supreme advantage around the green by making the whole green complex a short grass recovery area. Thirty years ago, pro players would sometimes “lay up” to full wedge distance, because they were unable to control a half wedge shot (40-60 yards) with spin. Modern equipment and improved technique have largely removed this layup decision.
There are problems with this proposed “ideal course for trajectory control”. Aesthetically, a course with wide, open playing fields, where 40-60% of the grass is a second longer cut, will look funny or ugly. Strategically, having a significant percentage of rough somewhat defeats the purpose of wide corridors for directional strategy. However, the penalty for playing from the “wrong” side of the corridor may be greater for the expert player, and perhaps less for the casual player. I can also imagine more agronomic problems if one attempted to maintain large pure stands of high quality golfing grass at “short rough” height. It seems you’d keep invasive plants out best by mowing at low heights. I could be wrong, though.
Because of the firm turf and commonly windy conditions, virtually every hole at Ballyneal periodically demands a punch or other low trajectory approach shot. Sometimes crosswinds on par 3s and shorter par 4s make the low trajectory ½ to ¾ shot seem appropriate. All par 5s are sometimes reached with a long, full second shot that bounds onto the green, even up the steeply uphill approach to the 4th green. The thought provoking wind holes at Ballyneal are the four long par 4 holes in downwind conditions, the 2nd, 6th, 10th and 18th, that make me consider a variety of options for approach shot height and weight. This is not particularly unique, but the playing conditions for this type of golf are uncommon, and Ballyneal’s fairway turf is a bit longer and more forgiving than most. But the same remarks could be made about the 4th, 8th, 9th, 12th and 18th holes at Pacific Dunes, where a long, controlled chip iron may look like the best play. I can only comment with authority on courses I’ve played multiple times, or studied through pictures and stories. The most underutilized educational tool on GolfClubAtlas is the anecdote, where a contributor explains how he/she played a hole, and how the architecture interacted with the shot decision and execution.
I’m not 100% sure whether all of this is true. Would a course with a narrow fairway, flier rough and a few well-placed trees be strategically superior? It may provide a superior pre-shot planning process, as the player considers the obstacles presented and decides the shot he/she will attempt. It also may support the effort to make golf more enjoyable for the casual player, while maintaining a high level of difficulty for the expert. I believe the idea is fresh enough to merit a theoretical discussion. Thanks for the opportunity to summarize my thoughts on the subject.