The two most irritating courses in the world are Royal Worlington & Newmarket and Wolf Point. Why can’t we play courses this good all the time as opposed to ever so rarely?!
They both demonstrate that you don't need great land to have great golf. Alas, you need something more elusive: great architecture layered on top of firm playing surfaces.
Both courses employ a similar, winningly simple recipe:
* Bunkers: placed only where someone is likely to want to hit it; otherwise, why build it? In the case of Wolf Point, 60 get the job done.
* Greens: complex and intense; building up green pads to make interesting targets is the easiest, most cost effective way to create engaging golf on featureless land.
* Short grass: plenty of it. It scares good players, they lose control when their ball drifts and the weaker player is comfortable, watching his ball bumble along and knowing he can get a clean strike on his next shot, even if it is with the putter.
* Playing surfaces: firm, bouncy-bounce and as the legend Don Mahaffey notes, only maintain things that make the golf better.
* Routing: compact, walker friendly with 18 holes done in under three hours.
Only the trees tell you that this Double Green isn't at St. Andrews.So ... why don't more courses/clubs follow suit? Honestly? How many of the ~16,000 in the United States vaguely fit the bill? Fewer than 100? For sure, less than 200. That’s ~ 1% - Yikes!
For those of us who study this stuff, it's irritating on several levels. First, we should have many more 'great' courses – what a disservice has been perpetrated on us golfers, especially in America. Second, when did needlessly blowing through money become chic? Third, none of this is a revelation: the right formula was revealed decades ago yet we blunder along today.
There are a few rays of hope out there: Rustic Canyon, Wild Horse, Common Ground, St. Andrews Beach but we desperately need more people, especially developers, to see and embrace this brand of inexpensive joy.
See if you agree after reading its profile, found here:
http://golfclubatlas.com/wolf-point-ranch/The commonsense approach on display at Wolf Point yields thrilling golf. In my opinion, it isn't a way forward, it is
the way forward.
Best,