Pat, you’re definitely right about Town & Country and the way it smashes head-on into slopes, much the same way White Bear does. I can’t think of many other courses that are so aggressive about playing over, up, or down hills, head-on and with very little camber. I would say the land at Midland Hills is relatively similar in its rolling character to that at White Bear or T&C, but the course seems to cling to the side of slopes more often as opposed to smacking into them head-on like White Bear. Dan Kelly and I touched on this a bit during our round at Midland Friday – there’s something to be said for the way the slopes at Midland allow a player to use them for purpose, especially off the tee. I haven’t played it enough to know for sure, but it’s not hard for me to imagine someone fading a ball off 2 tee and riding the slope to get a little extra runout, or hugging the inside corner at 4 to get a little more runout than the person who goes down the right side and more straight up the slope. Those are just two examples, and White Bear probably offers some of the same opportunities – a tee shot down the right side on 5 will surely get a little more runout than one down the left – but it does feel like more tee shots at White Bear are going to hit into the front of a hill for most players and lose some steam. It seems to me that’s a big part of why it’s the longest 6400 yard course I’ve ever played. And it’s THE thing that stands out to me most about the course. I’ve never played anywhere else that demands a player negotiate so many slopes and rolls head-on.
And here’s another thing about White Bear that I think is interesting as I’ve thought about it, even though I don’t have a clue what it means or how I really feel about it, or if I even have a feeling about it. But it’s interesting to me that, at White Bear, the holes I would consider hilliest seem like they mostly finish at about the same elevation they started. It’s a wild, heaving ride down 1, 4, 5, 7, 9, 10, 15, 16, 17 and 18. And yet, it seems like most of those holes finish on a green that’s roughly the same altitude as the tee (18 is probably a fair amount lower, but it definitely starts low, moves high, and then plummets). Meanwhile, holes like 2, 3, 6, 8, and 12 seem to feature broader slopes. The journey on those holes isn’t defined as much by the humps and bumps along the way, and yet we definitely finish significantly lower than where we started on each of them, and that generally doesn’t happen on the more rolling holes there with exception of maybe 13 and maybe maybe 2.
I don’t know if there’s anything actually significant about that pattern, and I don’t know if it was done on purpose (by Watson… LOL), and I don’t really know what to think about it. But it at least seems like it might mean that every hole requires the player to take its slopes into account in one way or another, and that almost every hole presents the chance that a player may need to gauge how far up/downhill any given shot might play, and that each hole gives the opportunity to try to strategically attack the slopes to create easier subsequent shots – trying to minimize blindness or sidehill lies and whatnot. And there’s something I find interesting about that.