Undaunted by being 3 down after 3, Goswick ups its game again at the 4th. The first par 5 on either course and it's a ripper! As an aside, whilst Silloth's 13th may be, as mooted last week, the best par 5 in GB&I, I think that, as I suggested last weekend at Silloth, Goswick has, overall, a significantly better set of par 5s than its opponent. Goswick's 4th hole has a tee shot similar in many ways to the previous hole. Dogleg left to right, tempting an attempt to carry, or at least take on, the inside of the corner. Like the 3rd, however, I don't think there's any real advantage in this. For most, the second will be a lay up without a helping wind (which there may well be). If having a go at the green, however, it's narrow, very narrow. Missing right brings a bank and an elongated hollow into play, missing left requires a chip up a bank, over a slight ridge and from either side getting it on the green is no gimme. A really strong response to the plight Goswick finds itself in.
Silloth, however, can see Goswick's 4th and raise it. Driving from the ridge of the dune the 3rd green is benched in, we play to a blind fairway, picking one of the industrial buildings on the horizon as our aiming point. There's a large dune on the left and the hole doglegs to the left. It's easy to run out of fairway and the rough on the right is not to be toyed with. The smart play here is rarely driver. Hit something that will hit the fairway and roll out to the right side, to give a good view of the green. And what a green! The green itself is a really good one, almost a flattened out Biarritz (thanks Niall for that thought) but that isn't what is notable. See Ran's review of Silloth for the steep rough drop off on both sides. Miss either side and you can be going backwards and forwards across this green for a while. A truly memorable, unique golf hole.
Goswick must wonder what it can do to compete. It throws in a really, really good par 5 and Silloth summons a great par 4. Silloth takes the hole and leads 4 up.