Tom,
On your courses where it’s pretty much one height of cut (Streamsong Blue and others), how wide are the corridors? You obviously wouldn’t dismiss a 75 yard wide fairway, or is my thinking off?
Joe:
Let's talk practically, shall we?
1. Riviera hosts a TOUR event every year. The TOUR prefers 26-yard-wide fairways, not 75. It looks from the pictures like the fairway used to be bigger on the left, but they have shrunk it down to be in line with everywhere else. They are more prone to use a tape measure than to use their imagination in setting fairway widths on TOUR.
2. Riviera is in Southern California, where they have to pay unbelievably high prices [as in over $1m per year] for water, and where the standard of conditioning for fairways is very high. Widening the fairways significantly would require more of both.
I've got no issue with a 75-yard-wide fairway if it's somewhere that is sustainable, where you can use fescue fairways, say. [Somewhere like High Pointe, or Bandon, or Barnbougle, or Tara Iti, which are all fescue.]
At Streamsong, we hashed it out with the superintendent, and he agreed that we weren't spending much more on maintenance with the wide fairways because they don't change the inputs much between fairways and rough - so it was only a question of more frequent mowing. If he'd said otherwise, we'd have 40-yard-wide fairways and a bunch of short rough, even if it didn't look as cool.
I think we can both agree we wouldn't recommend a 75-yard-wide fairway of bentgrass in the transition zone. Where Riviera falls on the spectrum is somewhere in between, but water prices in southern California are turning an environmental matter into an economic matter to which even the richest clubs have to pay attention.
I hadn't really meant to go into that sort of detail when I made my original question to Sean, though. I was just commenting on the practical truth that you have to stop mowing fairway somewhere, and it's usually not "into the trees".
Anyone paying any attention to the shape of the green or the fronting bunker would notice that more strategy would arise from shifting the fairway more to the left [so you could flirt with o.b. to try and get an opening into the left side of the green], rather than into the trees on the right.