Hole 4 - "Low - High" - 515 YardsThe first of five par-fives, the fourth hole is also the first in a series of split-fairway holes at the new Braemar Golf Course. Starting from a ridge to the west of the third green, the tee shot plays to the south, hugging a grove of oaks on the right, to a landing area that fades away from the golfer. Beyond this grove of trees, the expansiveness of the Braemar property comes into view for the first time.
This expansiveness didn't always exist, though. One reason (of many) that I'm not a big fan of trees on golf courses is because they tend to cover up the best land features of a site. At Braemar, this was very evident to me in the design of the fourth hole. For those of you who have played the original golf course, you may recall that this hole shares the same corridor as the old 14th hole. A scattering of ill-planted trees covered up a bluff that sat about thirty feet above the fairway. Right away, I zeroed in on the possibility of a series of bunkers cut into the slope that connected the two areas. From there, the strategy of the hole began to evolve with the split fairway idea, something I am always seeking out in my design efforts.
First Landing Area - BeforeFirst Landing Area - AfterWith a fifty-yard-wide landing area, the tee shot isn't likely to give golfers too much pause, but after the tee shot the golfer will be faced with their first make-or-break decision of the day; Low or High?
The smarter, but longer route requires an uphill second shot to a welcoming bowl fairway twenty feet above the lower left side of the hole. An expansive specimen oak is the aiming point for a right-to-left shot. From there, the golfer will find a more comfortable, but steeply downhill third shot that can be played with any club in the bag, from sand wedge to putter. One would best hedge their bet with a low bump that follows the slope of the hill to funnel their golf ball onto the green.
The shorter, more direct route is to play straight ahead to the lower fairway. This route is fraught with danger, though, as four fairway bunkers and a small pond pinch the fairway in an ever-shrinking bottleneck toward the putting green. Pull it off and you are left with a straightforward pitch into an open green where everything is right in front of you.
In order to make both routes work, I had to develop strong incentive for golfers to take the longer route to the right considering it was much higher than the direct route. I believe that the hazards we utilized here will be enough to deter even the most accurate golfers some of the time.
The aggressive golfer with thoughts of an eagle putt has two options, as well. The first option is to fire away straight at the green, but this route requires both distance control and accuracy. The second option is to bounce a wood into the far side of the higher landing area and let the ball roll down the slope onto the putting surface. Too hot, though, and it can run through the width of the green and find the left greenside bunker, or worse, the water.
The green extends out from the high second landing area to the left, contrasting nicely with the opposite feature found on the previous green. The putting surface tumbles out of the hillside led by a ridge that separates the front-right of the green from the back-right. A small shelf on the middle-right of the green makes for a tricky pin location, as seen in the aerial looking back down the fairway from behind the green.
You can view an aerial flyover of the fourth hole at
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_cOCHrdtSEc.