What is the shortest and hardest composite course the PGA Tour "could" play from, using every course in their rotation of courses?
Looking at the scoring averages from the 2020 season, this is the course I put together:
1: Pebble Beach no. 1 - 381 yard par 4 - (4.14 stroke average)
2: Monterey Peninsula Shore no. 6 - 570 yard par 5 - (5.02 stroke average)
3: Bay Hill no. 11 - 438 yard par 4 - (4.31 stroke average)
4: TPC Southwind no. 11 - 162 yard par 3 (3.10 stroke average)
5: Spyglass Hill no. 2 - 349 yard par 4 (4.01 stroke average)
6: PGA National no. 4 - 395 yard par 4 (4.22 stroke average)
7: Kapalua Plantation no. 11 - 161 yard par 3 (3.24 stroke average)
8: Olympia Fields North no. 12 - 389 yard par 4 (4.16 stroke average)
9: Monterey Peninsula Shore no. 18 - 381 yard par 4 (4.12 stroke average)
Out: 3,226 yard par 35 (36.32 stroke average10: Waialae no. 10 - 351 yard par 4 (4.08 stroke average)
11: Pebble Beach no. 5 - 188 yard par 3 (3.25 stroke average)
12: Waialae no. 15 - 398 yard par 4 (4.25 stroke average)
13: PGA National no. 1 - 365 yard par 4 (4.01 stroke average)
14: Pebble Beach no. 11 - 380 yard par 4 (4.10 stroke average)
15: PGA National no. 15 - 179 yard par 3 (3.29 stroke average)
16: Bay Hill no. 13 - 370 yard par 4 - (4.01 stroke average)
17: Pebble Beach no. 8 - 418 yard par 4 - (4.27 stroke average)
18: Pebble Beach no. 18 - 543 yard par 5 - (5.15 stroke average)
In: 3,192 yard par 35 (36.41 stroke average)Tot.: 6,418 yard par 70 (72.73 stroke average)I'm not sure what, if anything can be taken from this, but it is interesting to look at and think that a course just a bit longer than 6,400 yards could actually play nearly 3 strokes over par by PGA Tour standards.
Before I started looking into this I had the following expectations
- Both Riviera no. 10 and Pebble Beach no. 7 to make the list, neither did
- Water would be a very prevalent defense mechanism, it is only in play on 8 or 9 of the holes
- The longest par 3 would be less than 170 yards, there are only 18 par threes shorter than 170 yards on the PGA Tour, all but two have a negative stroke average
- The majority of holes would be on courses build before 1950, less than half actually were.
- Very few course would have more than on holes on the routing, 5 different courses had more than one hole listed
It very interesting that 16 of the 18 holes were from Hawaii, California, and Florida. Which makes me think that pretty much the only common trend among the courses may be the use of wind as a defense mechanism.
What are your thought, Could a short course in real life actually hold its own against the best of the best? Is there anything to be taken from the hardest short holes on the PGA Tour that could be applied to design in general?