A GCA friend played golf once with an esteemed architect. The friend said Hey, esteemed architect, this breaks left, right? The architect, incredulously, uttered/yelled what? We laughed. A complete misread by the friend.
Green slope does that, I'm told. I played my current hidden gem again this weekend, and the superintendent/course owner mentioned to us that the greens were running at ten at their fastest. The same GCA friend said Well, a few weeks back, you had them up to twelve. The super said No, it's that people don't see the slopes that I do, don't see the breaks and undulations that I know, and then they set it straight in their heads that the greens are a certain speed, based on stimp.
Raise your hand if you've ever measure a green with a stimp meter. I know, mine are also down...both of them. Raise your hand if you have the true 3-D perspective to read a green. I don't. I learned this as an assistant coach. The head coach was our art teacher, and he saw breaks and movement that escaped me. It took five years of tutelage for me to realize, his eyes and brain see things that I do not, can not, will not ever.
The thread started by Tom Doak about his main takeaway from Houston got me thinking about these events in my golf awakening. I invite you to comment herein, about stimp, green slope, counter slope, and share your own stories.