Tom - I am curious as to how you think about placing bunkers for the long hitting scratch player of today and their impact on the bogey golfer. My thought is if you bunker a course “perfectly” for the scratch player you’ve now created cross bunkers for the rest of the golfers.
Mike:
That was part of our thinking behind having so few bunkers at Memorial Park. They are a problem for average golfers, but Brooks Koepka is only worried about bunkers when he's in the UK. If you put a bunker 325 yards from the tee to catch him, he doesn't really care unless the hole is more than 500 yards, otherwise he's hitting 9-iron out of the bunker and NBD.
But I don't really worry about guys who hit it 300+ for most of my projects. They are not the customer base.
* If I did want to worry about them, I'd probably build 3-4 holes that restrict their drives. I was always taught not to "take away the driver," and usually I haven't, but if the ruling bodies are going to let drives continue to get longer, that principle cannot hold.
I was surprised at reading the new book on Herbert Fowler to read his essay "Is Golf Becoming Too Easy?" written December 24, 1913 in reaction to changes in equipment. At the end he talks about the need for more cross hazards:
"Every course should have several holes where either natural or artificial hazards curtail the long drivers from getting nearer the putting green than a certain distance. Given a course where the ground runs well at a hole of 440 yards, a hazard placed across the fairway at 240 yards will entail an approach shot of 200 and odd yards. Such a hole will always prove interesting, and
it is not too much to ask that the very long hitters should at times (as in the case of short holes) be asked to approach a putting green on more or less equal terms with those who cannot hit so far."