The greens at ANGC are very diffirent in any number of ways. Given the many hands that have worked on the course, it is hard to tell who did what, but the word "homogenous" is not a word that comes to mind.
Some differences:
- Large internal contours. Elevation changes that dominate the putting surface (3, 5, 13, 14, 18 - these tend to be but, are not always, old MacK greens that have changed the least)
- Small scale contours. Small, distinct dips and humps that extend no more than a couple of yards (1, 7,
- Flatish, though angled surfaces (2, 9, 11, 15, 17)
The last two categories, to my eye, are cleary greens revised or revuilt by people other than MacK.
Green approaches
It's never been very hard to distinguish aerial approaches to par 4's that are for the most part the result of the work of Maxwell or Jones. The remaining MacK approaches (3, 5, 11, 14 and maybe 18) all offer a ground approach as a real option.
I can't think of a single Maxwell/Jones par 4 approach where playing it on the ground is a real choice.
Along the same lines, am I the only one who thinks that the same archtitect couldn't have possibly designed the green surrounds on 10 and 15?
Bob