Golf Club Atlas
GolfClubAtlas.com => Golf Course Architecture Discussion Group => Topic started by: Jason Blasberg on January 02, 2006, 11:50:04 AM
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In looking through my Tobacco Road yardage book I nominate the following:
"Tobacco Road is not an overly long golf course, but it incorporates many other elements to test your game. We highly recommend that you use the following handicap guide to determine the set of tees you play. This will enhance your experience greatly.
Yardage and Ratings
Marker Name Par Slope Rating Yardage Recommendations
Ripper 71 150 73.2 6532 Men 5.0 and below
Disc 71 141 70.8 6297 Men 5.1 to 14.0
Plow 71 131 68.6 5886 Men 14.1 to 22.0
Cultivator 71 115 66.41 5094 Men 22.1 and above"
I've listed only the Mens recommendations out of laziness.
Note, I disqualify the disclaimer at the Black Course due to over exposure.
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I don't know if this qualifies as a disclaimer, but I had noticed the following on the Hawktree website.
"Like many of the modern golf courses, Hawktree, has four teeing areas per hole. By allowing golfers to change teeing areas within an 18 hole round, we are able to create eight unique ways to play and enjoy the course. The above chart shows you how this works."
I was curious about the need until I noticed par 5 yardages from the tees I would play.
512 519 529 516 513
Stanley Thompson would not be pleased. He used to draw bar graphs of the yardages of his courses to verify variety in distance.
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Not sure there are disclaimers on the course or the card, but . . . My vote would go for Beachwood GC or Straight Outta Compton.
The world's most dangerous golf courses
Emmaus, Pa. 20th March - Mens Health magazine of the US for April has listed its 10 most dangerous golf courses in the world.
• Lost City Golf Course, Sun City, South Africa. The 13th green is fronted by a stone pit filled with crocodiles, some 15 feet long.
• Elephant Hills Country Club, Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe. The fairways are sometimes marked by craters caused by mortar shells fired across the Zambezi River.
• Compton Par 3 Golf Course, Compton, California. High calibre excitement - home to the Crisps versus Bloods, Ryder Cup style competition.
• Machrie Hotel Golf Course, Islay, Scotland. On this old fashioned course virtually every drive and approach is blind, played over huge sand dunes.
• Scholl Canyon Golf Course, Glendale, California. Built on a landfill site it ran into problems when golfers snagged clubs on buried tyres and methane gas rose up from the divot holes.
• Pelham Bay and Split Rock Golf Course, Bronz, New York. Pelham's remote location makes it ideal for unfortunate souls. In a recent 10-year period, 13 bodies were said to have been found.
• Singapore Island Country Club, Singapore. In the 1982 Singapore Open pro, Jim Stewart, encountered a 10 foot cobra. He killed it, only to watch in horror as another snake emerged from its mouth.
• Beachwood Golf Course, Natal, South Africa. Mrs Mollie Whitaker successfully executed a bunker shot, but was then attacked by a monkey which leaped from the bush and tried to strangle her. An alert caddie dispatched the ape.
• Plantation Golf and Country Club, Gretna, Louisiana. With 18 holes shoved into 61 acrea (less than half the norm) players must huddle against a protective fence while waiting their turn to play.
• Lundin Links, Fife, Scotland. A most enjoyable links course near to St Andrews unless you happen to be Harold Wallace who got hit by a train when crossing over the track behind the 5th green.
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Garland,
Given the topography at Hawktree, it is fair to say that the three-shot holes do not play to the scorecard yardage, in fact only #14 would remotely resemble it. #5 plays progressively uphill, and the tee shot carries a diagonal hazard (the creek), enabling the hole to play a variety of distances. Both #7 and #10 are extremely downhill, and #18 is substantially uphill again.
I guess what I am trying to say is that the scorecard is not the best measure of yardage variety, the interaction between the topography and routing is much more accurate.
TK
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(http://images.snapfish.com/345945%3A62%7Ffp338%3Enu%3D3268%3E695%3E73%3A%3EWSNRCG%3D323342%3B57%3B766nu0mrj)
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Tyler,
Thanks for the info. In my trip to ND last year I had time to pick two of three and chose Bully Pulpit and The Links of ND. Next year (oops it is already this year) I hope to do all three.
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At Wolf Creek, they make you sign a golf cart liability disclaimer.
Worst Course Disclaimer:
At Muirfield, "Women and Dogs not allowed"
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Worst Course Disclaimer:
At Muirfield, "Women and Dogs not allowed"
Muirfield does not sound like it's for me, my three favorite things in life, in no particular order:
Women, golf and dogs!
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John Goldman,
The Elephant Hills disclaimer is no longer around. There hasn't been gunfire there for over twenty years.
Cary,
I think politcal correctness has even reached Muirfield. Methinks the sign has been altered
Bob.
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My favorite is the sign you walk by as you're about to walk behind the Road Hole green:
DANGER
GOLF IN PROGRESS
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No preferred lies! We play golf here. Taconic
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Tom D.,
You beat me to it! I love that sign.
If my memory serves me correctly, there's a similar one at Elie.
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Also at the Old Course, "No fouling" with a very explicit international type picture of a dog defecating with the red slash through it.