TEPaul,
You raise some interesting points although I am not sure what the focus of the tread was. So if my random ramblings, arent quite on the mark, I apologise.
One of the things I am thinking of here is the island green. It would appear to me that the ideal maintanance meld for an island green is soft. I mean it would be funny to see Sawgrass play so firm and fast that players were bumping and running it onto the 17th green (I am sure Mickelson could) but it aint going to happen. The IDEAL mainanance meld for that hole is a relatively soft green. The length of the hole however does not mean that the green needs to be very soft. This is different to an island green on a Par 5 hole. Here the ideal maintenance meld is a VERY soft green that can be held by long iron and wood shots. If the green is firmed up at all, then the player must lay up to hit a wedge in and the strategic design (second shot option) of the hole is lost.
Now, I think it would be very hard to argue against the concept of universal green conditions (firmness and speed) across an entire course. Therefor, what, I think happens on some courses is a sort of "lowest common denominator" effect. That is, if one green is required to be soft (because it is on an island, or is fronted by a large water hazard), then all greens must be the same softness, whether it is in that hole's interest from an ideal maintenance meld point of view or not.
Therefor if a course has an island green (or the like) then the maintenace meld that this hole REQUIRES can possibly have a negative effect on the ideal maintenance meld of upto 17 other holes on the course.
You, or other people may have played courses where this has happenned. I havent, I am just hypothysising. Could the RTJ led trend of modernising older courses by placing water hazards close to greens have had the effect of altering, for the worse, the ideal maintenance meld of the whole course? I dont know, maybe someone can answer that.
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One course that did spring to mind when I read the topic, and
I know it is uncool to mention it on this site, was Augusta National. Although weather conditions have not always allowed, I think they have made a reasonable effort, for the Masters tournament, to have firm greens despite the number of hazards that front greens. What factors allow them to be able to do this?