Jordan - where did you play? It's been magnificent weather in the northwest, I just returned from a week-and-a-half there. No surprise it's fast & firm this time of year.
Question - you described the bunker as "unexpected". Did you know the bunker was there, or was it just closer than you thought? If you had known the bunker's proximity to the back of the green, would you have played the shot differently?
If you weren't aware of the bunkers presence or proximity and you played the shot you played thinking "a little over the back isn't bad", then the course fooled you into thinking you made the right play. Would it be better to have that bunker more overtly visible to more clearly show the strategy & consequences - or is the fact the bunker was "unexpected" better?
Steve,
I played, for the first time, Skagit Country Club, and it was surprisingly good, and I would venture to say very good in some places.
However, the course featured very small greens, which it needed due to it's lack of length, and it only had two par-4's over 400 yards. The 11th hole was 343 yards and I hit a good drive and was left with a little 55 yard pitch. The pin was back, and though I saw the bunker behind the green, I was not aware of it's proximity.
I hit a pitch exactly how I wanted, it one hopped into the bunker. My ball mark couldn't have been more than two feet from the hole, so it was really a shot I felt ok with, though the result was not too great. However, I was left with a bunker shot, downhill, that was literally about five or six yards, with the green sloping away. It was one of the toughest bunker shots I have ever played.
I don't really think the course fooled me, I think I was dumb and didn't take a little walk to the green like I should have. However, if I had played the course before I would have known about that bunker. And, I think that knowing the close proximity to the green of a bunker makes the shot really interesting. The rest of the round the feature was used several times to pack pins (there simply one front pin for the tournament!) and each time I had a short pitch or wedge to those greens. Out of the four, I went +2, all from inside 95 yards. The first time, as mentioned, I playd into the bunker. The other three I was dead scared and while I managed two on the green once I left the ball short in a bunker trying to run it up!
Personally, the fact that I had never experienced something like that, with bunkers so close to the green that they made normally simple wedge shots tough may be the reason I am so in awe of the feature. It was simply the best way to defend par on a short golf course I have seen in a long time. It seemed so simple yet effective.
What are other courses that use this feature so greatly?