A few more quotes from the Naysayers... for your reference.
I think that bunkers that dot the fairways like landmines that are virtually impossible to see and you can't really play out of are not the kind of penal I like. I prefer bunkers I can see, can avoid if I try and can play out of with a well struck shot to save par or even make birdie from if I really put a good swing on it. Bunkers that tour pros can't even consider getting up and down from and many cases can't even get out of in a single try are just too penal and test your luck more than your game. Perhaps that's why only bombers who blow it past all these bunkers or no names we've never heard of tend to win at British Opens. It's either the big hitters or the luckiest guy you've never heard of who wins lately over there.
Is that the fairest test of the true champion golfer?
I just don't believe it is anymore. I believe there are better tests to determine the best player without goofy stuff like the road hole or a bunker that's so penal it can cost the best player the whole shebang because he ends up in jail with a beautifully struck shot that just ends up getting swallowed up after a gust of wind nudges it into an impossible lie in a sinkhole.
Some people like seeing the fates mess with great players while they sit on their barstools in the pub and snicker and guffaw watching on the telly. Some find it very entertaining to see a tour pro with a golf ball a few inches from a mud wall as tall as he is that stands between him and what was good score. That's why those moments get replayed over and over on the Golf Channel....like watching a car accident.
In my mind fate shouldn't have such a strong say in determining what should be a test of skill. In most golf tournaments it doesn't. At the British Open....especially at St. Andrews, it does.
I love it when people say that that playing in that crap is what REAL golf is all about. What do the Scots say? "Nay wind,nay rain,nay golf"
Yeah thats great. Looks like a real blast. Thats why when it blows you get flukes like "Louis whatever his name is,and Curtis,and Hamilton and Lawrie. The winners are basically determined by which end of the crap weather and wind you get. And of course which way your ball ends up bouncing either into the gourse or into a bunker or the heather.
Thanks but i'll pass. But this is an "opinion" Forum and thats just mine.
St. Andrew's, apart from its historical significance, does not thrill me. Perhaps if you are there and play it, it takes on more meaning, but the course does not bring on the warm and fuzzies for me.
I do like some links style courses, but St. Andrew's is just not one of them.
As I said before, I don't expect everyone to like TOC, but these comments fascinate me.
K