John Kirk,
You rang ?
BCrosby,
I believe the 18th tee was to the right, not left of the 17th green, not far from the 16th tee. It was originally a straight hole with the green where the current practice tee sits.
I believe it was shorter than the current version.
Ryan,
If you think that the field drawings of the greens on graph paper represent "as builts" you may be in the minority.
What many overlook, when looking at photos or the graphed schematics, is a critical factor ...... the wind.
Seminole sits ON the Atlantic Ocean and in some areas the course sits high above the Ocean which means that strong winds buffet the golf course almost daily.
With high stimp readings, introducing more contour would create havoc.
A green that may seem benign to you, can be ferocious if you think about the combination of contouring/slope, speed and wind.
# 10 is a perfect example. It looks benign, rather mundane, until the speed and winds are up, then, it becomes frightening.
I've seen well hit balls land at the mid-point and spin back into the water in a north wind.
The same for # 4.
Did you hit that green in regulation ?
Right now many greens in South Florida are fairly soft, with balls leaving deep pitch marks. When # 4 green is fast and firm, just keeping your ball on the green with your approach or recovery is difficult, and putting, as you sit high up on the course and exposed to the wind, can be difficult at best.
What's different and/or wrong with the bunkering on # 14, 16 and # 18 ?
What changes were made to # 7 ?
Why were you disappointed ?
It's a great hole in most eyes.
And, what plans were you looking at ?
What restoration work are you referencing ?
Would you advocate returning # 18 to it's original configuration ?