.... under Courses by Country and Architecture Timeline/CH Alison/1920.
Here is the link:
http://golfclubatlas.com/naruo-golf-club/If I told you that my top three favorite courses in the world are NGLA, PV, and TOC you might conclude that I cherish wild greens first and foremost. Fair enough; however, my top three are, in fact, NGLA, PV and Royal County Down. So what does that mean? Who knows (!) but every now and then you stumble upon a property that is so turbulent and so interesting that its design need not extend the property’s macro movements relentlessly throughout all eighteen greens. Put another way: if RCD's greens had contours like Machrihanish's, the golfer would be overwhelmed too often. The tee-to-green aspects of County Down are so compelling that its greens (hardly demure but not rambunctious) serve it just fine.
Naruo conjures up similar thoughts. Its land is so good and employed to such great effect that its Korai greens need not feature three foot interior undulations to celebrate the overall design. Its greens still dictate playing strategy from the tee on the basis of being small to medium sized and angled attractively to the line of play. Add in Alison’s bunkering schemes and you have a set of fascinating targets, albeit without putts that break 15 feet. Naruo’s tee shots hold great appeal, the approach shots offer diverse challenges and trying to recover is anything but straightforward. By any meaningful metric, this “position” course is full of appeal and is in the conversation for best in Japan.
On a side note, I apologize that my photographs were obtained with an iPhone. The morning featured hopelessly steady rain and I left my camera safe and dry in Osaka. Alas, the weather broke just after noon.
I was so enamored with the course that our host very kindly took me back around for some afternoon pics under grey skies with the only device I had available. Some of the pictures are fuzzy
because of my unfamiliarity with the iPhone and its zoom capabilities. Regardless, I hope that the wonders of the land are apparent.
After all, this tradition-steeped club and its fascinating golf deserve the best treatment. I am keen to go back, in large part because no modern architect designs anything similar to it today.
Best,