I'm having a hard time believing what I'm reading here. Aren't we supposed to be advocating for preservation and keeping the most iconic course in our entire sport as it lies? Who gives a rats behind if the winning score is in the mid to high teens under par as it has been for the last 5 or 6? I don't and with 1/18 weak holes? They are birdie opportunities IMO, not weak as I view the entire course in it's entirety and you have some brutes and you have some friendly handshakes. Obviously if the wind and rain comes TOC presents a much more difficult challenge, which is links golf. I'm totally against changing TOC routing for any Open Championship.
Those who disagree make yourself known so we can drain your brake fluid or use whatever the Russians are using now for clandestine poisoning.
Jeff,
This is all hypothetical and can be an interesting challenge to see whether we can mix some of the best Old Course holes with others by it so see if there is a real major championship course on the whole links without having to dig up and change holes on the Old Course.
Royal Melbourne and the Country Club do it for the professionals and revert back to the club courses after.
Adam's article is an eye opener - its another course on the New and Jubilee land which is more of a dunes land with mounding - it would be interesting what would be there as well.
To me the Old Course is the Mona Lisa of golf courses and needs to be untouched as it is however its time as an Open Championship course is coming to an end IMO unless there are changes to the ball and driving distances. If the powers still allow the golf ball and driver to carry on as they are plus pros beefing up to happen why not have Super Championship course to host the Open at St Andrews for the next 100 years and leave the Old Course as it is.
It has happened at Gleneagles with the Kings course used to host the Scottish Open for many years and now all Gleneagles events are on the PGA Centenary. Same for the Celtic Manor. The demands for hosting major golf events has increased more in the last 20 years than the 100 years before it.
The course record is 61 (Ross Fisher 2017) and it wont be that much long that it will be a 59 or 25 under 4 round winning score IMO.
Cheers
Ben