If you missed watching Dechambeau and Westwood play the 4th hole yesterday, video of the "highlights" can be found here:
https://www.golfchannel.com/news/top-slice-shank-fourth-hole-adventures-bryson-dechambeau-and-lee-westwoodAnd I mean, maybe it was just three bad swings from the two hottest players in the world. But it reminded me of something.
The 9th hole at Wolf Run was never very popular with stronger players, at least in my experience. I'm a hack, so I had no unique qualms with it. But I played with a scratch friend a few times, and I think the three worst shots I ever saw him hit all happened on that hole. Cold dribble-tops right into the stream in front of the tee.
I also recall a very skilled friend of his, also a scratch-or-better player, topping a ball from the same tee into the same stream.
It's not news when I hit a cold dribble-top. But those two guys were probably the two best players I ever played with at Wolf. For them, it was a funky layup tee shot to a sort of angled landing zone... more angled the further down the fairway you go... with harsh penalties for a miss. In other words, it wasn't totally dissimilar to the 4th at Sawgrass, which also requires a funky layup tee shot to a landing zone increasingly angled the further you go and harshly punishing if you miss.
And maybe it's just a coincidence... but is this a thing?
Are there certain Bermuda Triangle-esque tee shots where you feel like gremlins steal your talent and leave you regularly just topping, shanking, and otherwise chopping it up?
Are there other tee shots where you've noticed even highly-skilled players suddenly looking like 18 handicaps with much more frequency than you'd expect?
And if so, are there consistencies in the types of challenge those shots present? Is it always a high stakes shot to an increasingly angled target, for example?