I recall a lot of discussion on the intricacies of courses such as TOC and Augusta. And I recall players stating that the pin position at Augusta dictates their tee-ball position. Recently, we held the Jacobs Creek Open at Royal Adelaide, and if I was trying to educate someone on how to play that course, well you need to understand the greens and the likely pin positions first.
All of this got me to thinking - 'what is the best way to walk a course?' Should we start at #18 green, and walk backwards hole by hole till we finish at #1 tee? That way, we understand the green structure, then determine the preferred line, then work out the tee-shot, etc.
I've walked a few courses, and discover the mystery of a hole at the green, then want to go back to the shot point to re-evaluate the preferred line. But I wouldn't bother with such a technique on an over-watered target golf course.
If this is a better way, does anyone actually do it this way? Where have you done it, or seen it done? It would be tricky during play, effectively going against the tide for the 18 holes!
James B