Pat,
Why should gca's respond to a post that starts out by postulating about what Tour Pros do when the chances of that 0.000025% of the golfing population would ever show up at a course we remodel or build is remote? Chances of a PGA Tour event coming to one of my courses is less than the chance of me getting struck by lightning.......
And the last time I saw a Tour Pro use a running approach, it was Tiger Woods when he had a case of diarreah......and was heading for the rest room.
I agree with Paul Cowley's direct statement and Tom's implication that a frontal opening to at least part of virtually all greens is necessary for average players to negotiate the course. This is another old story, but it illlustrates the point:
Once upon a time, a famous architect renovated an equally famous club. In the process, he added a carry bunker on the par-3 9th hole. The female members – none of whom was named Martha Burke – were furious. "Mr. Famous Architect," they said, "Do you know that we can't carry the ball far enough to get on that green? And the bunker is so deep, we can't get out of it without hitting backwards? But you added a pond, meaning we would have to deliberately play into the water? Why, that bunker ends our round right there."
Mr. Famous Architect, rather than being contrite, thought for a second, and replied, "Had I known that, I would have put it in the 1st fairway."
Of course, most of us would not feel comfortable saying that, but that gca was near enough to retirement, and his kids were through college......
I read with interest Tom D's thoughts on how to encourage the running approach. I think they would work as well as any. I am not sure how backing bunkers affect all of this.
Perhaps Larry Rodgers can chip in, but if you are at a club and are getting a new irrigation system, to allow proper watering of the approach areas, I would suggest you make sure the approach gets covered as a separate zone worthy of individual head control and control zoning. I would also make sure the green and surrouds get back to back part circle coverage.
Lastly, in any remodel, I would make sure the front area has at least 3 and preferabley 4% slope to make sure it drains well. Keep any collection basin or swale at least 10% of the approach shot distance from the front of the green to avoid soggy areas. Also, make sure there is no overland flow of any substantial acreage cutting right in front of the green.
Those technical additions to the design gives the super a fighting chance for firm and fast, unless the real firm and fast at his/her club is the greens chairman's attitude - He says "No" very fast, and stays very firm in his convictions.....