Sean I also really like Sutton Coldfield. It’s great piece of land, lovely turf and an interesting golf course - a solid Doak 4 with one great par 3.
However I think the club makes a great deal of it’s famous designer and yet in the club history in the chapter called The Legacy of Dr MacKenzie, you can pick out the following:-
1919 Dr Mac “made a proposal keeping (only) 6 of the pre war holes.”
Holes 1, 2, 3, 4, 6(Mac’s 7th) are his “after that while some lines of the present course are recognisable the positioning of the tees & green is mostly unrecognisable “(from his plan.)
“Mac’s 15 is not unlike the present 12 although the green is positioned differently and the 18th is approximately the hole which is played now.2
The work took place in the early 20’s and was dogged by lack of funds after fires ate up more than the original total budget. This caused ructions within the club and it’s possible they abandoned some of his ideas. Mac was asked to provide alterations to his plan including lengthening several holes. The greens were constructed from sketches and he wasn’t involved with overseeing the work. These facts could also account for some of the later changes.
The club altered the order of holes and the ‘lines of play’ several times notably in 1939, 1951 and in 1976 following more fires.
I feel that the Club is guilty of overselling his involvement with the current design. Several times I have read that having 3 consecutive Par 5’s is an example of Mackenzie’s original thinking when in fact he had at least one of them as a par 4.
Hence I conclude this is definitely not a course that should be considered authentic Mac, but one that I would be happy to play again soon.