The par 4 382-yard 11th at Asheville Municipal Golf Course (nee Buncombe): did Donald Ross invent the half-pipe!?
This is one of the most-amazing holes I ever have seen. You play up a half-pipe to a green tucked in an amphitheater. The hole looks a million miles long; I'm beginning to see that one aspect of Ross's mastery was the ability to make holes appear much longer than they actually are. I think he mastered this for mountainous and relatively flat terrain alike.
(I can imagine him walking this property, sussing out the contours of the pipe and finding a ledge that in his mind's eye transformed to an amphitheater. His choices of green sites, on both this hole and the entire back nine, was inspired!)
As far as I know, this hole is untouched from Ross's day. Can you imagine playing this hole with old equipment? And by untouched, I mean to include little for preservation of fairway and green lines, etc. Would love to know others' thoughts on how the hole might have played originally, plus on how the hole / conditions should be changed to be brought back to the original. (I should note, the actual course is listed on the National Register of Historic Places; it is the oldest municipal course in NC.)
From the tee -- should there be rough up the sides of the half-pipe? I fully understand the maintenance challenge of shorter grass up there, but I can't help thinking the hole would be more fun, if easier, to play, watching shots bounce all over the place:
The green -- as you can see by looking at the photo from the tee, almost certainly this green originally extended to or over the precipice, creating a false front. What about sides and back? Where would you extend the green? And would you cut down the amphitheater grass, graduate the rough, or leave as is?
Here's another look at the hole from behind (some distance) and left. I love how Ross stuck that bunker right where the typical right-hander's miss lands -- and not to make things easier! (Ever notice how many times Ross put bunkers in that location for the purpose of adding challenge, whereas many modern architects will usually make that area easier, sometimes using bunkers to "save" shots?):
Mark