I had the great fortune to tour some of America’s best courses last month and meet up with a fabulous collection of GCA members (many of which I am indepted to for their incredibly generous hospitality).
This was my first trip to the States and it was fantastic to see the work of so many American architects including:
Coore and Crenshaw (Hidden Creek);
Fazio (Galloway National);
Travis (Garden City);
Flynn (Rolling Green and Philadelphia CC);
MacDonald (Merion) sorry Wayne, just joking;
Hanse (Rustic Canyon);
Nicklaus (Angeles National);
Strantz (MPCC);
MacKenzie (Pasatiempo) and
Nevvile/Grant (Pebble Beach).
However the real highlight of the trip was getting to meet so many of the characters that I had been reading on Golf Club Atlas over the last 8 years.
The trip started in LA, within 1 hour of getting off the plane I was on the practice fairway at Angeles National.
Close to downtown LA and at $70 I thought the course was reasonably good. The condition was great and the location spectacular. I thought quite highly of the design of the course too…until the next day I met up with David Moriarty and David Stamm for a game at Rustic Canyon and found out what could be done on such a site. Despite the hype I had been reading on here for so long, I was blown away by Rustic Canyon. I was expecting a clever course, I wasn’t expecting something so spectacular. Too many standout holes to mention, but needless to say, Gil Hanse is the architect that I am most looking forward to seeing more work of.
Next stop was Philadelphia where I was very kindly picked up at the train station by Wayne Morrison. I survived a brief interrogation as to what exactly I was doing in LA with David Moriarty and upon surviving the interrogation allowed to tour of some of the cool stuff in Philadelphia.
First stop was Merion. This was a course that had particularly intrigued me as we have no very high quality courses built on clay in Australia. And it didn’t disappoint. A very special place. A particular highlight was meeting up with Tom Paul out on the course. After the round he was excited that I had got to meet local legend and Walker Cup captain Buddy Marucci. To be honest I was just excited to meet Tom Paul.
What I loved about Merion:
-The simple yet brilliant strategic use of the land on the 5th hole.
-The contours of the 7th green (below)
The par 3 3rd and 17th holes.
-The proshop. A warning to anyone visiting Merion for the first time. You will need a minimum of $500 to $1000 for the pro shop. Everything in it is first class –shirts, beer mugs, wine racks, travel bags.
-The green contours in general.
-Hearing Matt Shaffer’s stories about working at Augusta National.
What I didn’t love:
-I found the par 5 holes slightly disappointing. Both have blind second shots and the 4th in particular doesn’t allow for much variety in play. The shot from the top of the hill looks thrilling but one would rarely play form there. Hard to criticize the routing though as the holes around it are routed beautifully.
-The tenth hole. A good hole but didn’t really have the great risk reward element that great short 4s such as Royal Melbourne’s tenth hole.
-The bunkers in the quarry.
-The fact the course interested me so much that I have read 112 pages of Merion threads over the last 2 months.
Next stop was Philadelphia County Club. Driving down the driveway, this was a course I thought I would not like, lots of rough and lots of big white bunkers. I must say I really didn’t like the bunkering here at all. To me it looked out of scale and the shapes were unattractive.
However the internal green contours were some of the best I have ever seen and a real highlight of the trip. I think it just goes to show that if you have a good routing and green complexes, then you are a long way towards having a good or great course.
Rolling Green was next on the tour and a great chance to meet with Mayday Malone. This is a man who knows his golf course. I had a great tour of the course and great to see the course seemed to be heading in the right direction. The par 3s were a real highlight, with a great mix a strong long and short par 3s.
Next stop Atlantic City, New York, and dinner with Tom Paul and Pat Mucci…..