I saw hours upon hours of the Open last week on television but what I didn't see was anyone in Hell or Hill or Strath or the Principal's Nose. True, the Road bunker/Road combo was as fierce as ever but many of the most famous hazards of The Old Course didn't seem to dominate play as they once did. It makes me wonder if Macdonald would copy the same features from The Old Course today as he did from over a century ago? Perhaps the beauty of the numerous hazards at The Old Course are that as some phase out, others phase in?
Not too long ago, Nicklaus was thrashing around in Hell bunker but now that it is surrounded by rough, I just didn't see anyone come even close to getting in it. Why would Macdonald even pick up on Hell's presence if it plays such a minor role? Clearly, the wind direction has a lot of say as to which features stick out but this was a windy championship. True, the fourteenth never played into the wind so Hell rarely saw action. However, I contend that with hickories and even Tony Penna drivers/blade irons, be it downwind, no wind or into the wind, a large hazard that falls 120 yards short on a 560 yard hole always played a role. Its presence was felt more than today's 620 yard hole where the fairway no longer feeds balls into it. In fact, with all the surrounding rough, it would take a true miss, and not just a marginal shot, for a player to wind up anywhere near Hell. In many ways, the fifth hole with its spectacular very front and very back hole locations (the back one was 82 yards
onto the green) played as the more interesting three shotter.
The features that DID seem to wreck the most havoc was the swale in front of the fifth green, the large and deep Cockle bunker at the seventh, and the false front and back at the twelfth. For instance, in Macdonald's day, Cockle was strictly a second shot feature and frankly, since it is removed from the green, how much of a factor really was it? Today's drives of 350 yards now can find it and we all saw many people including Tiger have to splash out sideways from its ten foot deep vertical face. Today, it represents a GREAT central feature on a short par four.
Hence this post: Has technology changed which hazards are now the most relevant at The Old Course - and in golf course architecture? And if so, which ones? And which modern designers will be quick to pick up on this shift?
Cheers,