1) How many times have you played it?-I have played it exactly four times--the first time being my most memorable. I almost sodded my pants I was that excited. I spent the better part of two weeks in St. Andrews, forgoing seeing the other Championship venues other then Carnoustie. I made it a point to walk the Old Course everyday. I learned more about the course by watching others play it. Choosing to pick a certain place and just sit there for hours with a lunch consisting of those egg salad sandwiches and Diet Coke bought from the cafeteria above the St. Andrews Wollen Mill Shop alongside the 18th.
"I now am the only American duffer who ever went to St. Andrews and did not play a round on the famous "Old Course." But I can tell ever so much more about a course, watching other people play it.--O.B. Keeler from What I Saw of British Links, The American Golfer, September 1926
My favorite observation spot? Sort of tucked away in a gorse free clearing alongside the 11th tee, where you can see the all of the happenings; from left to right, part of #12, #11, #7, #10, #8 and #9. One spot six holes you can observe play--AMAZING!
2) What do you *currently* think of TOC?-Despite all of the changes to the sand hazards which are giving it a very well kept--on its way to fast becoming an Americanized appearance. I still think that this is the place were anyone that really wants to understand what the Game is all about; how it is played and how diverse each and every persons mindset can be, they need to go there. I think that marketing the Old Course and St. Andrews is a very BAD thing. This is the main reason why so many don't understand the course and that it will ultimately be changed further and further. (Look at the Eden Course for example and how such a wonderful course has been decimated by the need for a driving range that for the most part is never used by the tourists that frequent the Grey Auld Toon. Tourists coming in are usually part of a Group Tour where they frequent for one day and one night. They come and go faster then a bullet train, yet they are the ones the Links Trust cannot seemingly do without. Yes, they bring money into the town, and while it may be a good thing to the heartbeat of the community, ultimately commericialism will dictate a false sense of reason.
3) Is your current opinion of TOC higher, lower or roughly the same now than it was before you'd ever actually played it? In other words, what do you think about the course now relative to when you'd only heard stories about it, seen photos of it or watched tournaments on television played on it?
Darren, I'm a devout believer in God, yet I'm hoping and praying that my Higher Power (You know, FEARING!) understands that I'm hoping Heaven is in fact the Old Course and the town of St. Andrews, only with temperatures always 70 to 80 degrees!:) (aka Royal Melbourne!:)) I hold the Old Course and the town in the highest regard, probably more then my own home. As much as I studied the course for years, I could never fathom the actual putting surfaces. They along with the placement of the sand hazards are so freekin' phenominal, I can't even find the words.
For someone to make the statement, (And I'm not trying to be insulting here) "One last point - if anyone says that they understand and love TOC after one round they are (imho) LYING!" then they really aren't that impressionable. The first time I met the Old Course, was the most influential moment of my life--and that was just standing on the steps near the 18th green/1st tee! Never in my life nor since, did I ever think something could be so perfect. It screams at you in the face! Further studying the rest of the holes, especially on the outward nine will reveal everything you need to know about the Game. The closing nine will make sure you never forget it!
Perhaps it would be better serving if you didn't go there for a substantial amount of time, instead reading the material that explains the course much better, thus allowing yourself the opportunity to grow in knowledge and then actually want to study the course much deeper. But you are in good company Brian.
....In his first British Open in 1921 at St. Andrews, he played so poorly in the third round that he tore up his scorecard.
"It was," he would reflect later, "the most inglorious failure of my golfing life."
In retrospect, it was also the most significant turning point of his golfing life. He would acknowledge that tearing up the scorecard was a "childish effort to make known publicly that such a misplay was not to be tolorated by a player of so much ability."--Dave Anderson writing of Bobby Jones, from The Greatest of the All--The Legend of Bobby Jones
And in closing--
You must use something besides shots and clubs, playing St. Andrews. I can learn more golf in a week on that course then in a year on many a sterling championship test in America."-Bobby Jones, as told to O.B. Keeler
So Brian, I ask you, Who are we to argue with Bobby Jones?
A great thread Darren. I know where your heart is!