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JESII

The cart before the horse!
« on: December 20, 2004, 12:09:57 PM »
Has anybody played a two-shot hole in which the second shot is longer than the first?

Discussing the new back right tee at Philly Country #17 got me thinking about a hole design mentioned in writings by William Flynn in which all caliber of players are essentially forced into the same area off the tee before dealing with a long demanding approach shot. Obviously there must be some circumstance that prohibits the very long hitter from using his distance as an advantage off the tee.

Does this make for a good hole design?

JSlonis

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #1 on: December 20, 2004, 12:11:47 PM »
Sully,

On several occasions I've seen guys with a longer 2nd shot than the 1st on #2 of the "C" Nine at your own course HVCC.

That hole drives players crazy.  I've always thought that it would be a great risk reward hole if the trees on the left were cleared so a player could try carrying the ball over the creek.  I think I heard that the trees could not be removed because of some environmental issues...do you know if that is the case?
« Last Edit: December 20, 2004, 12:15:20 PM by JSlonis »

JohnV

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #2 on: December 20, 2004, 12:15:57 PM »
The second hole at Meriwether in Hillsboro Oregon was a 5-iron off the tee and a 2-iron to the green for me when I used to play it back in the late 1970s.  There was a large lake that cross the entire fairway and required a layup off the tee.

I'm sure there are plenty of other par 4s where hazards cross fairways and cause this.

JESII

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #3 on: December 20, 2004, 12:18:21 PM »
That is the best example I know of to describe this type of hole. I don't think the intention when he designed it was to force this situation because there were no trees on the interior of the dogleg at the time and I don't believe he planted any. Environmental restrictions are the reason they were all left there when it was restored. I think it was an interesting risk / reward hole at the time, but would not be much of a risk today for someone capable of carrying the ball 225 or so.

Does the hole in its present state suffer because of this cart before the horse setup?

Jim

Mike_Cirba

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #4 on: December 20, 2004, 12:21:19 PM »
I'm not sure the hole number because they have resequenced it a few times, but there is a hole on the worst course in the world, The Country Club of the Poconos at Big Ridge, by Jim Fazio where a drive any further than 140 yards goes into wetlands (you can't play around them because there are deep wood on both sides) which leaves you a 200+ yard blind approach over tall, reedy wetlands that run all the way to the green.  



An artists conception of the offending hole.  At the site, they claim it's 397 from some non-existent back tee, but 347 from the "whites".  

That is just a phony attempt to get some card yardage beyond the 5900 yards listed on what has to be a 1000 acre sites, with 12 MILES OF CART PATHS (this is actual...no exaggeration).  There is no back tee on the 4th hole...just thick woods.  

It plays as I mentioned...140 to the wetlands, 207 to the hole from there.  

Nice.
« Last Edit: December 20, 2004, 12:29:13 PM by Mike_Cirba »

JSlonis

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #5 on: December 20, 2004, 12:33:39 PM »
The 2nd hole on the "C" at HVCC is a bit awkward but it never really bothered me.  It's just plain difficult.  I'm usually of the mindset that you have to play what is in front of you, whether it is awkward or not.  I've found that by doing that, enough other players will get upset and play poorly because they don't care for a particular hole or course, etc.

I was always interested in seeing the scores on the "C" nine during the Lynnewood Hall, there was always alot of moaning about that nine, and invariably alot of high scores as well.
« Last Edit: December 20, 2004, 12:34:32 PM by JSlonis »

Mike_Sweeney

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #6 on: December 20, 2004, 12:59:52 PM »
Does this make for a good hole design?

First hole at Links of Union Vale, NY Par 4, I think I have hit 5 iron short of waste area and 5 wood in.

First hole at The Orchards - Par 4, forget the yardages to and over the creek.

First hole at Cobbs Creek - see The Orchards.

4th hole at Long Island National, 235 to end of fairway before a big waste area from the gold/member tee, then a par 5, so you hit three wood.

I don't think any of these were great design as the risk reward at least for me was not there to go for it, especially on the 1st hole. Have not played Cobbs in years, is it easy to hit over it now on #1 ?

JESII

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #7 on: December 20, 2004, 01:01:29 PM »
I would have to say, Mike, that your example would take the cake. It may actually be tha cart before the donkey though ;D.

Jamie,

I guess that explains your success there. Well done.

We have heard bitching about that hole from day one, my opinion all along is that the second shot is one of the best, most demanding and most attractive shots you will ever find so that being said how else are you going to get everyone to hit it other than by not giving them any other option?

Jim

Brian_Gracely

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #8 on: December 20, 2004, 01:01:30 PM »
Half the dogleg holes at Palmer's The Carolina course down in Pinehurst are like this.  Nothing like a few 7iron - 3wood holes.  Makes you feel like Moe Norman.
« Last Edit: December 20, 2004, 01:01:41 PM by Brian_Gracely »

JESII

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #9 on: December 20, 2004, 01:06:17 PM »
Brian

Maybe it makes us envy Moe Norman. I can assure you that the second time I have to hit a 200+ approach after being forced into a 150-200 tee shot I would have serious questions about the architecture.

I think this is an interesting hole, but one whose type should be used sparingly and really only with the benefit of terrain that will lead to a first rate approach shot.

Jim

Pete Buczkowski

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #10 on: December 20, 2004, 01:19:22 PM »
Half the dogleg holes at Palmer's The Carolina course down in Pinehurst are like this.  Nothing like a few 7iron - 3wood holes.  Makes you feel like Moe Norman.

Brian,

Just curious - which holes do you feel fit this mold at the Carolina?  I can't imagine you hitting any 3 wood approaches there.  The 6th hole is pretty bad, but a 3 wood?

If anything its more like 4iron - 9iron.

But I agree about the course - the 1st, 6th, 10th, and 12th holes are just plain bad.

Pete

Brian_Gracely

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #11 on: December 20, 2004, 01:22:21 PM »
There you go again Pete, trying to make me remember courses that I tried so hard to put out of my memory ;)  I just looked at their website (since I don't want to go back to the course) and I think #8 and #15 fit the mold.  #15 definitely seemed to be a very long shot (uphill) for the approach.

Pete Buczkowski

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #12 on: December 20, 2004, 01:40:36 PM »
There you go again Pete, trying to make me remember courses that I tried so hard to put out of my memory ;)  I just looked at their website (since I don't want to go back to the course) and I think #8 and #15 fit the mold.  #15 definitely seemed to be a very long shot (uphill) for the approach.

Sorry Brian, you have to realize I am the defender of bad courses.  ;)

Regarding the 8th & 15th at Carolina...the 8th is only about 350 yards so I can't imagine you had a 3 wood approach.  I would hit a 3W or 3I and a 9-iron or wedge.  Maybe you played to the left fairway?  I wouldn't be able to reach the right fairway with a short iron.  

15 is a 310 yard par 4...again, can't imagine you hit a 3W in there.  Maybe 3W/wedge.

Now I'm wondering if you played the nines in reverse order - b/c I think the major problem holes are the 6th and 17th.  6 fits the mold as I mentioned earlier (approach is ~175) but you don't need to lay up on 17 tee - the wetlands are immediately in front of the green & the fairway is decently generous.  Not a good hole by any stretch, but not a 7I-3W.


I think Finley's 10th could fit this criteria, but you do have the option of hitting a fade off the tee to get a shorter approach.

SPDB

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #13 on: December 20, 2004, 01:54:16 PM »

4th hole at Long Island National, 235 to end of fairway before a big waste area from the gold/member tee, then a par 5, so you hit three wood.

Mike - I've played there, and I don't remember teeing off on a par 4, and then the hole changing to a par 5.  ??? ;D

Tommy_Naccarato

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #14 on: December 20, 2004, 01:54:31 PM »
The second hole at Meriwether in Hillsboro Oregon was a 5-iron off the tee and a 2-iron to the green for me when I used to play it back in the late 1970s.  There was a large lake that cross the entire fairway and required a layup off the tee.

I'm sure there are plenty of other par 4s where hazards cross fairways and cause this.

A bizarro hole if there ever was one, the 2nd at Merriweather National. I can't tell you how many times I have played there! But of course you already knew that!

Scott_Burroughs

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #15 on: December 20, 2004, 02:35:43 PM »
Jamie,

#2 at HVCC C-nine is pretty close to that, if your drive is not left of center of the fairway.  Right side of fairway will do that.  The closer to the left (and far) edge of the driving zone, the shorter the approach.  I think I hit 3-wood, 5-iron there to the right front (from back tees).  Pin was back left, I should have hit 4-iron.


For Pete B., #10 at (new) Finley.

The old #14 (must be #5 now) at the Virginia Tech course was pretty close, especially if you were on the outside of the dogleg.  Some brave souls tried to drive the green through a small hole in the trees.

Same with #11 at Wake Forest GC, if your tee shot is outside the dogleg (happens often when protecting from going in creek on inside of dogleg and you turn the ball over on too-frequent occasions)

Jay Cox

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #16 on: December 20, 2004, 02:56:06 PM »
I think the short shot - long shot design concept isn't a very good one, especially since 1) the need to set a maximum distance on the tee shot ends up hurting players hitting from forward tees the most and 2) there is usually some kind of water feature involved, which can lead to long, annoying second shot carries (Mike Cirba's fan-tastic Poconos example is an excellent case in point.

There are two particular holes I've played, though, that Jim Sullivan's criterion and were at least close to good.  I say were because both have been changed.

The 1st hole at Trull Brook (Tewksbury, MA) is a short par 4 -- maybe 255 yards from tee to green as the crow flies.  In the old days, you could try to drive the green, but it involved hitting over / through a not-too-dense strand of pretty tall pine trees about 120 yards from the tee.  There were low points or gaps in the trees just big enough to aim for and fairly hard to hit.  If you missed and hit the trees, you had a hard but not impossible recovery and still a reasonable chance to save 4.  The other option was to hit a 7 or 8 iron off the tee down into a valley way off to the right, and then have a straight 7 iron or so in.  
Because of pace of play problems, they moved the tee to right up against a hedge so you can't possibly try the through the trees shot anymore.  Now the hole is just pretty terrible.  Hitting a nine iron (the hole got shorter, too) off the tee to a pretty enormous landing area is a terrible way to start a round.

The 10th hole at Juniper Hill's Riverside course, a 470 yard par 5 with a slight dogleg left, was one of the most interesting holes I've seen, and a hole that I would try to replicate / improve on given the right site if I were a designer.  From the tee you had three choices:  1) lay up with a seven iron short of a pond (starting between 150 and 170 yards from the tee depending on your line), then hit 3 iron - wedge into the green; 2) try to hit straight over the pond, a carry of maybe 260-265 yards again depending on your line (that distance seemed much longer then, hardly anyone I knew could make the carry consistently); 3) try to carry the pond by hitting to the left side of the fairway on the far side, which involved hitting over the edge of a public road and a whole lot of swamp and cut the carry down to something like 245.  You aimed the drive at a telephone pole at the edge of the road; anything pulled further left than that was on the road, OB, and gone.  If you pulled off either option 2 or option 3, you had an iron into the green.  
Now they turned it into a par 4 and moved the tee up, so it's just a boring mandatory water carry off the tee.  

If I were recreating the hole, ideally I would leave a little more room for the tee shot (so you could hit, say, a 3 iron, but still not be able to get there in 2, if you layed up) and increase the carry distances a bit from the tips to make up for technology.  But I was very sad to see that hole go.

bstark

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #17 on: December 20, 2004, 03:00:55 PM »
...4th hole at Long Island National, 235 to end of fairway before a big waste area from the gold/member tee, then a par 5, so you hit three wood.......
 ???

What was RTJ jr. thinking here? I never got the chance to ask him about it. I know drainage is an issue on that part of the course. I always thought he could have just narrowed the fairway a bit instead building of a severe drop. I think he told someone that the big hitters could carry the crap. But I don't think even Daly could bomb it that far. With the prevailing wind in your mug the design looks even worse.
  The next hole is the best on the course imho.

Pete Buczkowski

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #18 on: December 20, 2004, 03:10:39 PM »

For Pete B., #10 at (new) Finley.

Duly noted Scott, I mentioned this in reply #12.  I still think its a bit different, b/c the option of hitting a cut driver off the tee and using the slope to get a short iron in is an option on that hole (there is no hazard to clear in the fairway).  I have played the hole both ways so it is definitely possible, but risky...especially for us reverse slicers.  ;)

My question is...why is this such a bad design concept, especially for better players?  How else can an architect force a good player into hitting a long iron into a par 4?  At Finley, a lot of the college players would hit 2-iron - 3-iron from the tips.  I'm OK with that.

Jay Cox

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #19 on: December 20, 2004, 03:15:56 PM »
My question is...why is this such a bad design concept, especially for better players?  How else can an architect force a good player into hitting a long iron into a par 4?  

Why is this a better idea than building 500 yard par 4s?  
If you can now hit 3 iron off the tee on even the hard par 4s, will anyone ever hit a driver?
Plus, see my previous post re: the impact on people playing from forward tees.  I suppose you could build a hole where only players from the tips are limited in how far you could drive the ball, but that's getting pretty contrived.

Pete Buczkowski

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #20 on: December 20, 2004, 03:20:49 PM »
My question is...why is this such a bad design concept, especially for better players?  How else can an architect force a good player into hitting a long iron into a par 4?  

Why is this a better idea than building 500 yard par 4s?  
If you can now hit 3 iron off the tee on even the hard par 4s, will anyone ever hit a driver?
Plus, see my previous post re: the impact on people playing from forward tees.  I suppose you could build a hole where only players from the tips are limited in how far you could drive the ball, but that's getting pretty contrived.

Jay,

The hole that I mention does not have a water hazard that causes the forward tee players to lay back.  In fact, the angle of the tee is different, so the hole "straightens out" and there is no reason to layup off the tee.  Also note that a faded drive will take the downslope right of the fairway bunker to the 150 marker.



I would argue that even the 500 yard par 4's don't require a long iron for the accomplished player.

Pete
« Last Edit: December 20, 2004, 03:22:07 PM by Pete Buczkowski »

Jay Cox

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #21 on: December 20, 2004, 03:26:09 PM »
Pete -
Fair enough.  I agree that your example solves most of the problems that exist with a lot of "cart before the horse" holes and that there is a place for holes like it on good golf courses.
 
I continue to think, though, that there is at least as much need to require accomplished players to hit a driver as there is to require them to hit long iron shots into par 4s.  If you have to make par 4s 530 from the tips, so be it.  

Of course, that would have been terrible for me, as the guy on the team in college who could barely hit it past 250.

Alternately, do something about equipment...

wsmorrison

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #22 on: December 20, 2004, 10:08:57 PM »
Jamie, Jim,

I know that the present 2nd on the C-nine at HVCC cannot duplicate the original shot values due to the wetland considerations--isn't there some kind of rare turtle or something in there?  Almost all of the talk is about the shorter tee shot required vs the yardage of the approach shots.  What I rarely hear people talk about is the green.  In my opinion it is one of Flynn's toughest greens.  What are your thoughts?

Forrest Richardson

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #23 on: December 20, 2004, 10:20:19 PM »
Our No. 2 hole at The Hideout (Utah) is a 540-yard, par-5 with a gamble tee shot that usually only places a driver in the hande of the verrrrrry long and accurate hitter. Most players opt to hit iron from the tee to avoid the creek which crosses the fairway at about 230-yards. The second shot is flanked by a creek to the right; it requires a placed shot...but as long as one cares given the width.

The routing plan shows No. 2 (at top). The photo is taken from just shy of the tee shot landing area. The trees to the right sit within the creek and encourage a tee shot placed to the left — toward the creek which continues toward the tee.




« Last Edit: December 20, 2004, 10:24:54 PM by Forrest Richardson »
— Forrest Richardson, Golf Course Architect/ASGCA
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Doug Siebert

Re:The cart before the horse!
« Reply #24 on: December 21, 2004, 01:39:02 AM »
Forrest,

I don't know if that's a very good example of this type of hole, because a creek at 230 still leaves many golfers not having to take a whole lot off their shot.  And anyone with any doubts about their ability to fly it 230 (flying it 230 straight is another matter of course) would be playing a 540 yarder as a three shotter anyway.  Lay up to 210 or 220, and you only have 320 or 330 left which is still a fairway wood and short iron even for some fairly short hitters.  On the other hand, at only 230 it certainly leaves a quite reasonable option open for longer hitters.  Seems like a decent risk/reward hole rather than an example of a Moe Norman hole.
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