Ian
The only other "reverse dogleg" I can think of on the property is the 5th on the C-nine. I generally refer to the A and B nines as the regular golf course, possible because my score for those 18 is about the same as that on the C-nine alone
. In regards to your candy ass statement, I agree 100%. On a nine generally considered very difficult with plenty of opportunities to make a mistake, it is very often the rather benign looking 16th that does them in.
Tyler Kearns,
I actually had Olympic in mind as I was writing the subject because I have heard so often about its difficulty due in large part to this characteristic. I have never been there however, so I would be curious, as are you, about more experienced players thoughts.
Wayne,
Again, thanks for the drawings, awesome. Interesting that there is no left greenside bunker in either drawing, any idea when it may have been added? Not having that bunker would dramatically alter ones approach to virtually any pin position. The severe side hill lie in the fairway forces you to aim at that bunker with the hopes / expectations of moving the ball to the right. I wonder how the hole would play without it.
Great point about the green, it certainly is three greens within one. The front pin seems to play at least one half stroke easier than either the back left or the back right, so long as you keep the ball in the front or short. The back portion of the green has become as difficult as any I've played with the short iron typically in hand. Based on those contour arrows, you can imagine that the difficulty is in trying to get the ball to react properly once it hit the ground. As you know we keep the course as firm and fast as possible so you better have the ball under control or it will get blown dead off that right side. Then there is the problem of leaving the ball too far left and above the hole.
There are presently two tee complexes, a runway style tee box that I would guess is an addition about twenty yards to the right (and 15 feet lower in alltitude) and the one shown in the drawings. Wayne's explanation that the angle of the dogleg has increased over the years due to a narrowing of the fairway from the left makes perfect sense to me, although I have no exact evidence. The fairway still runs along those bunkers all the way down the right, and is not presently 45 to 50 yards wide as illustrated, so I'm convinced.
All in all, considering the difficulty of hitting the proper tee shot and the challenges facing the approach and putting, I find this to be a phenomenal short par four. Not sure I'd want 9 or 10 of them in a single round though.