There have been a number of threads here before discussing whether strategy is irrelevant/obsolete for good players. I always dismissed such speculation, believing that the wide fairway strategies employed by Mackenzie and Russell at Royal Melbourne would always stand the test of time.
Now, after a game at St Andrews Beach with Mark Ferguson, I'm not so sure. In his
My Home Course entry, Mark describes the Gunnamatta course being a course which is "eminently playable by the average golfer, but demands relentless precision for the better player hoping to post a score". Such a course fits the GCA "party line" perfectly, and is a philosophy which I assume Doak and Clayton set out to achieve. The fairways on the Gunnamatta are very wide (most are 60m+), and on most holes the surrounding rough is undaunting.
St A.B is just over 6600 yards, and the greens were reasonably firm, but not concrete. The wind was fairly light.
I brought along a friend of mine who has recently turned professional, also a keen student of golf design. He shot an easy 68, which could have been 64 or 65 had he holed some putts. St Andrews Beach is wide enough that driver can be taken on every hole except the par-3's, and by driving his ball 300+, he was left with very short shots into the undulating greens. The "relentless precision" I thought was required was not necessary - even from the wrong angle, he was hitting to no more than 15ft with his lob wedge.
I've come to the conclusion that unless the wind blows, such courses won't be able to challenge good players any more - strategy doesn't mean much when you're hitting wedges into all par-4's! The alternative would be rock hard greens (like Shinnecock 2004 or Victoria 2002) which makes the course unplayable for the average player.
By contrast, as a 7-8 marker who drives it around 260, I found the course difficult. Driving into position was more crucial to me, hoping to break 80, than it was for a professional trying to break 60! With the severe greens, accurate iron play is essential - harder to achieve with a middle iron than with a wedge.
Is it time to discount the challenge posed to the best players when designing enjoyable courses for the rest of us?