I was thinking this morning about our discussion a few weeks ago about the second-best course in East Lothian, and my thoughts drifted back to the group's appraisal of North Berwick. In particular, I thought about the 14th hole, which has the following peculiar characteristics:
--The fourth green is scarily close to the 14th fairway, and is very much at risk of being bombarded by short slices off the tee.
--The row of bunkers at the end of the landing area precludes any great aggressiveness from the tee - there are no real strategic options as such (except perhaps in the availability of a bail-out area on the right, i.e. the 4th hole).
--The green is blind and sloped strongly away from the line of play, in such a way that getting close to the hole is often a real fluke.
--Beyond the green is usually thick grass (and thereafter the beach) - because the hole is blind, it's usually impossible to tell where a ball has entered the tall grass, or indeed if it has crossed the hazard line.
I know the hole is called "Perfection", but I wonder if that only goes to show that the Olde Scots had a sense of irony...my real question is this: does this hole in particular get a free pass among the "great" Scottish links courses simply because it is old and Scottish? If Pete Dye were to have built this hole in the first place, wouldn't people be screaming bloody murder?
Cheers,
Darren