I have just started reading The Evangelist of Golf. I figure better late than never. Starting on page 34 is an extraordinary outline in mathmatical terms of what the ideal golf course is. How he came up with the percentages in relation to the essential characteristics is beyond me. I guess since he built a few doozies I will let this go! A couple of things on the list struck me immediately.
1. He states that the putting greens (which includes turf, undulation and variety) make up 18% of an ideal course. From listening to what guys like Doak are saying does this make sense? I would have thought the relative importance would be much higher.
2. Mac states that the nature of the soil is 23% of what makes an ideal course. This doesn't sound outrageous to me as I am constantly harping about courses with poor turf. I figure the soil and turf are closely related and it is tough to have good turf on poor soil. This also demonstrates the importance Mac placed on the ground game. Yet, I rarely hear people complaining about poor turf on this GCA. Is this a sign that many of the great courses that are discussed are still too wet?
3. Mac thought that the importance of bunkering and other hazards (size, variety & placing) was only worth 13% of an ideal course. I think this demonstrates the importance that Mac placed on using sites with undualtions and hummocks (making a load of b&h unecessary). Based on GCA discussions one would have thought B&H were worth much more than 13%.
So by my math, according to Mac, bunkers, hazards AND greens make up less than 1/3 of what makes a course ideal. Can this be correct? I don't think there are many on this site who would agree. What do lot think?
Ciao
Sean