I was just sitting in English class today when something funny happened.
I was drawing pictures of golf courses, and I had drawn #7 at Ballyneal, where the tip of the flag could barely be seen and only the front of the green was visible. Then, I drew a picture of Augusta #12. Both were decent pictures, so I asked my buddy which one he liked better. He said he liked the one of Augusta better because it was so much easier to tell it was a golf hole. Once I pointed out the tip of the flag on my Ballyneal picture he realized a course, but he still didnt like that it was so hard to see flag and green.
My question is why players always like seeing the hole and what they are playing at.
I look at Ran's review of County Down and there are many pictures with directional poles, and many blind shots.
I think it is very cool.
However, I was speaking to a member at Seattle about NGLA and he said the course was merely ok due to the blind shots.
Isnt a course better with one or two blind shots?
Arent blind shots good for, if anything, variety?
I dont like the concept of always needing to see where my ball lands.
Part of the fun of golf is guessing anyways, so wouldnt blind shots fit perfectly?
Should each course have a blind shot to provide interest?
And, is the acceptance of blind shots beginning to dwindle among golfers?
With new courses being built to look pretty and beautiful, do courses lose architectural value by focusing too much on aesthetics?
Because, after all, if courses are built to simply look good there would be no blind shots. You cant really make a blind shot pretty.