Henry Longhurst arranged a personal composite "perfect course" in a column for Golf Illustrated in 1961. In so doing, he nominated two holes on the basis of "that quality which the architects call 'indestructibility', the power to survive changes in the ball and the weather and everything else". The holes he had in mind were the 5th at Rye, and the 1st at Prestwick.
He ordained that a left to right breeze would be blowing on those two holes.
Almost fifty years later, do his choices still qualify?
What are other examples of "indestructible" holes, and why?
I thought of two at Dornoch that might fit the definition, both as a result of their green complexes: the 2nd, and Foxy.
Longhurst's composite course:
No. 1, St. Andrews 1st
No. 2, Hoylake's 1st
No. 3, Mildenhall's 3rd
No. 4, Rye's 5th
No. 5, Birkdale's 14th
No. 6, Prestwick's 1st
No. 7, Huntercombe's 13th
No. 8, Mildenhall's 5th
No. 9, Rye's 4th
No. 10, Sandwich's 15th
No. 11, Addington's 13th
No. 12, Lytham's 8th
No. 13, Deal's 6th
No. 14, St. Andrews' 14th
No. 15, Addington's 16th
No. 16, Formby's 16th
No. 17, St. Andrews' 17th
No. 18, Hoylake's 17th
He confesses in the column that his favorite courses are St. Andrews and Mildenhall. I think he was a member of Sandwich.
Ken