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Jay Flemma

This piece is part of an even longer recap of the PGA I wrote for Cybergolf and my website.  The link is here, if you wanna read the whole things.  My friends will llike it because I channeled a little master and commander.  My enemies will like it because they can scream "bloated gasbag" till the cows come home.  Nevertheless, Dornick and Okla City G&CC are superb and we should all make the trek.

We all know Woods lipped out his putt for a major championship record 62.  The putt was two-thirds down before spinning away.  That record will have to wait until Pebble.  As a result, I made a decision that on paper looked questionable, but which ultimately paid superb dividends in the long run.  I decided to forego attending the tournament on Saturday to travel three hours to Dornick Hills Country Club, Perry Maxwell’s first golf course and the site of his grave to compare that course with Southern Hills.  On the way back, I would stop halfway and explore Oklahoma City Golf & Country Club, another Maxwell design, this one from his time working with Alister Mackenzie.

Why would I do such a thing?  When so many would kill for a media credential to any major championship, why would I skip moving day?  To understand Maxwell and the tenets of his design strategies, it is necessary to see the architect’s progress over time.  Who knows when I would get the chance to return to Oklahoma.  There was still Sunday for the competition.  Besides, as the light of the risen moon left us to reflect on the proceedings, there were simply two inalienable truths:  Woods is the greatest frontrunner in sports history and no thirty-six hole leader in a major at Southern Hills had ever lost.

Saturday

   My old girlfriend Britt was unbelievably finicky.  “Come on” I said, “I’ll take you to Angelo & Maxie’s for a great steak.”

“Well maybe” she replied ambivalently, “but it needs to be cooked perfectly or I don’t like it.”  Okay, note to self:  stick to sushi.

Then when we were curling up on the couch I said “Mmm, you smell great, girl.  You smell like strawberries.”

She didn’t even look up from the TV and muttered, “I don’t like strawberries.”  Boy, flattery will get you everywhere, won’t it?  Better try flowers and some candy.  That can’t possibly fail.

“You’re going to make me fat” she groused.  “I’m training to run a half marathon.”

“That’s it, I’m outta here” I thought to myself.  But I got as far as the kitchen when the line from the rock song “Reconsider” by Marwood came to mind.  “I swear I’ll leave, but we both know I won’t.”

Why?  Easy.  I’m just like her.  Because when it comes to golf courses, they can sit in my lap and make little cooing sounds in my ear all they like and I’ll still care less about whether they have a PGA Tour pedigree or $22 million clubhouse and more about whether they have solid strategic design features and character-rich green complexes.  So although by Sunday’s end seven majors will have been contested at Southern Hills, I found two other Oklahoma designs by Perry Maxwell that I like more.

Understand – we are splitting hairs between a fantastic course and a transcendent one, between the outstanding and timeless.  There is no question Southern Hills is a triumph of a course and rightfully holds a place in golf history.  However, there are many other Maxwell masterpieces too, courses that deserve the same reverence for a different reason.

Dornick Hills Country Club is Parry Maxwell’s first golf course.  Three hours from Tulsa and ninety minutes from the nearest city of note (Oklahoma City to the north, Dallas to the south), the course is undiscovered by the golf world at large but golf historians, collegiate teams and ardent Midwest golfers know it is far more than just a hidden gem.

The course is a shrine to Maxwell’s memory.  He is buried in the family cemetery, located atop a steep hill off the 7th fairway.  A prominent NCAA Intercollegiate tournament is named in his memory and is one of the premiere college events on the calendar.  Most importantly, a few minor changes aside, the course remains largely the same as it did when the eighteen holes were finally completed in 1923.

Shortly before her untimely death in 1919, Maxwell’s wife, Ray Woods Maxwell encouraged her husband to study golf course architecture.  Maxwell was most enamored with National Golf Links of America (NGLA) and modeled many holes at both Dornick and Oklahoma City G&CC after C.B. Macdonald’s template holes.  He also invented some templates of his own and they are among the best holes on the property, which tumbles up, down and into the teeth of the most severe rises and drops.

Take for example, the par-3 4th hole (190 from the tips, 150 from the regulation tees).  Many people denigrate severely uphill par-3s, but Maxwell never flinched from making the most severe features of the property integral to his golf holes.  Why bulldoze or avoid a terrific natural feature when you can incorporate it into a great hole?  Maxwell and Mackenzie a part of the pantheon of the greatest designers because their designs are bold.

NOTE THE REST OF THE ARTICLE IS BELOW, THE HYPERLINK IS HERE:

http://jayflemma.thegolfspace.com/?p=693

« Last Edit: August 18, 2007, 03:43:40 AM by Jay Flemma »

Jay Flemma

Re:More great OKLA Maxwell golf - Dornick and Okla City G&CC!
« Reply #1 on: August 16, 2007, 08:23:49 PM »
Chris Clouser (pronounced “Closer”) authored the best work on Maxwell.  In his book The Midwest Associate he examines some of Maxwell’s templte holes.  “One such hole” he said in an interview for Cybergolf, “is a drive to a plateau, then a drop shot.”  The par-4 5th at Dornick is a solid example of both this template and how Maxwell loved to use specimen trees to force shaped shots.  The tee shot must travel 240-260 and must be center or right-of-center or a large elm with overhanging branches will block the approach shot.  The hole turns 90-degrees left and is two clubs downhill to a green set obliquely behind a bunker.  It’s a heroic shot similar to the tee-shot at the 5th at Bethpage Black.  If the tee shot is not long and straight, forget hitting the green in regulation.

The sixth hole is one of only three flaws on the golf course.  Let’s examine all three now and get them out of the way.  Someone stuck a little tree – as small and useless as the Hinkle Tree at Inverness right smack in front of the green.  Great – we have a bunker in the sky.  Sources say the tree may be removed and most agree that it has no use.  Next, the first and second hole seem not to fit with the rest of the course, but they were not as Maxwell originally designed them and now serve to simply get the player to three tee, where the solid architecture starts in earnest.  Finally, the twelfth hole is all wrong.

On the tee of this hard-left-bending hole, greenside trees are directly in the center line.  Worse still, even from “Position A,” the right edge of the fairway, the only play is a hard draw.  “I was in the best spot possible” said one participant in the Oilman’s tournament “and I had no shot.”

Look, he Mona Lisa has no eyebrows (there’s a sure bar bet winner for you).  So it’s like Britt said to me about relationships, “nobody’s perfect and if they are, then that’s their flaw.”  By the way, when she asked me what I thought her flaw was, I responded that she was perfect.

The rest of the course is fascinating.  A short but perilous par four appears at seven.  A drive and a pitch for most, you can try to drive the green, but water on the right, sand on the left, and uneven lies as you approach the green defend par admirably.  The kidney shaped green features many swales.  The eighth green, fronted by bunkers, has a back portion that flows away from the player, testing distance control.

The back nine features equally atmospheric moments.  The eleventh green, a two-tiered, curvy beast comes back to the clubhouse so during tournament time spectators have easy access to more exciting golf.  The fourteenth, another short, but sexy par-4 plays uphill to a heaving green set in a sea of sand.  With all the equipment advances, now it can be driven where in Perry’s day it could not, but that leads to more exciting swings – a two or a six?  Take your chance, glory or defeat.

The 13th and 15th require shots shaped around a wide variety of trees: pecans, cedars, oaks, elms and many others.  The exquisite and unique 16th plays directly to the base of a forty-foot cliff with the flag sitting directly on top of this mountain, sarcastically winking at you like a bawdy harlot sitting at the bar, enticing you to come to her.  Such a hole would never be built today and the brilliantly used rock face would be dynamited out of existence.

Begun in 1914, Maxwell tinkered with the design until he died in 1952, changing both the sequencing of holes and the routing.  While no majors have been contested here, many major champions have played in the Maxwell during  their college days including David Duval, Mike Weir, Justin Leonard and Jim Furyk.  The PGA Tour held the Ardmore Open at Dornick in the ‘50s.  Many state amateur championships have been contested on these thin and twisting corridors.

Even with all this, the most powerful moment of the day was seeing Maxwell’s grave, high on a steep, almost vertical hill just off the seventh fairway and overlooking the hole on one side and the lake of the old “Rod and Gun Club” on the other.  It’s a difficult climb up the rugged, craggy, almost perpendicular hill, especially in long black pants and wing tipped shoes.  (I always dress impeccably whenever a guest at any private club).  The rock is friable and crumbles easily, even under my mere 134 pounds, making footing treacherous.  With yardage book in one hand, “Gatorade Rain” in the other, I grasp at whatever I can for support.  One foot at a time, I grab long grass here, hug a tree there, and find footholds wherever I can.

Finally, I crest the hill and a singular site greets my eyes.  A semi-circle of Ionic pillars topped with a capstone stands sentinel over eight gravestones and one bench.  The first, Puritan Holt Woods, was laid to rest in 1931; the last, Herbert Earl Deskins, passed in 1985.  Oaks, elms and red buds – a tree with pink blossoms serenely shade the area.  In the third row from the top, there are the markers of the doting wife Ray, and Perry Duke Maxwell next to her, 1879-1952

What a final resting place; as quiet and moving as one could ever wish.  God grant me the same pleasure one day.  A wall separates the graves from another portion bordered by a wrought-iron fence which leads to the expansive vista of the lake.

The climb down is harder, both on my legs and on my heart.  I must tear myself away from the place of reflection and restful repose.  Only Mike Strantz’s 11th tee at Monterey Peninsula Country Club (Shore Course), the last hole he ever built, moved me more.  It occurs to me that perhaps Mike and Perry are playing together in Heaven today, as though waiting for me to commune with them.  It’s good to meet you too, Mr. Maxwell.  Keep a weather eye on Mike for me; in fact both eyes, as often as you can spare them.

So what did I miss at the tournament by coming here, another “Tiger walk?”  Sure he is making history, but many other pens and keyboards will tell that tale.  Seeing Perry and his legacy resonating through the decades is more compelling than a Saturday of Woods’ death stares and fist pumps.  Tiger may be “Who’s Now,” but who cares “Who’s now?”  Nobody, that’s who!  Perry Maxwell echoes through eternity in ways Stuart Scott, Erin Andrews, the chumps in “Chuck and Larry” and Glenn Jacobs (the “mastermind” behind “Who’s Now”), refuse to understand.  It’s not what you do for a living that makes you great, it’s what you do for others.  Are you working for the game’s greater glory or merely your own?

   Similarly, Oklahoma City Golf & Country club is also a triumph.  Greens swerve every which way.  They are canted sidehill, then away from the player, then back to front.  Template holes abound from the par-5 5th, with a giant knoll semi-hiding the green which is a punchbowl and sits one club downhill to the pint-sized par-4 8th modeled after the “Sahara” hole at NGLA.  At a mere 280 yards, it screams to be driven, but sits in an ocean of deep bunkers.  The green is hidden behind a hill and the fairway plays directly into the teeth of the hill.

   That is the strength of OCG&CC, the fiercest terrain is used to be a plateau that must be challenged off the tee.  Holes feature alternate shot requirements; fade off the tee, then draw into the green.  The next hole requires just the opposite, keeping the player off balance and preventing him from finding a groove.

After crossing a road, the 10th through 14th play over, along and around a burn as deep, serpentine and ubiquitous as the fabled Barry Burn at Carnoustie.  It has no name, but I call it Scary Burn. (America has its own Carnoustie!)

Darkness fell as I approached the 16th hole, so I will return to Oklahoma City next May and report further.  I gratefully accepted Dornick Head pro Steve Ramsey and Maxwell Collegiate Tournament director Bob Bramlett’s invitation to cover the Maxwell for Cybergolf.

Just like Britt may be picky about steaks, I picky about golf courses.  Look, Southern Hills is terrific.  It’s a piece of golf history, there’s no question.  Run don’t walk to play it. But Southern Hills is a big Ribeye.  It’s a solid steak, but it has some fat on it (a sameness to a few holes) and you have too like dealing with that to choose it over other choice cuts.  That’s fine if that is your personal preference.

By contrast, Dornick Hills is a porterhouse with the course itself as the huge, delectable T-Bone and Perry’s grave as the strip steak portion you get as a bonus.  Oklahoma City G&CC is a chateaubriand; hugely impressive in presentation, but much more importantly, the greatest substance of all.  The routing is impregnable and the fascinating, boldly twisting greens cement its place in the pantheon of not only Maxwell’s greatest work, but among the country’s greatest courses.  Failure to list Dornick and OCGCC in a list of Maxwell’s masterpieces is a colossal blunder.  They must be mentioned in the same breath as Southern Hills, Crystal Downs, and Prairie Dunes.

And just as all that talk about food made me hungry, Britt was standing in front of me.  Her bag was in one hand, her jacket in the other, floral flip-flops on her long, thin feet.

“I’m hungry.  What do you want for dinner?”

Think fast!  Think fast!  What’s the right answer?

“Why don’t you pick?” I answered wisely.

Jay Flemma

Re:More great OKLA Maxwell golf - Dornick and Okla City G&CC!
« Reply #2 on: August 17, 2007, 12:31:30 PM »
so my friends in wisc can read...bump

Chris_Clouser

Re:More great OKLA Maxwell golf - Dornick and Okla City G&CC!
« Reply #3 on: August 17, 2007, 01:58:41 PM »
Jay,

Make sure that Bob takes you to Firesides and order one of the bone-in ribeyes when you go back in May.  

Matt Cohn can vouch for the food there as well.  It is easily the best in Ardmore.    





Jay Flemma

Re:More great OKLA Maxwell golf - Dornick and Okla City G&CC!
« Reply #4 on: August 17, 2007, 03:53:21 PM »
Why don't you come too?  We'll watch the tournament and have a steak...

You'll for give me bone in  ribeye sounds great, but my taste runs to porterhouse or NY strip.  Tell ya what...we can trade a couple bites for a couple bites and see...

Porterhouse...hmmm....

OH PORTERHOUSE!  JUST LOOK AT THE WAX BUILD UP ON THESE SHOES!
« Last Edit: August 17, 2007, 03:53:58 PM by Jay Flemma »

RJ_Daley

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re:More great OKLA Maxwell golf - Dornick and Okla City G&CC!
« Reply #5 on: August 17, 2007, 04:03:25 PM »
Wisconsin just bumped in...

Maybe you have to get off the net and into syndication.  But, where will you end up writing your essays, the spiritual weekend sections, nature section, sports-golf sections, gourmet critic or literature critic sections?  Very enjoyable reading, if I may say so.  

I'm glad you made the side trips to see OCCG&CC and Dornick Hills.  Somehow, I knew you'd wind up in solitary reflection within the confines of that colonade.  I'll bet it is very peaceful up there.  You made a great journey of discovery last week and were generous to give us a nicely described glimpse.

But, with all that black attire, I still can't peg you for an idealistic hairshirted protege monk or Paladin, "Have Pen, Will Travel".  ;) ;D 8)
No actual golf rounds were ruined or delayed, nor golf rules broken, in the taking of any photographs that may be displayed by the above forum user.

Wyatt Halliday

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re:More great OKLA Maxwell golf - Dornick and Okla City G&CC!
« Reply #6 on: August 17, 2007, 04:45:00 PM »
Bravo Mr. Flemma!

I was eagerly anticipating the full piece, especially after the appetizer you gave me off Highway 53.

I too was touched by my visit to the colonade just moments after Jay was there. What a special place.

Thanks Jay!

Jay Flemma

Re:More great OKLA Maxwell golf - Dornick and Okla City G&CC!
« Reply #7 on: August 17, 2007, 06:39:07 PM »
Wyatt and Brother William...thank you for teaching me a new word!  Colonade...I did not know that one.  Nice:)

Maybe I do have a little more adso in me than I thought, but I still see alot of Ubertino too.

see you guys soon I hope.

RJ_Daley

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re:More great OKLA Maxwell golf - Dornick and Okla City G&CC!
« Reply #8 on: August 17, 2007, 07:04:00 PM »
Jay, will any photos be forthcoming?  ;D
No actual golf rounds were ruined or delayed, nor golf rules broken, in the taking of any photographs that may be displayed by the above forum user.

Jay Flemma

Re:More great OKLA Maxwell golf - Dornick and Okla City G&CC!
« Reply #9 on: August 17, 2007, 08:16:27 PM »
good thinking...where WAS my mind.

Dick, I'm heading out to a gig (The Muggabears), but owuld you PLEASE IM me and tomorrow I'll post EXCELLENT pix...even Pix of perry's grave.

Jay Flemma

ok, this is the par-3 fourth...muuuuuch more uphill than it looks




this is the killer par-4 5th...a maxwell template hole...drive to plateau, turn 90-degrees lft, drop shot to green.  Heroic drive...long and straight past tree of you're blocked out.  I'm standing on the 150 yard marker in the middle of the fwy



here's the hill that leads to the maxwell cemetary




Perry's marker




sixteen...awesome



more to come

Jeff Doerr

  • Karma: +0/-0
Thanks Jay...looking forward to the rest.
"And so," (concluded the Oldest Member), "you see that golf can be of
the greatest practical assistance to a man in Life's struggle.”

Jay Flemma

I'll have then up mid-day Sunday.  Glad you like them.

RJ_Daley

  • Karma: +0/-0
Jay, I must say that the cliff makes me cringe.   Of course I understand it is an integral part of the manner that Perry routed the course to use and take full advantage of the feature.  I just doesn't make my skullcap sit in place...  ;D 8)
No actual golf rounds were ruined or delayed, nor golf rules broken, in the taking of any photographs that may be displayed by the above forum user.

Jimbo

I love the look of that bunker left of #4.

I love the look of bunkers whose sand level is below the surrounding grade.

"Cut away" to below fairway(or green) height.  You don't need to see the sand, you know trouble lurks over there.

So sexy.

« Last Edit: August 18, 2007, 10:58:21 PM by Jimbo »

Chris_Clouser

Jay,

I can't believe you hiked up that hill.  Didn't anyone tell you about the path leading from the 17th tee through the trees.  Much easier walk.  

Jay Flemma

Path?!?  What Path?!?  Do you mean to tell me I nearly killed myself clinging tree and grabbing at grasses and trying to find footholds for nothing?!?

Unbelievable.

Anyway, here's OCGCC photos

the clubhouse:




The tee shot on two...



The tee shot on four...sorry the shadows are so long, but look at those fairway contours!  Thats what I mean when I say he lays into the teeth of the fiercest natural features.



4 green, a pretty green site:



Knoll hole!  looks how the green not only sits below fairway level, but also is partially blocked by the knoll


Jay Flemma

Oh...by the way...you know how I quote "Reconsider" in the piece?

Here's the song...enjoy.

http://www.marwoodmusic.com/go/music-download?id=163415

Michael Christensen

great pics.......I spent a 6 months in that area when I worked for AA...and played there almost 3 days a week......just as I remembered it

Nice photo of the head stone........

Jeff_Brauer

  • Karma: +0/-0
The 4th at OKC could be the 10th at Oak Cliff.  BTW, Oak Cliff was just renamed something else for some reason.
Jeff Brauer, ASGCA Director of Outreach

mike_beene

  • Karma: +0/-0
Jeff,The Golf Club of Dallas.Excuse me while I go puke.

Jeff_Brauer

  • Karma: +0/-0
sixteen...awesome





A former employee made one of the funniest shots ever here.  After hitting driver off the deck to reach the top in two, and chipping from the fringe, he shanked it back down the hill!  And he was a good player but it was chuckles all around as he walked down the steps that used to be there to pitch back up and two putt for a bogey.

Jeff Brauer, ASGCA Director of Outreach

SPDB

  • Karma: +0/-0

Knoll hole!  looks how the green not only sits below fairway level, but also is partially blocked by the knoll



I've never seen it, but from the pictures I'm scratching my head wondering - how is this a knoll hole?

Chris_Clouser

I think Jay means it is a punchbowl.

Jay Flemma

Well wait a minute chris - when I was there with the member he pointed out the knoll and its huge in its dimensions and makes the approach semi-blind - granted its not as huge as other knolls on other template versions.  The camera washed out into a mere two-dimensions what was much larger in person and in 3-d.

Now I did get on the green and look at it - standing in the pack portion and looking towards the front and sides and say exactly this - "If I didn't know any better I'd say this was a punchbowl"

I said that because some of the sloping sides and rolls made it look a little more like a saddle.  The member and I thought it may sort of a saddle/punchbowl blend, but as you look from either side, I though my favorite feature was the bold use of the knoll...he didn't shy away from that land form.
« Last Edit: August 20, 2007, 11:48:46 AM by Jay Flemma »

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