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Sean_A

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Tees and Course Rhythm
« on: September 05, 2007, 04:20:08 AM »
Looking at the Chambers Bay pix piqued my interest in mix n' match tees - meaning playing from a fancied tee at any given hole regardless of "sets of tees".  Are tee sets designed with a particular flow in mind?  Do archies feel that rhythm they are trying to create is disrupted by guys playing mix n' match tees?

Ciao
New plays planned for 2024:Winterfield, Alnmouth, Camden, Palmetto Bluff Crossroads Course, Colleton River Dye Course  & Old Barnwell

Tom_Doak

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Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #1 on: September 05, 2007, 07:02:14 AM »
Sean:

No, I don't think that people using "mix and match" tees will screw up the intended rhythm of the course.  Truthfully, sometimes I build back tees that I don't like in regard to the rhythm, because people insist on having so many holes of a certain length -- so that usually the best rhythm does NOT flow when playing all the way back.

Chambers Bay would be like that, too ... to play the back tees you'd have to hike back up a hill on more than half the holes, because they were trying to stretch it out to 7500 yards to attract a championship.  At 6600 yards it would be a much more pleasant experience, not just to play but in terms of minimizing the transitions.

Tom Birkert

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Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #2 on: September 05, 2007, 07:26:02 AM »
It’s an interesting question. Personally I like to challenge myself by playing the course from the plates, but then I tend to play with good players and it’s more of a test all round. I would not play from those tees if I was not of suitable ability to do so.

However, from an architectural and playing standpoint, it really frustrates me if I have to walk back a long way to the back tee. A course will always seem to flow better to me if the previous green and subsequent tee are close to each other, and one does not have to traipse back 70 odd yards to the back tee (I found the new back tee on 12 at Riviera very incongruous for this reason).

I appreciate the designer (especially of modern courses with housing) can not easily accommodate these wishes, but it does make a course seem far more natural of a layout to me.

Of course, I play in the UK where cart paths aren’t as prevalent as they are in the US (thankfully!). I’m also grateful to be able to walk whichever course I play at my home club.

Tom_Doak

  • Karma: +1/-1
Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #3 on: September 05, 2007, 10:02:53 AM »
Tom:

Don't forget that at most clubs only 5-10% of golfers play from the back tees.  If we make the course "flow" ideally for those tees, then it's a longer walk for the other 95% of players.

Jordan Wall

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Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #4 on: September 05, 2007, 10:16:48 AM »
Sean,

Tom is right regarding the tees at Chambers Bay.  Playing at 6600 or 6700 yards is really the best way to feel the real flow of the course.  Holes such as 5, 9, and 14 all require big treks to get up to the tee boxes.  I think the course is made better by these tees, as Washington undoubtebly needs a course that can sustain a major or big event, but as far as flow is concerned, a couple tee boxes do require big treks.

As far as mix n' match go, I have no problem playing varying sets of tees.  From the back tee markers (not the tippy tips) at Chambers I can reach two of the par-5's, sometimes more or less depending on the wind.  However, I played #14 at 498 yards and didn't stand a chance at reaching the green into a 30 mph wind, despite its downhill nature.  On a hole like that I wouldn't mind moving up.  For the matter, I play the lower and back tee box on 17 because for me, its a better hole from there.  Playing from up top, I hit 8-iron past the pin from 172, and so the hole isn't really hard at the back tee markers.  At 217 and a bit uphill though, its a real great hole.
So, I definitely go mix n' match sometimes.
« Last Edit: September 05, 2007, 10:17:50 AM by Jordan Wall »

Tom_Doak

  • Karma: +1/-1
Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #5 on: September 05, 2007, 10:29:20 AM »
Jordan:

Not to pick on you, because I've seen lots of others do the same thing (or complain about it when they are too embarrassed to move up), but aren't you pandering to yourself a bit if you switch your tees around so you can go for a par-five in two?  And isn't that unfair to the guy you're playing with who is twenty yards shorter off the tee than you are?

Tour pros are often lousy critics of architecture because they think everything should be designed around their games.  Really, though, most other golfers think the same thing ... they just don't get to say it into a microphone.

Rich Goodale

Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #6 on: September 05, 2007, 10:37:45 AM »
Tom:

Don't forget that at most clubs only 5-10% of golfers play from the back tees.  If we make the course "flow" ideally for those tees, then it's a longer walk for the other 95% of players.

Tom

Is it not true that if the back tees "flow" (i.e. are near the green), every player will have the same length of walk--the 90-95% will just have to walk forward before they hit their drives rather than after they do so (as will be the case for the 5-10%).  Same as the situation of the men vs. the ladies if you place the regular men's tees near the green.

Rich

Sean Leary

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Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #7 on: September 05, 2007, 10:39:05 AM »
Jordan doesn't move up on par 5's. He simply hits until he's happy with his tee shot :)

Actually, one of the interesting things about CB on the card is that there is no 6700 yard tees.  It goes from 7100 down to 6500. Probably not a bad idea considering the pace of play issues, as borderline players will be less likely to go back to 7100...


Tom Birkert

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Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #8 on: September 05, 2007, 10:40:35 AM »
Tom:

Don't forget that at most clubs only 5-10% of golfers play from the back tees.  If we make the course "flow" ideally for those tees, then it's a longer walk for the other 95% of players.

Tom,

I appreciate the % who play the backs, although that % is certainly higher at my home club but then so is the % of single figure handicaps, I just love a course that winds and sweeps around in a natural, fluid progression rather than having tees jut off 50 or 60 yards backwards in the opposite direction of the flow of the course. From an enjoyment perspective I would also suggest that the average handicap golfer would be able to gain some sort of insight – and further appreciation – of the relative toughness of the course from the back tees if they walk past them in order to get to the set that they are playing. Of course, it is easier to accommodate this if the course is not designed with cart paths and housing having to be considered. If the green to tee walk is relatively short then I don’t think the majority of average handicap golfers would be too upset with having to walk a bit further – they would at least be walking in the direction the hole is going! Edit: Richard just explained above what I was trying to get at, he just did it far better than I did!

The main point for me is the feel and flow of a course and I find that somewhat interrupted by tees which take you away from the prevalent routing of the course. There is a perfect example at my home course of a new tee – the tee makes the hole much better from a playing perspective, and indeed was the only real solution to offer the better player a challenge on the hole. However, the tee is 40 yards back and elevated, so it slows down the pace of play and doesn’t really seem to fit in (one can tell it is a new addition). I find myself torn between the positive change to the challenge of the hole and the negative side of the clearly newly added feature. I guess part of that would be an appropriate addition for the topic of what the eye “sees” on a course.
« Last Edit: September 05, 2007, 10:42:00 AM by Tom Birkert »

Garland Bayley

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Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #9 on: September 05, 2007, 10:51:27 AM »

Tom

Is it not true that if the back tees "flow" (i.e. are near the green), every player will have the same length of walk--the 90-95% will just have to walk forward before they hit their drives rather than after they do so (as will be the case for the 5-10%).  Same as the situation of the men vs. the ladies if you place the regular men's tees near the green.

Rich

Yep, but I recon 90-95% of all golfers will be walking a longer course and taking longer to play that way. The one true advantage to carts is the green to tee travel time on these modern new fangled courses with all their different tees. And you know what, I don't really care what the course looks like for those playing 7500 yards.

 :P
"I enjoy a course where the challenges are contained WITHIN it, and recovery is part of the game  not a course where the challenge is to stay ON it." Jeff Warne

Richard Boult

Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #10 on: September 05, 2007, 11:04:56 AM »
In order to provide longer yardage from the back tees on most courses, the back tees must be set back from the place where you enter the tee box from the previous green. Therefore, you can't easily design the course so that all players walk the same distance regardless of the tees being played. As one who plays back and middle tees about the same amount, I don't think it's a big deal.
« Last Edit: September 05, 2007, 11:06:33 AM by R.Boult »

Sean_A

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Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #11 on: September 05, 2007, 11:16:13 AM »
I appreciate the responses from everybody, but I wasn't thinking in terms of transition from green to tee flow.  I was more considering how the archie envisioned each hole to play from each set of tees and that relationship/rhythm of one hole following another.  For instance, an archie may try to avoid back to back 340 yard holes and does so if a certain set of tees is played, but this flow can get a bit mucked up if a player bounces around between tee sets.  Does this make sense?

Ciao
New plays planned for 2024:Winterfield, Alnmouth, Camden, Palmetto Bluff Crossroads Course, Colleton River Dye Course  & Old Barnwell

Jason Topp

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Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #12 on: September 05, 2007, 11:20:04 AM »
Many courses in my area have a suggested mixed set of tees.  It appears to me that they simply alternate between sets from hole to hole.  

I think a better general approach is to play back tees on par fours and forward tees on 5's and 3's.  3's tend to be too long, I believe because designers like to sneak yardage into those holes and 5's become more fun if the agressive play is a viable option.  For the same reason, I would also play forward tees on short par fours if any exist.


Tom Birkert

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Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #13 on: September 05, 2007, 11:25:39 AM »
Sorry for dragging the topic away from the intended course Sean!

I certainly have never experienced anyone playing from various sets of tees throughout the course of a round. A decision is made at the start (normally the blues unless someone more than a 12 is playing in which case the whites) and that is that.

I have played a couple of courses in the US where they had some form of composite tees which meant you played the back tees on some holes and then the next set up on others. I think the idea was to bridge the gap between the 7200 odd yardage and the 6600 odd yardage the respective tees played. I didn’t like it (and I can’t for the life of me remember what courses they were).

Tom_Doak

  • Karma: +1/-1
Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #14 on: September 05, 2007, 11:35:30 AM »
"A decision is made at the start and that is that."

I guess that's how nearly everyone plays but I think it's a shame.  I was just reading a great article this morning in the Journal of the Shivas Irons Society, about one of my favorite courses (which goes unnamed in the piece), and will quote from it here ...

"Sadly, our sense of play in golf has been hemmed in by our own creations in the name of efficiency, or perhaps ego, and they give us less enjoyment than they might if we could just bring ourselves to loosed the constraints of self-perception that force us into our usual roles as golfers:  the capable from the tips, women and children up front and the great mass of us somewhere in-between."

and, later,

"The experience has given me renewed license forthe playful anarchy I experienced as a teenager, when the evening light was filtering through the treetops and the marshals had long retired for the day. . . . Real play in golf demands a spirit of spontaneous invention, tempered by a respect for others.  We should make up the tee box from time to time, as we did that day, just to ensure that we can still perceive ourselves as capable of being creative and playful outside the box that the modern golf world insists we inhabit."

The above was written by a fellow named Hilton Tudhope, who goes on to write some profound things about playing without keeping score, etc.

For Rich:  Of course you are right in your analysis of walking distance, but Garland summed up the point I had intended to make.  Most people are playing the middle tees and don't want to walk an extra 500 yards between holes.

Richard Boult

Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #15 on: September 05, 2007, 11:36:27 AM »
one of the two courses I play most - Cypress Ridge, a Peter Jabobson course - has "Combo" tees and they even have a rating and slope so you can post your scores.  In general, they put you on the white tees on the higher handicap holes and blue tees on the rest. They suggest these "Combo" tees for 13-20 handicappers. Doesn't change the "flow" of play, just the amount of challenge.

Sean_A

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Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #16 on: September 05, 2007, 11:41:36 AM »
Sorry for dragging the topic away from the intended course Sean!

I certainly have never experienced anyone playing from various sets of tees throughout the course of a round. A decision is made at the start (normally the blues unless someone more than a 12 is playing in which case the whites) and that is that.

I have played a couple of courses in the US where they had some form of composite tees which meant you played the back tees on some holes and then the next set up on others. I think the idea was to bridge the gap between the 7200 odd yardage and the 6600 odd yardage the respective tees played. I didn’t like it (and I can’t for the life of me remember what courses they were).


Tom

You are generally right about UK courses.  There are fewer sets of tees and often times the back set is only available for comps.  I was thinking more for American courses where there are often at least fours sets of tees.  When I played Pinehurst we mixed and matched tees depending on the whim of the person with the honour because we didn't fancy playing all the back on many holes nor forward on some holes - just by glancing at the card.  It was an idea born out of a game we play in which the man with the honour can choose the club all tee off with (of course all use the same club or close aproximation).  Generally, I liked the idea (and so did the caddies as they often did less walking), but I thought we may be messing with the flow a bit.  For instance, I am not sure, but I bet we never went to the back tee for par 5s.  However, I am not sure archies get that deep in their thought process about this sort of thing when the blocks at many courses are placed willy nilly anyway.  

Ciao
« Last Edit: September 05, 2007, 12:36:50 PM by Sean Arble »
New plays planned for 2024:Winterfield, Alnmouth, Camden, Palmetto Bluff Crossroads Course, Colleton River Dye Course  & Old Barnwell

Jim Sweeney

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Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #17 on: September 05, 2007, 11:46:11 AM »
Tom:

Interesting that Mr. Tudhope writes profoundly about NOT keeping score; one of the key elements in "Golf in the Kingdom" is the very careful keeping of one's score....

I have heard that at more than a couple of what we would consider prominent clubs it is de reiguer for the winner of a hole to enjoy the priviledge of choosing the teeing area on the next hole. It is an idea I like. Similar to the winner of the toss electing to receive or kick.
"Hope and fear, hope and Fear, that's what people see when they play golf. Not me. I only see happiness."

" Two things I beleive in: good shoes and a good car. Alligator shoes and a Cadillac."

Moe Norman

Gary Slatter

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Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #18 on: September 05, 2007, 11:49:07 AM »
Good question Sean. I personally like a mixture of tees on many courses although I don't mind the walk "forward" as much any more, as long as the walk is towards the green. Long gone are the days when I looked around to find where the tiger tees were!  (Speaking of Tiger tees I was at a meeting at the Links Trust today and saw the Championship tees on the Old Course were called the Tiger Tees in the 1930s).
I've found the worse mix of tees is usually the forward and the next one back, for almost every women's event it requires using a mixture of tees (some Red, some Yellow). It's hard to find a course around 6000 yards for women. Too many 5200 yarders. Nothing wrong with 5200 yard courses, except they don't all look planned, they look like someone just wanted some "forward Tees".
Gary Slatter
gary.slatter@raffles.com

Richard Boult

Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #19 on: September 05, 2007, 11:54:56 AM »
TomD: I really enjoyed the latest Journal from the SIS - and that article in particular!  Reminds me too of that 9-hole course Mike Keiser did along Lake Michigan where there are several tee boxes, but no markers. Whoever has honors just picks where to play from on each tee.  

In our Men's Club at Cypress Ridge, we have one format where we play 4-5 holes from each of 4 tee boxes and we pick before the round which holes we'll play from each tee box. It really introduces a new element of strategy.  Many simply pick the women's tees for par 5's to reach them in 2, but others choose tees that put every approach at 100 yards out.  

I personally forego pre-shot routines, just to keep each shot different and creative.  I have one hole at Monarch Dunes where I tee off with a Happy Gilmore drive. It makes the approach a little more interesting since it's rarely from the fairway - but always 300+ yards from the tee ;)

In another thread, I recently posted that I'm a proponent of playing whatever balls you find instead of buying prov1s (just don't be a nerd and carry a ball retriever. Just another way to keep the game more interesting.

Speaking of being a nerd, I spent an hour yesterday on Google Earth measuring the distances from tees to fairway bunkers at Bandon's courses. Going there for the 1st time in 10 days (with the SIS)!!!

Wayne_Kozun

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Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #20 on: September 05, 2007, 12:03:07 PM »
Tom:

Don't forget that at most clubs only 5-10% of golfers play from the back tees.  If we make the course "flow" ideally for those tees, then it's a longer walk for the other 95% of players.
Is it really that many people that play the back tees?  My experience is that it is much less, more like 2% of golfers who would play the back tees, especially at newer courses that have 5 or so sets of tees.

At my club there are three sets of tees for Men - Gold, Blue and White.  The Gold tees only exist on four holes and the length difference is significant on only two of these holes but it is very rare to see anyone playing from the Gold tees - usually hotshot juniors and the Mens CC.

Tom_Doak

  • Karma: +1/-1
Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #21 on: September 05, 2007, 12:51:38 PM »
Wayne:  Back tee usage varies from club to club, based on the other options available.  If the backs are 7500 yards then even 2% is probably high.  By the same token, I'm told that 25% of play at The Valley Club is from the back markers, because it's 6600 from the back and 6200 from the whites.

BCrosby

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #22 on: September 05, 2007, 04:41:02 PM »

I guess that's how nearly everyone plays but I think it's a shame.  I was just reading a great article this morning in the Journal of the Shivas Irons Society, about one of my favorite courses (which goes unnamed in the piece), and will quote from it here ...

"Sadly, our sense of play in golf has been hemmed in by our own creations in the name of efficiency, or perhaps ego, and they give us less enjoyment than they might if we could just bring ourselves to loosed the constraints of self-perception that force us into our usual roles as golfers:  the capable from the tips, women and children up front and the great mass of us somewhere in-between."

and, later,

"The experience has given me renewed license forthe playful anarchy I experienced as a teenager, when the evening light was filtering through the treetops and the marshals had long retired for the day. . . . Real play in golf demands a spirit of spontaneous invention, tempered by a respect for others.  We should make up the tee box from time to time, as we did that day, just to ensure that we can still perceive ourselves as capable of being creative and playful outside the box that the modern golf world insists we inhabit."

The above was written by a fellow named Hilton Tudhope, who goes on to write some profound things about playing without keeping score, etc.


Could the improbable name "Hilton Tudhope" be some sort of anagram for "Max Behr"?

Bob


Jason McNamara

Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #23 on: September 05, 2007, 05:20:06 PM »
one of the two courses I play most - Cypress Ridge, a Peter Jabobson course - has "Combo" tees and they even have a rating and slope so you can post your scores.  In general, they put you on the white tees on the higher handicap holes and blue tees on the rest. ...

This is also the case at the Jacobsen/Hardy courses at Blackhorse just NW of Houston.  In both cases it's to provide an option at about 67-/6800 yds.

Jordan Wall

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Re:Tees and Course Rhythm
« Reply #24 on: September 05, 2007, 05:29:16 PM »
Jordan:

Not to pick on you, because I've seen lots of others do the same thing (or complain about it when they are too embarrassed to move up), but aren't you pandering to yourself a bit if you switch your tees around so you can go for a par-five in two?  And isn't that unfair to the guy you're playing with who is twenty yards shorter off the tee than you are?

Tour pros are often lousy critics of architecture because they think everything should be designed around their games.  Really, though, most other golfers think the same thing ... they just don't get to say it into a microphone.

Tom, I play the back tee markers, and therefore do not move up to reach the par-5's.  

I simply move to the tips on one or two holes (17 and sometimes 15) and move forward sometimes on 14 so I can have a legitimate shot at hitting the green in two (its a long par-4).

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