Stanford Golf Club was my “Home” Course from 1964-1968, when I was an undergraduate and played it first casually and then with more intensity as I moved through the steps of my “education.”
About 10 days ago I played Stanford for the first time in 8 years and the first time for me over the most recent re-routing. According to the club history, this was one of George Thomas's last projects, even though most of the work was done by Billy Bell. When Golf Magazine published its first World Top 100 20+ years ago, Stanford made the cut while Yale and others did not. I suspect this had more to do with the then influence of Sandy Tatum and Grant Spaeth and Tom Watson, than objective relative merit. Since then the course has had some significant changes, mostly due to the transmogrification of the Santa Clara Valley to “Silicon Valley.” Sand Hill Road was just a bordering road when I first played the course-now it is a freeway to financial nirvana. The road works extracted much of the soul of the golf course--particularly what was the old 4th hole, a long (then) and marvellous two shotter over a hill into a dip and then up to a two-tiered,”Mackenzie” green. But, life must move on…..
The old Stanford will never be recovered, but what remains is worth talking about, particularly in the context of its history. The following are some of my observations based on the 18 holes I played October 9, 2008. I know there are pictures on another recent thread. If anybody could link them to this thread, I would be appreciative.
--the introduction to the course--the drive in up the hill, the pro shop, the club, the putting greens and the first tee are very much as they were in 1964. Bonus points for the retro feeling. 'Tis a pity that the green fee is not waht I paid in the mid-60's ($3.50).......
--the first hole lacks not only the rickety bridge that one used to have to traverse to get to the fairway, but also the huge arroyo @ 200 yards or so (which is being filled in to accomodate the ladies and the geezers), as well as the simple bunkering (now sadly MacKenzified) and the fast and firm mid-October conditions (now green when the hills are brown, rough thick rather than wispy, sigh....)
--on the second I miraculously managed to hit a solid straight drive with my reantal clubs and found myself just about in the same place as I witnessed Roberto Di Vincenzo in a seniors event in 1980 or so. I thought his drive amazing at the time, and the fact that I could equal it now at roughly the same age (then) of that great man was for me sad, rather than triumphant. To the right as you play the hole you see a spectacular trench bunker sitting at the back of a pushed up green. It is a Raynor(?) Ross (?) replica on the 30 acre practice facility which is now open only to golf team members and deep pocket donors. Should I as an alumnus be proud of this seemingly highly aesthetic paean to greed and exclusivity? No. It sucks. Just think what other great uses could have been put to that land by that great University.
--the 3rd is now completely reversed, and it is a very good medium length par-3. Kudos.
--the 4th is now another 3, top the green built by RTJ Jr. when they emasculated the old par-4 mentioend above. As a par-4 when I last played it it was a stupid hole--iron short of the barranca, pitch to the green. Now it is OK, but geezers like me can't stop from looking left to see what the 4th used to be........
--thankfully they have restored the old back tee up near the old back green. Unthankfully peons like me can't play that tee, so we have to be content with hitting from the ladies, with no need to think strategically.
--6 always was and still is one of the great medium length par-4s in the world of golf. They have cleared out some room on the left for the hackers, but that just serves to tempt the better players to open their shoulders. If there was even a hole designed for the well struck 1-iron this is it. Sic transit gloria 1-iron........
--Big Walt Driver could carry the trees on the dogleg 40 + years ago, but even today they are uncarryable to us wee mortals. This was and is a great risk-reward shortish par 5. One note of regret. The native oaks to the left of the green are now gone and replaced by a boring bunker. One of my playing partners (a member) told me that the oaks were dying due to OVERwatering. To the goal of keeping the course green, its natural attributes were being lost. Sigh...
--the 8th is a new RTJ green, but far less subtle that the old green nearer the creek. I never liked it 40 years ago, and still do not.
--9 now has a stupid bunker/tree complex(?) in the pull hook area off the tee, and the hill to the left beyond is now fully grassed, at rough height. In the 60's, that grass used to be brown native stuff, and the really good and long players at the time (e.g. John Brodie) used to hit it up there as far as they could and then pitch down to the green. Now that option is gone.....
--10 was and always wil be a slog up a hill. Always boring, still boring.
--11, going downhill, could be made into something interesting, maybe even a driveable par-4. Now it still is just an OK hole.
--12 was always will be great and quirky. You have to drive it long and straight (either left or right) to have a shot at the pin. Learn to love those trees in the middle of the fairway.
--13 used to be a great hole, but that was in the days where it took a solid hit to get over the center-line bunkers. Now it is a sky-ball and a 9-iron. They spent some money foo-fooing that center-line bunker to make it look like it had been designed by Fazio. They should have bulldozed it and moved it 20-30 yards forward and put in a Bell/Thomas artefact.
--not much you can do with 14. It is a simple medium par-3 over a barranca, Bunkers would be superfluous or even counterproductive.
--the next hole would be improved by making it a driveable par-4. All the resrotation money seems to have gone into putting bunkers down the left to punish the hackers. The green s already hard enough for them. Put a gentle l-r kick slope at 300 or so (the hole is severely downhill), surounded by hazards. Give the punters a chance for a birdie with an open fairway up to 250 yards or so.
--16 is a good uphill 5 which now has a left hand kick-plate to fee a 2nd shot onto the green. The bunker right seems to have been filled in, but the over-watered grass is not an improvement.
--17 is and always has been a great inverted Redan (i.e. front to back, left to right slope). It plays best at the 185 yard tees.
--Tom Watson once said that if you can see your tee ball bounce on this hole, you haven't hit it far enough! When I was there you could see the City and Mt. Tam standing on that tee. Who in the hell would care where your ball happened to bounce?
Rich
Oops! Modified to include 16......