I have been very fortunate to have played some of the very best links style courses that have been built over the last decade or so recently. They are fun, exciting, and beautiful to play. They have reintroduced some of the classic architectural elements back in style to new generation of golfers who may have never been introduced to such style before.
To me, they represent the very best in golf course architecture and I get great thrills every time I play them.
I would like to share some of my observations with everyone in the treehouse to see if I am on the right track with my thoughts regarding these courses and serve as an explanation on why such courses are so popular with many of us here. One caveat is that I am going to limit my discussion to the courses that I have actually played. There are several other great examples of this architecture movement elsewhere (e.g. Sand Hills), but for now, I am going to stick with what I know personally.
The first thoughts that come to my mind are common traits that all of these “new links style” courses share. These courses are defined by following characteristics.
- The most common feature that they all share is the enormous fairway widths. These courses feature fairways that are 40 to 80 yards wide (and in some case even WIDER!).
- The greens are large and feature large undulations and rolls that bring a lot of character to their shape. Some even feature “sideboards” and “backboards” that encourage golfers to play away from the hole.
- The greens are well guarded by severe bunkers (usually blow-out bunkers).
- They look natural and fit with the movements of the surrounding property.
- The fairways and greens are surrounded by fescues and waste areas with almost no trees that come in to play.
- They play best when conditions are firm and fast.
So, what makes them interesting and fun to play?
I think Rustic Canyon (and perhaps CommonGrounds as well) serves as a great fundamental example of the golf course architecture approach taken by these courses.
Rustic Canyon fairways are very, very wide. They are also relatively flat with relatively mild undulations (< 5 feet). However, greens are usually raised up, guarded by large severe bunkers, and feature wild undulations.
The primary defense for the tee shot is placement. Based on pin position and relative bunker position, one side of the fairway is usually favored. If you miss your tee shot to the wrong side, you are certainly not facing an impossible shot, but your approach will have less margin for error.
On approach shots, because of the firm and fast conditions and severe bunkers, the usual aerial assault may not be the best way to attack the green. You may even have to aim away from the pin and use the slopes to bring the ball back to the proper position.
This mental exercise of thinking through and walking back your shot selections from the pin to the tee is what makes these courses so much fun to play. While you can just go out and mindlessly whack your ball, the course rewards those who think things through, those who plan two or three steps ahead like a billiard player who position his cue ball for ideal spots two or three shots ahead.
Rustic Canyon, as is, is a great example of this type of “thinking man’s” course and its adulation on this board and others are well deserved.
But, it can (and does) get even more interesting.
The Wine Valley Golf Club features even bigger fairways and even bigger (and certainly prettier) bunkers. The course also introduces fairway undulation into the equation.
The Wine Valley is built on a very rolling high desert land. The fairways at WVGC have rolls that are up to 10 o 15 feet from low to high. While Rustic Canyon does have elevation changes, most of the fairways are fairly level. But with fairway elevation changes at WVGC, you are introduced to additional strategic elements – bad lies and blind approaches.
If you miss to the bad side at WVGC, you likely will not have a clear view to the green. In front of you is a rolling fairway hill with no distinct landmark in view to aim at. Even worse, you may be facing straight at a large nasty bunker that brings an equally large amount of intimidation. Because of the movement, you may also be facing difficult lies. It is quite common at WVGC to face uphill, downhill, and side hill lies. All of these challenges bring multiples to the same strategies you face in flatter courses like Rustic Canyon. And to me, it makes it even more fun.
But what if you turn the notch even higher? What if you bring all the tricks in the bag to the course?
I believe that is what the very best of the new generation of link style courses like Chambers Bay, Ballyneal, and Pacific Dunes (and Bandon Dunes, and Bandon Trails, so on and so on) bring.
At Chambers Bay or Ballyneal, the ideal fairway position off the tee is not ˝ the fairway or even 1/3 of the fairway like it is at WVGC or RC. The ideal spots are typically 10 to 15 yards wide and are very well guarded with bunkers that tell you to stay away from those plumb spots. The ideal spots also feature turbo mounds that are difficult to carry or reach, but if you do, you are rewarded with extra bump and roll that will add yards to your tee shots and make your approach shots much less demanding.
However, if you miss those spots, the penalties are much more severe as well. The fairways feature bumps that punt indifferent shots away into nasty downhill lies to greens that are blind and located far, far away.
A great example of this design approach is the 10th at Ballyneal. The landing area is impossibly wide, but the ideal spot on the right edge of the fairway is only 10 yards or so wide. To get there, you have to fly a nasty looking bunker that is 200 to 260 yards to carry. If you pull it off, you have a great view to the green with a straightforward approach and a level lie to perform it on. If you don’t, your ball feeds to the hollow on the left side where most of the balls gather, leaving you with 150 to 200 yard blind approach with most likely a downhill lie. Talk about tough!!!
Another sweet example is the 14th at Chambers Bay. You have three separate tee shots from the tee. First, you can just lay up to the right where there is ample space, which will leaves you with 190 to 230 yard approach to the well guarded green. You can also attack the fairway bunker in the middle about 220 to 260 yards away. If you are successful, you are rewarded with a turbo boost off the side hill that will add about 40 yards to your drive and leave you with an easy 150 to 110 yard approach. Or you can just bomb away and carry 230 to 280 yards above the acres and acres of waste area which will leave you with the same shot. But if you pull slightly or leave it short, you may have to layup 50 to 100 yards short of the green.
Ballyneal and Chambers Bay also increases the difficulties as you get closer to the green. The greens and its surrounding area are smaller than it is at RC or WVGC. Also, usually there is one side of the green that is either surrounded by the bunker or feature such severe slope that it punishes the bad approach much more severely than you do at RC or WVGC.
In my opinion, this combination of increase in severity between the good and the bad shots and smaller and better guarded ideal positions elevate these courses to a “special” category. Natural land forms that support this type of severity is pretty rare (Ballyneal, Pacific Dune) or you have to move quite a bit of earth to make it happen (Chambers Bay). But just like increased contrast ratios bring much more detail and life-like images to a TV monitor, the increase in severity of the landform heightens one’s senses and brings higher highs and lower lows with every shot performed.
Some may argue that “don’t you also face that kind of severity with US Open type of course with narrow fairways and tall rough?” But I would argue back that there is a huge difference between just trying to avoid danger compared to wanting to reach an ideal position. The former is like living the life just to avoid jail. The latter is like trying to live the life to the fullest potential (even if you may not pull it off). They are not alike and it is why one is so much more enjoyable than the other.
I would like to thank the architects who are bringing “fun” and “challenging” at the same time to golf course design. It is very well appreciated.