Patrick:
Thanks for the thoughts. I share your thoughts on the subject in general. It seems like every course in the twin cities has added some length in the last couple of years with mixed impact on quality. We have two new back tees at Oak Ridge. One of them detracts from the hole significantly and I vocally opposed the other new tee but it has not opened yet so we will have to see how it plays.
As to Interlachen, I played it from the new back tees a couple of times last year and while I do not know the course that well, I had different reactions.
2 did not bother me at all. It still seemed like a good drive and pitch hole. I saw little risk of being beaned from hole 8 because it would require someone to hit it over the green - pretty rare for a long par four. I also like shared tees at a private club - it creates a spot for a quick conversation with friends you encounter.
3 is a bit excessive - although I aim for the middle of the green even from the short tee.
18 bothered me more than you. It turns the hole into a slugging contest to a green that is nearly unpinnable because of the slopes.
Didn't they also lengthen 8? I didn't remember that back tee from before but my memory is not the most trustworthy.
I can't imagine any of the new tees will help Interlachen in rankings.
Jason-
Wow you must have played them late in the season as they were just putting them in October when I left for FL.
You are correct that the new box on #2 probably won't be hit much at all. And with only 3-5 groups all day playing that tee the likelihood of someone getting hit is minuscule. It just looks out of place to me especially with the split tee-box being such a nice feature as you said.
The reason I don't like #3's new tee is it makes it the exact same club as the 225 yard 17. It was great at 160-180 between the 150-180 #5 and the 170-190 #13.
#18 is indeed now a slugfest. It's a championship par-4. Personally I think the black tees probably should be where they were before at 440 and only should be dragged back on some days. But I guess you know what you're getting playing the blacks. The reason it didn't bother me is because it wasn't really changing the character of the hole. For the long hitters it's now driver and 4-iron or so. Which for most of the older members is how it plays from the white member tees.
They lengthened #8 a few years ago and then moved the box slightly back again 2 years ago before the Women's Open IIRC. It's an even better hole now especially with the way Silva brought the bunkers back in to pinch the fairway. It forces me to either absolutely crush a drive on a very fine line or just hit 3-wood out to the right and have a long approach. One of the best holes out there imo.
Matt - As much as I love Interlachen it probably is a bit overrated because of both the tradition and that most say it's the best course in MN. (And with MN having the most golfers per capita word travels far and wide that it's the best.) I've had a number of people tell me they think Fazio's Springhill is the better golf course but unfortunately I've yet to play it so I can't compare. Honestly though you could also make a strong case imo that Minneapolis Golf Club is damn close to the being as good a course as ICC but lacks in the tradition.
That being said Interlachen is a wonderful old Ross with some fantastic green complexes that have lots of movement. The two raters I spoke of previously both agreed that it has one of the best sets of short par-4's (#2,#6,#7,#10,#16) that are still both fun to play and hold up against par pretty well even if they are all driver/3-wood and wedge. I've thought for a while that they need to knock down 2, #1 and #11 (and maybe 3 - #9) of their 5 par-5's into par 4's and make it a par 71 (or 70). #1 was originally a par-4 on Ross' design until RTJ moved the green back 40 yards and turned it into a par-5. It's not a bad par-5 but if you moved the tee-box up just 40 yards it would be a great opening par-4. #11 is the controversial hole that they changed to a par-4 one summer but didn't take down the trees at the corner of the dogleg like they needed to. It's a par 4.5 as it stands depending on whether your drive gets through the trees or not. There's a small but strong contingent of members that are pushing for it to be changed and the trees taken down. If so it could turn into one of the best par-4's in the state.
Matt have you played it since Silva re-did the bunkers in '07? If not they have GREATLY added to the architecture of the course. Likewise the tree-removal they did also was well done and they could even take out 500+ more I'd say.
In all I still think Interlachen is a top 100 course but it probably falls in the 85+ range and not the 60-70 range it's in now. I'd be curious to hear others thoughts.