Tom Doak...
If you have occasion, would you elaborate on your earlier comment
"They would never get away with making the hole today"
Why?
Or better asked, "Who would stop whom, the architect or the client?"
cheers
vk
v kmetz:
I will start by asking a rhetorical question: have you seen a new golf hole in the last 30 years that looks and plays anything like the 17th at Pebble Beach? I have not ... and that's despite the fact that Nicklaus' shot in '72 and Watson's in '82 would make copying the hole seem to be a popular idea.
Perhaps some tech-savvy young man will come on here after me and overlay this green with the 12th green at Augusta National, and then we could have a real discussion. I believe the green at Pebble is smaller overall, and a shallower target than the green at Augusta; and where the 12th at Augusta has severe trouble on two sides, the green at Pebble has trouble on all four ... the front bunker is actually the best option if you miss the green.
The feature of the hole that I don't think anyone would copy today is that little hourglass pinch which divides the right and left halves of the green, combined with the strong slopes in play. It is so narrow today that it often precludes putting from the wrong half of the green, on anything resembling a line to the hole on the other half ... and so narrow that there is NO WAY a ball hit toward it [i.e. toward the middle of the green] can stay on the green. Of course, this is not the way the hole was originally designed ... the green was probably five feet bigger all the way around, so the pinch point was ten feet bigger in the middle ... but the green has been that small since I was ten years old, at least. I am sure there must be some other hole, somewhere, where you could say that, but I can't think of one right now.
For those who have not been to Pebble Beach in person, it's also quite stunning to get to the tee for the first time and discover how flat the hole really is and how little of the hole can be seen from the tee ... you can see the opening on the right and you can see the flag on the left, and you can see a lot of bunker and long rough, and that's it. Watching on TV for 30 years gives a perspective on the hole that doesn't exist in real life.
But, it will be the same for everyone in the field today ... I just hope the shot we wind up remembering is a heroic one to overcome the difficulty, and not one where someone gets screwed out of the championship.