In the tournament my team just played in, one of my groupmates mentioned playing in the PA Open a couple of years ago when the Oakmont greens were, as he said, "Rolling 16.5 on the stimp."
Tim, your groupmate was incorrect. Greenspeeds of 16.5 would be impossible at Oakmont.
See Arthur Weber's study on slope and greenspeeds.
At at stimp speed of 13, on a 4 degree slope, a ball will NOT stop rolling.
At 16.5, that occurs on a slope of 2 degrees or less.
But, it makes for nice folklore.
Now, I don't know how true that is, but supposing it was, does that seem a bit unreasonable? Oakmont, I know, is legendary for the amount of slope in their greens, so wouldn't 16.5-stimp greens eliminate a lot of interesting pin positions and just make for such difficult putting as to pose a pace of play issue?
It would require hole locations in the bunkers or fronting fairways.
It's FICTION
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1LDhbyZPl9M
Is the green speed depicted in the above video reasonable? Do greens need to be that fast, regardless of what the membership wants (or thinks it wants)?
Patrick--
Thank you for the reply; I had a feeling this guy was exaggerating.
Now, this raises some more interesting issues. I have never played Oakmont or Mountain Ridge, your two exemplar courses for this discussion. If the maintenance staffs at both courses ratcheted back the greens by two feet on the stimpmeter, would...
A: ...there be blood in the streets and calls for the sacking of the Superintendent?
B: ...a bunch of previously unreasonable pin positions open up for use and the membership embrace them?
C: ...a bunch of previously unreasonable pin positions open up for use and the membership not care and wish to go back to the old, faster speeds?
D: ...the potential variety of pin positions wouldn't really change and the club would go back to the faster speeds?
If [C], does this imply a flaw in the membership's perspective on the preparation of the putting surfaces?
Would Mountain Ridge and/or Oakmont become less interesting if the green speeds were to decrease by about two feet on the stimpmeter?
Also, what do you (and anyone else who's interested in this thread, and the same goes for all the questions I'm asking) make of the situation that plays out in the Youtube video whose link I posted?
I would hazard a guess that I have played more than 95% of my lifetime rounds of golf on greens that would roll less than 10 on the stimpmeter, so I am definitely a luddite when it comes to higher-speed greens. I relish every opportunity I have to putt on faster greens, but there have been a couple times in tournaments where those who set the pin positions have gotten a little overzealous.
Cheers.
--Tim