Given that you have to putt once on the green, I'd like to see a little more variety of shot required when you're not. Its still a huge improvement over thick rough that requires a sand-wedge flop shot all the time.
Jonathan,
That's only true about better players that can pitch or loft shots off tight lies. Its a risky shot for the regular golfer.
. . . .
Here's the rub. Golf is really only about one thing -- it's about getting the ball in the hole as efficiently as possible. It's not an obstacle course where you have to succeed at ten different shots in order to finish. If all of the better players' superior shotmaking skills do not enable them to get the ball in the hole as often as they like, then is the course really at fault? Or are the players really just not that good, and just posturing and wishing the average guy would get his skull bashed in more often? . . . .
Amen, Tom. Much of this sort of discussion begs the question of "what is a
good player"? I subscribe to the idea that if player A beats player B on course C, then on that day on that course player A is better than player B. Over time and on a number of different courses player B may be player A more often than not, in which case I'd say player B is generally a better (I should interject that I mean "better" in a playing skill sense) player than player A?
This analysis doesn't answer the question of whether either player A or B is a "good" player. I have no idea how you determine who a good player is, except by competition against other players, and then the ranking is only relative. Where is the good cut-off from the not-good? Against the course, I say the course always wins (absent some future player's ability to make 18 consecutive holes-in-one during a round).
Another pet peave of mine about the term "good
golfer." I have a "friend" I play with from time to time who's about my age (near 70). He was a mid-single digit handicapper at one time, but now is in the 11 - 13 range. I now play to a 19. So I grant you that I would consider him to be a better (more skilled) player than I am, looking at it generally. However, he has told me that unlike himself, I am not a "real golfer." He's thinking in terms of skill, of course, and of course he's being rediculous, and I can ignore him. My perspective is that the phrases a "good golfer" or "real golfer" should be used to describe characteristics inclusive of, but far beyond, the skill level, a good part of which is summed up in "the spirit of the game" and other etiquette considerations as laid out in Section I of the USGA's
Rules of Golf book. It should not take too much to figure out some of the other "good golfer" characteristics.
I've never played OM or any other other Bandon Resort courses, so my comment is not in that particular context. Also, I don't mean to highjack the thread. I just felt like this was a good opportunity to vent a little.