I had the opportunity to interview an aspiring law student today, who, in her undergrad career, played on the Yale golf squad. Being very interested to delve into her thoughts on the course (and forgetting the typical interview questions like "if you were a tree, what kind would you be?"
), I asked her about her thoughts on the architectural merits of Yale. All was well until she said it was "target" golf.
As a neophytic architecture aficianado, that puzzled me a bit, because usually I associate target golf with desert golf. Upon reflection, though, when I thought about her explanation about needing to hit shots in the correct location to have the best reward, I thought maybe that could be considered another way to describe strategy (of course, the penalties, I would think, at a course like Yale might be much less severe than missing the target at a desert course and ending up in the junk).
Any thoughts and/or comment on Yale as target golf.
Steve
by the way, I figure anyone that played golf in college deserved a good rating (especially if she could somehow end up on my team for the firm golf outing!)