Or perhaps incorrectly defined?
This is an area I've been thinking about quite a bit lately, and one where my ideas are admittedly not fully formulated, so keep that in mind when you lay into me...
George Thomas is credited with stating "strategy is the soul of the game", and judging his hole diagrams in
Golf Architecture In America and in Geoff Shack's terrific book
The Captain, a good of his definition of strategy included discrete options. [Poster's insight: this view is overwhelming favored by those who judge armchair architect discussions, btw, so if winning those are your goal, study his books and learn to draw... you won't get my vote (see the rest of my post), but you might win a contest or three.]
Now, when I first came across these diagrams and ideas (thanks, Geoff!), I was fascinated by them; somehow, discrete options and avenues appealed to the inner geek in me (and he's a big geek, sadly). I thought such an approach was the be all and end all of golf course design.
Then a poster on here said something on here that I found simple yet profound (paraphrasing here): the problem with options in golf is they are almost always too obvious, particularly to the better player. Any player will almost always gravitate toward one option; even with options that are less discrete, such as a diagonal carry, the clever player will always build in safe margins for error. [Another note: Pete Dye screws this poster by making both the carry and the fairway diagonal. Brutal for the golfer who struggles to control his distances, absolutely brutal. Keeps the pros on their toes, but kills guys like me. And please don't give me the "play the right tees" line, there are no right tees for his courses for someone like me... and I say that having enjoyed the two PD courses I've played.]
In one simply observation, this poster blew apart all of my thinking about golf course architecture. But in its place, I believe I have developed a different appreciation for golf course design. This led to much of my thinking about what I refer to as subtle versus non-subtle golf design (or black and white versus grayscale versus full color golf; the latter appeals to my inner artist, who is admittedly not as strong as my inner geek).
So I developed a much greater appreciation for the non-obvious, the subtle, the shades of gray.
And if you think about it, the best golfers in the world hit 60-70% of fairways and greens. If you extrapolate that to a par 4, with two full shots, you're looking at a less than 50% chance of being able to utilize your plan for a hole, even if you're one of the best golfers in the world.
That's where shot accommodation comes into play (non beard-pullers call this width). A golf course not strewn with death penalty hazards (water, ob, heavy forests, brutally thick rough, etc) will allow the golfer to find his ball that likely didn't end up where he intended and develop a new strategy for completing the hole in the fewest strokes possible.
Here's a big key: these follow up shots - regardless of whether one is in the preferred landing area or some other part only visited by the likes of me - must hold the golfer's interest. Maybe not every single time, but the vast majority of the time.
I think the best courses in the world hold one's interest, regardless of whether one follows his plan or not. That doesn't mean one shouldn't plan, just that the best courses don't force one particular plan at the cost of all others.
Well, if you managed to read all that b.s., I'd love to hear your thoughts. (No prizes for guessing the poster who opened my eyes, btw, I think I've mentioned it on here before.)
Everybody has a plan until he gets hit. - Mike Tyson
Mike understood what I'm sayin'.