Do I win the award for longest title?
After going through a couple threads about which courses are “playable� for all ability levels yet “challenging� for the better player; and Tom Kite’s comment about the excess proliferation of chipping areas as older courses are renovated (or re-whatevered); I thought I would share my experience at Pinehurst #2 a few weeks ago. Obviously it’s been written about a lot, including Ran’s course profile on this website, so I’ll try to find something new to say.
Despite the wettest winter and spring on record, and hard rain the few days before, the course was plenty dry and firm due to the sandy soil. What a natural advantage, especially compared to the bog Charlotte has been. The handicaps in our foursome were 0, 8, 11, and 20-ish, and we played from the 6,700+ yard tees.
Rather than a course “review�, here are some random impressions from the day:
· Despite plenty of, um, variability in how well everyone hit it, nobody came remotely close to losing a ball.
· The scratch player shot 78; the high handicapper shot 92 comfortably. The course ABSOLUTELY allows everyone to have fun and get around reasonably well.
· The routing is superb – holes going every direction; flowing seamlessly into one another. What a pleasant walk. Best spot: behind the 3rd green, looking down on the gorgeous par-5 fourth going away, and the fearsome 5th coming back.
· Terrific angles; clear advantage to finding the correct side of the fairway.
· Fantastic, but playable greens. It has all the chipping interest one reads about, but the green speeds were reasonable and we had little or no back-and-forth chipping experiences.
· I wonder if “chipping areas� might be on the verge of becoming a cliché, but they really work at #2.
· False fronts (and sides and backs) galore. I found them on 9 (a very slightly thin 6-iron which hit in the back third of the green, rolled to the back edge, and trundled 20 yards behind the green) and 13 (7-iron hung on the edge of the false front until I had walked halfway to the green, then fell back down the fairway).
· Most fun shots – big flop shot on the aforementioned #9 up and over a bunker, to a downhill green with no room. 18 – after a good drive into a strong wind, hugging the fairway bunker on the right, I hit a low 3-iron which ran through the green and into the back of a chipping area almost in the pro shop, behind and to the right of the green. Hole on the front right, big bunker directly in the way, and no way I can pull the flop off twice in one round. I putted the ball up the hill and to the right of the bunker, some 60-70 feet away from the hole. The slope by the bunker turned it left, then a tier in the green turned it further left, and it stopped 5 feet away.
I came away thinking that #2 may be the Old Course of America. ‘Course I haven’t played many of our seaside courses, nor the Nebraska gems, but Pinehurst sure shares many of St. Andrews’ characteristics.
Respectfully submitted,
Ken