Is anyone saying there is a singular ideal tempo for all courses, Tom?
I'm not saying that and I don't read Brian's post that way.
I'm just trying to highlight that there is a heck of a lot more to a golf course than a collection of holes. And get a discussion about tempos/routings/flows that people like.
What are some course tempos that you like? Why?
Mac:
No one here has said that. But Brian implied, correctly, that many golfers DO have thoughts on what the ideal tempo is. They criticize courses for a weak finish, for too hard of a start, for having consecutive par-5's, and on and on.
I agree with Josh Tarble's observation that the holes should come in bunches of two and three and four holes that are harder or easier, instead of switching speeds all the time. Amen Corner is a corner, it's not just #12 ... although really 10-11-12 is the stretch of hard holes at Augusta. The changes to #7 and #18 really messed with the tempo there.
I like a course that gives you a chance to hit the driver a lot of times early in the round. The Old Course does this in spades. I love Pacific Dunes' routing with only the one par-3 on the front nine, because you get into a rhythm of hitting driver. I don't like it when you get to a stretch of holes where there are par-3's every other hole, or lay-up holes, so that you don't hit driver twice in a row for a while. (Notice that at Pacific, even with the four par-3's on the back nine, they fall at 10-11-x-x-14-x-x-17, and #10 is often a driver hole from the lower tee, so the holes are better spaced out.)
Most people like a difficult finish, but in general I prefer a balanced finish, especially for tournament play. Again, The Old Course does it great ... 16 offers multiple possibilities, 17 is harder than hard, 18 is easy. If you're tied with the leader in the clubhouse and you have three holes to go, you're not screwed, as you are on so many championship courses.