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Mark Saltzman

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On a recent trip to New York that included several good to great golf courses, I came away from Piping Rock unimpressed.  I told a few people that the course featured no bad holes, and a couple of standouts, but unlike The Creek it did not hit very high highs.

Nevertheless, two weeks removed from my trip, I find myself often thinking about Piping Rock.  Perhaps my impression of the course was overly affected by its rather uninteresting start and meek finish.  I am convinced that my initial impression was WRONG.  

Unlike The Creek, where the best holes are the non-template holes, Piping Rock's best holes (and several are exceptional) are the templates.  The Redan, Road, Biarritz, Alps and Knoll are all very FUN golf holes.

It seems the course is constantly changing.  New tees have been added on many holes, bunkering has been added/removed/moved/re-shaped; though the greens are seemingly intact -- that is, there is no obvious loss of putting surface.

Take, for example, these aerials of the par-5 6th hole (the first borrowed from Dean DiBerardino):

Below is an aerial from December of 1953. Looks like a few changes from 1953 to 1966 as well....



Here are some aerials from 1966, 1994, 2003 and 2012.

Notable changes:

1) A large-scale bunker in the left-side of the DZ was eliminated between 1966 and 1994. In 2011/2012 a series of 3 bunkers were added slightly farther up the fairway on the LHS.

2) A bunker on the RHS of the DZ was added between 1966 and 1994 (let's guess 1985  :)).  Scale has since been reduced.

3) Cross-bunkers running diagonally across the fairway have been made less-intrusive.

4) Bunker protecting RHS of lay-up area added between 1966 and 1994 (let's guess 1985 again).

5) THE MOST NOTABLE CHANGE, between 1994 and 2003 the green was expanded by at least 1/3 at the front, and in 2003 several feet were added to the front-left portion of the green.















Piping Rock starts slowly with a pair of straightaway, mid-length par-4s.  On each of the opening two holes bunkers flank the sides of the driving zone giving the golf course the 'championship' feel we are used to from so many courses today, but is a departure from the strategic design I expect to see from CBM.




Like the Principal's Nose bunkers at Yale, Essex County and Yeaman's Hall, the Principal's Nose at Piping Rock is an out-of-play hazard after a well-struck drive but complicates matters for those trying to advance their ball from the rough.




The approach to the 2nd green:




The 187 yard Redan 3rd is a very good hole and is cited by many as the best example of the redan template.  From what I've seen there are two styles of redan: (1) those where the fairway and kickplate collect the ball toward the green, and (2) those where the kickplate will stop the ball from advancing toward the green.  The redans at National, The Creek and Sleepy Hollow are good examples of the first style, while the redans at Shinnecock Hills, Somerset Hills and Piping Rock are examples of the latter style.




The green tilts from front-left to back-right making recoveries from this back bunker a delicate task.




The fearsome front-left bunker:


« Last Edit: November 07, 2012, 10:12:02 AM by Mark Saltzman »

Phil McDade

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Re: Piping Rock Club (C.B. Macdonald) - A Photo Tour!! - Hole 3 Posted
« Reply #1 on: October 26, 2012, 01:18:31 PM »
Mark:

Thanks of course for the start of another promising thread. Ironically, I wanted more photos of the 1st hole.

Here's why, and it revolves around a pet peeve of mine (and maybe I'm out to lunch -- weigh in if so!):

Can we stop calling center-line bunkers Principal's Nose bunkers if they don't serve the purpose of the original Principal's Nose bunkers at The Old Course? The whole idea of the original PN bunkers is that the hazard forces a choice upon the golfer -- easy avoidance to one side, which then leads to a more challenging approach into the green, or challenging the PN bunker on the other, more dangerous side, which then (successfully executed) results in an easier approach into the green.

I can't tell from these photos whether this bunker in the middle of the fairway does this. It appears not to. In my mind, that simply makes it a center-line bunker -- a feature with some merit, it looks like, but not a Principal's Nose bunker.

Mark Saltzman

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Re: Piping Rock Club (C.B. Macdonald) - A Photo Tour!! - Hole 3 Posted
« Reply #2 on: October 26, 2012, 01:29:36 PM »
Phil,

I understand the comments re the PN bunkers.  In my experience the Mac/R/B PN bunkers are not generally driving features, though technology has brought some of them within range of the longer hitters.

But, there is a PN bunker look that is unmistakeable on the M/R/B courses -- a trio of bunkers surrounded by rough with a high point in the centre.  There is little doubt in my mind that these are PN bunkers, even if they do not function in the same manner as the ones at TOC.

Mark Saltzman

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Re: Piping Rock Club (C.B. Macdonald) - A Photo Tour!! - Hole 3 Posted
« Reply #3 on: October 27, 2012, 11:45:40 AM »
Macdonald was not happy that he was forced to round his golf course around the polo fields immediately in front of the clubhouse.  I am not sure the reason for this discontent as the land on which the polo fields lie is flat and featureless, though perhaps it would have helped Macdonald to avoid the back-and-forth routing of the 4th and 5th.  Nevertheless, these two holes, each of which runs along a property line on the left side, are played to interesting, tilted terrain.

The 4th has been lengthened in recent years and now plays as a 445 yard par-4 with an extremely tilted fairway and a difficult approach to a sunken green.

Though almost 150 yards shorter than the 4th, I think the par-4 5th is the more interesting of the side-by-side holes.  A top-shot bunker and fairway bunker 100 yards apart meld well to convince the golfer that there is little room to miss.  The approach is a difficult one, played to a very small green that falls away from the golfer and is protected left and right by bunkers.




This view from the back of the 5th green shows the internal vistas on the front-9 at Piping Rock:


Mark Saltzman

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Re: Piping Rock Club (C.B. Macdonald) - A Photo Tour!! - Hole 5 Posted
« Reply #4 on: October 27, 2012, 11:50:46 PM »
The 530 yard 6th is a mid-length par-5 on the scorecard, but both the tee shot and second shot are played to a fairway that tilt back toward the tee.  In an earlier discussion, Pat Mucci asked whether the 6th is one of the great par-5s in golf: http://www.golfclubatlas.com/forum/index.php/topic,5659.html  I think that is a bold question, especially for a hole that lay over such simple terrain and without the ocean as a backdrop.  Though the 6th is clearly the better of the two par-5s at Piping Rock, I can't see it among the best in golf; heck there are at least 5 better par-5s on Long Island.   






The 7th is a difficult, straightaway par-4, but like the opening duo of holes, failed to capture my attention.




The 8th is Road and it is an excellent rendition.  For the scratch man the hole had become a pushover and a back tee added some 75 yards to the hole.  From the Blue tee the hole plays 380 yards and asks the golfer to risk playing over the fairway bunkers and flirt with the trees to leave the ideal line into the green.










The 9th is Biarritz and plays near 230 yards from the back tee to a green whose front portion of the swale is mowed as fairway.





Ronald Montesano

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Re: Piping Rock Club (C.B. Macdonald) - A Photo Tour!! - Front 9 Posted
« Reply #5 on: October 28, 2012, 10:36:30 AM »
That is a sad state of affairs for Biarritz PR. Any sense as to why?
Coming in 2024
~Elmira Country Club
~Soaring Eagles
~Bonavista
~Indian Hills
~Maybe some more!!

Mark Saltzman

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Re: Piping Rock Club (C.B. Macdonald) - A Photo Tour!! - Front 9 Posted
« Reply #6 on: October 28, 2012, 10:39:54 AM »
That is a sad state of affairs for Biarritz PR.

Why do you say that?

Joe Bausch

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Re: Piping Rock Club (C.B. Macdonald) - A Photo Tour!! - Front 9 Posted
« Reply #7 on: October 28, 2012, 03:19:26 PM »
From a lurker:



Mark Saltzman said:
 
 
“Macdonald was not happy that he was forced to round his golf course around the polo fields immediately in front of the clubhouse. I am not sure the reason for this discontent as the land on which the polo fields lie is flat and featureless, though perhaps it would have helped Macdonald to avoid the back-and-forth routing of the 4th and 5th. Nevertheless, these two holes, each of which runs along a property line on the left side, are played to interesting, tilted terrain.”
 
 
 
Mark, it is interesting that you mentioned holes #4 and #5 as a bit of an unusual routing sequence. Piping Rock’s golf course was built in two stages of nine holes each separated by about a year and a half. The first nine holes to be routed and built was the sequence of present #1, #2, #3, #6, #7, #8, #9, #10 and #11. In that original nine-hole course Macdonald wanted to use the area of the polo fields and race track for two holes but the club did not allow it. About a year and a half later #4 and #5 were added along with holes #12-#18 that added nine more holes to make the eighteen.
@jwbausch (for new photo albums)
The site for the Cobb's Creek project:  https://cobbscreek.org/
Nearly all Delaware Valley golf courses in photo albums: Bausch Collection

ChipOat

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Re: Piping Rock Club (C.B. Macdonald) - A Photo Tour!! - Front 9 Posted
« Reply #8 on: October 30, 2012, 01:08:26 PM »
The Creek has the advantage of the water and #6 is the single best hole I've ever played.

However, in comparing the holes that are parkland (all 18 at PRC and 15 at The Creek), I like the architecture on the ground at Piping better.  Both Short holes (#17 at each) pale in comparison to NGLA, but PRC has 100 acres of additional ground (ex-the polo field), so CBM had more to work with there, I think.

The Creek still most excellent, though.

Ronald Montesano

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Re: Piping Rock Club (C.B. Macdonald) - A Photo Tour!! - Front 9 Posted
« Reply #9 on: October 30, 2012, 11:21:05 PM »
I've played two Biarritz holes (Fox Chapel and Yale) and both mow the entire surface at putting-green level. I cannot imagine either hole playing better with a chipping area for the front 40% of the green (or the middle or the back, for that matter.)

If the front is chipping length, isn't the dip converted to a "valley of sin" instead of the middle part of a Biarritz green?
Coming in 2024
~Elmira Country Club
~Soaring Eagles
~Bonavista
~Indian Hills
~Maybe some more!!

Mark Saltzman

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Re: Piping Rock Club (C.B. Macdonald) - A Photo Tour!! - Front 9 Posted
« Reply #10 on: October 31, 2012, 10:41:37 PM »
The long, uphill par-5 10th introduces the golfer to the more interesting terrain that he will enjoy for the entire back-9.  Unlike the 4th/5th holes where the dominant movement in the land is across the golf holes, in all cases on the back-9, Macdonald routed the holes up and down the land.  The bunker scheme at the 10th is simple and effective. 




The 11th is Eden, and at 202 yards it is the longest version of the hole I have seen.  Eden must be the most wide-ranging of the par-3 templates, as many of the holes have little similarity (to my eye) other than a severe back-to-front tilt and the word Eden on the scorecard.




The 12th is called Apple Tree but like the 4th at Fishers Island, it is a wonderful Alps/Punchbowl combo.  Only a tee shot that boldly challenges the bunkers on the right side of the fairway (partially hidden in the shadows) has any hope of a view of the flag, while a tee shot up the left is played over a cavernous fairway bunker.




Joe Bausch

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Re: Piping Rock Club (C.B. Macdonald) - A Photo Tour!! - Front 12 Posted
« Reply #11 on: November 01, 2012, 11:19:29 AM »
From The Lurker:

Mark Saltzman et al:
 
1/ The biarritz hole (#9) never did have green-space on its front section and swale. According to some very good research that is reflected on some old threads on GCA there were no Macdonald/Raynor biarritzes that had green-space on their front sections and swales, including Yale's that some people believed may've been the only biarritz that called for green-space on the front section and swale originally.
 
2/ The 10th hole once had a type of "Principle's Nose" bunker in the area of the drive zone. It was put in by Dye/Doak during the club's architecture project around 1985 which some believe to be the first attempt at a "restoration project" in America. The PN bunker on #10 was apparently not popular enough with the membership and it was removed.
 
3/ The Eden template (#11) is the dullest version of the Eden template by Macdonald/Raynor I am aware of. To reiterate, the 10th and 11th were originally the 8th and 9th on the original nine hole course of PR. That would make sense at the 11th green is the nearest to the clubhouse than any other except #18.
 
4/ According to the PR centennial history book, in the late 20s or 30s the club began to consider Macdonald/Raynor's style of architecture either/or both obsolete or stylistically out of date and the club contracted with A.W. Tillinghast to do a rather complete redesign of the golf course. For whatever reason that Tillinghast plan was never executed but it still exists in the club's archives.
@jwbausch (for new photo albums)
The site for the Cobb's Creek project:  https://cobbscreek.org/
Nearly all Delaware Valley golf courses in photo albums: Bausch Collection

Patrick_Mucci

Re: Piping Rock Club (C.B. Macdonald) - A Photo Tour!! - Front 12 Posted
« Reply #12 on: November 02, 2012, 10:05:25 AM »


Take, for example, these aerials of the par-5 6th hole (the first borrowed from Dean DiBerardino):



I've always liked the 6th hole and wondered what the reasons behind the changes in the bunkering scheme were.

Pete Dye was retained to do the work and Tom Doak, who was working for him and involved in this project, could address the specifics behind the changes on # 6 and elsewhere.

I was always curious as to why the diagonal bunkering scheme on # 6 was removed.

When you look at old photos of courses like Hollywood, The Creek and Piping Rock you have to wonder if the penal nature of these courses wasn't being phased out as a broader spectrum of golfer was seeking "fairness".

What I've always found fascinating is that as equipment and the ball got better, allowing for improved performance by the golfer, the playing field was being softened, dumbed down such that the challenge was diminished.





Below is an aerial from December of 1953. Looks like a few changes from 1953 to 1966 as well....



Here are some aerials from 1966, 1994, 2003 and 2012.

Notable changes:

1) A large-scale bunker in the left-side of the DZ was eliminated between 1966 and 1994. In 2011/2012 a series of 3 bunkers were added slightly farther up the fairway on the LHS.

2) A bunker on the RHS of the DZ was added between 1966 and 1994 (let's guess 1985  :)).  Scale has since been reduced.

3) Cross-bunkers running diagonally across the fairway have been made less-intrusive.

4) Bunker protecting RHS of lay-up area added between 1966 and 1994 (let's guess 1985 again).

5) THE MOST NOTABLE CHANGE, between 1994 and 2003 the green was expanded by at least 1/3 at the front, and in 2003 several feet were added to the front-left portion of the green.














Mark Saltzman

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Re: Piping Rock Club (C.B. Macdonald) - A Photo Tour!! - Front 12 Posted
« Reply #13 on: November 03, 2012, 07:22:26 PM »
Hole 13 is knoll and at just under 300 yards it is driveable by some.  The tee shot is completely blind and the fairway is slightly left of where one would expect and protected left and right by bunkers. 




A small and very contoured volcano green at the 13th.  Missing pin-high left or right, or long, is a disaster.




The 14th is a long par-4 that, a bit like the 7th, is difficult but forgettable.




15 returns the golfer to the interesting terrain.  The tee shot must be placed between a series of flanking bunkers before playing an uphill approach to the most interesting green on the golf course.






The green is protected long/right by a built-up landform and features a wild, snaking spine that runs diagonally across the green.


M. Shea Sweeney

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Re: Piping Rock Club (C.B. Macdonald) - A Photo Tour!! - Hole 15 Posted
« Reply #14 on: November 03, 2012, 09:04:06 PM »
Mark-

Why do you find the 14th forgettable?


Mark Saltzman

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Re: Piping Rock Club (C.B. Macdonald) - A Photo Tour!! - Hole 15 Posted
« Reply #15 on: November 03, 2012, 09:45:45 PM »
Mark-

Why do you find the 14th forgettable?


Hi Mike, hope you're doing well.

The tee shot was one that required little thought.  Because of the downhill nature of the tee shot, I do not think the top-shot bunkers function as intended to give a perceived narrowing of the tee shot.  Perhaps for someone who strikes their driver (or 3w!) like you the centreline bunker is a consideration at 280 yards, but for me it is not in play.  Even if it is reachable, like the cross-bunker on 14 at Sleepy Hollow, it leaves little choice but to lay-up to it.

The green is simply (though deeply) bunkered short-left, short-right and long.  The green is not a bad one from what I remember, tilted from back-right to front-left, but it is hardly memorable.

Forgettable is not always a bad thing, though.  The flat land of the back-nine is all used in a single, strong par-4.

Mark Saltzman

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Re: Piping Rock Club (C.B. Macdonald) - A Photo Tour!! - Hole 15 Posted
« Reply #16 on: November 07, 2012, 10:08:33 AM »
16 is the second down then up par-4 of the back nine.  The fairway is set at an angle from the tee and the bold line requires a carry over a series of carry bunkers.




A fairly simple approach visually but it is a difficult one.  A false-front gives way to a green that falls noticeably away from the line of play.




The Short is not so short near 170 yards.






The 18th is a mid-length par-5.  The Line of Instinct draws the golfer toward the bunker on the left, but carrying that bunker will leave the bold golfer in the rough.




The 18th crosses a road 70 yards short of the green before moving straight uphill to another green protected by a false-front.


Mark McKeever

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Re: Piping Rock Club (C.B. Macdonald) - A Photo Tour!! - Hole 18 Posted
« Reply #17 on: November 07, 2012, 12:04:20 PM »
Saltz,

That's unfortuate that the bold player that successfully executed the idea tee shot is punished in primary cut.  The look back seems incredibly narrow.  Was this always the case or has the fairway line come in on the left side?

Mark
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