‘A brainteaser, charged with uncertainty and danger, electric with restraint.’ That quote comes from the New York Times Book Review of William Boyd’s "Waiting for Sunrise," which I am presently reading. I kept looking at the back of the book (and the quote) while the kids and I flew to/from Cabot last week.
I love the quote and of course, my mind shifted to golf holes that it evoked with the 16th at Castle Stuart springing to mind. During my one round there, I vividly remember standing on the tee confused by what I saw. For a short ~325y hole the fairway appeared both wide and trouble free.
This is what the tee shot looks like. No reason to push the panic button ... yet. Knowing how much care and thought had gone into its design, I felt that there was more to the challenge than what I could immediately discern. Sure enough, my approach started rolling along the green and down a bank into a grassy lie several feet below the putting surface. From there, my pitch - briefly - reached the putting surface before retreating backwards into a bunker. Then this, then that.
The clean, simple look of the hole and its miles of short grass was perturbing. I knew that a trap had been laid yet I still blundered. Still feeling stupid to this day, I vow to do better next time!
The hole's personality really shined during the Scottish Open, especially on that dynamic last day. Down wind, Michelson went for it from the tee with just a hybrid. Lefty's draw while well struck had no prayer of staying on the domed green which angles front right to back left - the firm playing conditions were intolerant of the wrong shape shot. He managed a par while a couple of the leaders suffered bogeys after going for the green from the tee.
I love holes like this and the quote from the NYT Book Review captures it perfectly. Does anyone agree? Disagree? And what other crafty holes are so aptly described?
Best,