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Tim Bert

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #400 on: October 30, 2013, 10:13:30 AM »
Bogey - I think your question about 16 depends upon at least three variables - where is the pin, how far right are you playing, and what is the trajectory of your shot?

For a right hander, a high fade probably works best for middle or back pins.

For anyone hitting a low runner, you have to hit the low spot on the right side - not the green but also not the high hill. Landing on the hill as note usually results in bunker or left depression.  Landing at the base of the hill or in the small valley ends up on the green.

For a front pin, I am convinced that right of the pin is the better play for just about every skill of golfer perhaps other than the elite that can dial in a distance within 3 yards and stop it on a dime. The green runs fast enough that going directly at the front pin for even a pretty good golfer is going to usually leave at least 20 feet back to the pin. I have seen plenty of balls nestle closely by using the slot to the right.

Josh Tarble

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #401 on: October 30, 2013, 10:52:58 AM »
Jud,
That's a good point, I don't think I played the hole from layup distance at all.  I think the point is you're going to be faced with a fairly awkward shot at some point on either hole.  I don't think that's a bad thing, but it doesn't mean they have to be your favorite hole on either course. 

Bill Seitz

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #402 on: October 30, 2013, 11:34:40 AM »
A question for the Kingsley regulars:  How effectively can the right side fairway cut be utilized to access the pin on the 16th?  In my two rounds there a few years back it seemed that such shots wound up in the left hand fringe or bunker.

As with most redan's these days, isn't it just better to have a go right at the green, ideally with a cut?

Bogey

Bogey,

Re #16:  From the blue tees, I think the play for me is generally just right of the stick, taking a swing such that if I miss, I miss right and into the hill.  In that sense, it's not a really hard hole, but it can be a very difficult green to read*.  If I'm playing the gold tees, and they're back, it's a hybrid that I'll take further out to the hill.  It should be noted that on the right side, there's a little knob that you have to carry to get to the spot that will kick your ball down to the green.  So you still need a fairly precise shot in terms of distance.  It's become a fairly easy 3 for me (scoring average is 3.2 this year), but a tough birdie (only one this year), and no others.  Again, in conjunction with how easy 14 plays, it's what makes 15 really work.  

I didn't think much of 16 on my first trip, but I was really hitting long irons poorly that weekend.  I like it more and more every time I play it.  And now that they've cleared out the trees to the left of the 17th tee (which sit right behind the green in eyesight), it looks great from the tee.  

*In the 2012 club championship, the pin was cut very close to the false front.  The eventual club champion had a putt for par that he putted off the green.  Chipped up past the hole, and putted his double bogey putt off the green.  Chipped up and made quadruple bogey seven.  Of course, that quad meant that he played 13-16 one over, as he had already birdied 13, 14, and 15.  
« Last Edit: October 30, 2013, 11:41:42 AM by Bill Seitz »

Chris DeToro

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #403 on: October 30, 2013, 02:12:58 PM »
I've always played out to the right on 16.  Even if you get stuck on the right side hill, you can actually putt the ball down the hill to get it close.  Still not an easy play, but definitely better than anything on the left


Chris_Hufnagel

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #404 on: October 30, 2013, 02:34:06 PM »
I've always played out to the right on 16.  Even if you get stuck on the right side hill, you can actually putt the ball down the hill to get it close.  Still not an easy play, but definitely better than anything on the left

I don't necessarily agree with this - if you are stuck on the hill, depending on the speed of the green and the location of the hole you are trying to get close to, it is not all that easy of a shot - and if you are just a little heavy with your pace, it is pretty easy to putt the ball off the green to the left - either into the brows of the bunker, the bunker itself, or the hollow short of the bunker.  

When I have been left and have seen players play from the left - one very good option (again, depending on the hole location) is to use the hill as a backstop and bring the ball back to the hole.  I have seen a lot of pars from down there and probably more holes halved or lost because of a great recovery from the left rather than from up on the hill.  

One small issue I have with #16 is the location of the sprinkler heads on the front right portion of the green (one disclaimer - along with knowing nothing about agronomy nor being a member at an old, prominent top-100 club - I also know little to nothing about irrigation), it would seem that as a redan and encouraging a ball moving from right-to-left, that there could possibly be a better location to place them.  But perhaps there is a very good reason why they are located right there.  I have seen both tee balls and second shots stopped by those heads - in fact I think Jud may have had a well-struck tee shot stymied by those heads at the Mashie...

Tim Bert

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #405 on: October 30, 2013, 02:34:46 PM »
Chris I disagree with that last statement. As I said earlier I think the play is to absolutely hit right but not at the expense of leaving it up on the hill. Much easier up and down from left of the green (bunker or not) than it is coming down the hill in my opinion.

Tim Bert

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #406 on: October 30, 2013, 02:37:01 PM »
Note from the context of my note it should be clear but I am disagreeing with the first Chris and agreeing with the second one. I didn't anticipate a Chris responding to Chris as the same time I typed my response!

Matthew Lloyd

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #407 on: October 30, 2013, 02:43:56 PM »
Chris #2 --- I've suffered the same fate with the sprinkler head to the front right of the #16 green several times.  It's maddening.  I've never hit it on the tee shot, but I frequently end up just short and in front of the sprinkler head and play a low to the ground 8 iron chip across the green and it's hit the sprinkler head three times and ruined the shot!!! So frustrating as it's not a difficult chip shot from there, which is why I try to error on the side of my tee shots ending up in that location.  I feel better knowing others have had this happen as well.  I guess the moral of the story is that I need to hit better tee shots.

Howard Riefs

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #408 on: October 30, 2013, 02:45:58 PM »
I agree with Tim1 and Chris2.  Being atop the hill is not a good spot. Odds are you'll end up playing your 3rd shot from the bunker or collection area.

And, yes, Chris2, Jud did hit a super, low running tee shot Sunday on #16 that was tracking toward the green.  Low and behold, it hit the sprinkler head and stopped dead in its tracks.  I was on #17 tee and could hardly believe it.  Thankfully, for Jud, he had already closed out his match.

Some photos of the hole, which is framed superbly among the pines.




Seitz on the blue tee



Approaching the green on the right (just beyond the family of pines)



Collection area short left


 
"Golf combines two favorite American pastimes: Taking long walks and hitting things with a stick."  ~P.J. O'Rourke

Bill Seitz

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #409 on: October 30, 2013, 02:48:20 PM »
I'm with Chris D, so long as "stuck on the right side hill" means leaving it about pin high when the ball doesn't make it all the way down to the green.  It is a pretty easy shot from there, usually a putt that trickles on to the green and picks up speed toward the hole.  I think that's a pretty easy up and down.  If "stuck on the right side hill" means up by the blue tees on 17, or actually on top of the to the back right of the green, well, that's pretty much death.  

Matthew Lloyd

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #410 on: October 30, 2013, 02:51:11 PM »
nice follow through on that swing!

Chris_Hufnagel

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #411 on: October 30, 2013, 02:57:41 PM »
Quote from: Howard Riefs link=topic=57040.msg1331086#msg1331086 date=1383158758
Thankfully, for Jud, he had already closed out his match.

...about an hour earlier...
« Last Edit: October 30, 2013, 03:00:00 PM by Chris Hufnagel »

Jud_T

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #412 on: October 30, 2013, 03:00:43 PM »
Let's not give the impression that I can actually play this damned game.  Firstly, it's patently untrue and secondly, this will in no way brow beat me into accepting fewer strokes...
Golf is a game. We play it. Somewhere along the way we took the fun out of it and charged a premium to be punished.- - Ron Sirak

Chris DeToro

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #413 on: October 30, 2013, 03:07:06 PM »
Oh, totally, if you get up near 17 tee, that is about as close to a near death experience on a golf course (anywhere not on Kingsley #2 green being a near death golf experience).  I would never miss it that far right though  ;)

Bart Bradley

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #414 on: October 30, 2013, 08:03:27 PM »
It seems participation in scoring the holes is waning.  I think that any thread that causes people to explain their reaction to golf holes is valuable.

I am going to go ahead and finsh up now.

Kingsley 16 is very cool. It offers options and has a balance in the penalty for a missed shot.  Bogies are certainly very doable when one misses the green.  The right hillside option is wonderfully fun to watch.  My best results on the hole have occurred when I attacked the pin directly with my standard fade/straight iron shot.  But Mike Devries, himself, plays the right slope like a Stradavarius.  It is fun to watch.  I can firmly say that this is my favorite par 3 on the course.  

Crystal 16 depends so much on wind strength.  I will never forget my first time around CD when my friend hit his driver solid on 16 into a 30mph wind.  As we approached his ball, I heard him ask the caddie "full 3 wood".  The caddie replied:  "at least twice".  The second shot is a full length layup on most windy days but admittedly I haven't figured out much strategy for that shot.  The green, as I recall, is significantly under-appreciated with lots of contours and interesting putts.

While I have heard some be very critical of Crystal 16, I don't see it.  But even yet, I like Kingsley 16 as a clear winner.

CD up 2 and 5 points.

The 17 holes at both courses have some very difficult land forms to utilize well.  17 Crystal is the more beautiful of the two but frankly, I don't like the hole.  It suffers the same dilemma for me as Bandon Trails 14.  I just have yet to determine that there really is a good choice off the tee.  I have always played this hole into the wind and even though I am longer than average, driving the green has never been possible on my 6 plays.  I have felt "out of position" after all 6 tee balls and have hit driver (1X), 3 wood (2X), 5 wood (2x) and the last time I was there I hit two balls 3 iron and 5 iron.  I had one 3 wood hang up in the rough on the right slope (dead).  I had a 3 wood in perfect position 60 yds short of the green...awkward uphill lie, missed green left (dead).  One perfect 5 wood to right fairway.  Probably my best chance, hit the green and 3 putted.  All the rest ended up rolling down the hill left leaving a blind, uphill, into the wind wedge/short iron.  Anyway, not an awful hole, but FOR ME, the worst hole at CD.  

I'd like to love 17 at Kingsley but I just don't.  The longer hitter is rewarded with a HUGE advantage if you can get the ball past the crest of the hill.  In my groups there, we nearly always play the blue tee.  Into the wind, getting the ball down the hill is a big hit.  Downwind, it is a near sure thing if I make contact.  In my last 8 plays from the blues, I have gotten the ball down the hill 7 times.  Despite playing with a lot of different folks, I have only seen 2 other balls down the hill in those same 8 rounds.  I have seen a LOT of balls end up 5-20 yds short of going down.  I just don't think it is a reasonable reward to give me an additional 80 yds because I hit the ball 5 or 10 yds beyond the other guys.  Once down the hill, the approach is no bargain, playing well more than the yardage on the ground.  This hole is not awful either and it is fun to get the huge distance bonus.  For me, from the blues this is clearly a par 4.5 but for nearly all my playing companions it is a par 5.  Against almost any other hole at Crystal, Kingsley 17 is a loser.  

I will push the 17.  In the end, I believe both landforms are just too severe for GREAT golf.

Both 18th holes have very good greens.  

I think the down/left tee box at Crystal is far the better tee box.  Although the view is lovely from the upper tee, long hitters can bomb the tee shot leaving a very short iron approach.  You have to take a line very close to the tree to avoid hitting through the fairway.

Although the 18th hole at Kingsley again features a fearsome bumpy and slanted fairway, I actually think it works very well.  As opposed to 6, for example, the left edge of the fairway has a counter slope to balance the hard right to left prevailing contour.  The greensite is fascinating and it is incredibly well bunkered.  The angle of the green and the bunkers truly makes distance control critical.  

Both are very good holes, from the lower tee I think 18 Crystal Downs is just slightly the better hole.  

Final Score CD up 3 and up 6 points on the 10 pt must system.  

I think there is zero shame in losing 3 down to CD.  As I have tried to point out as we have gone, this scoring system fails to take into account a number of factors some of which would accrue to each course's favor if they were taken into account.  I think Kingsley nearly always offers the ideal maintenance meld for the architecture.  I can't say that for CD.  I also think both courses are very well routed.  The unfolding of the course and change in environments at both courses is a thing of delight.  I do think they both offer bold, interesting features and I have always believed that bold features are what make for interesting shots.   I find the front nine at CD to be the better of the two nines with an all-world stretch from 5-8.  Kingsley 14-16 likewise dominated my scoring and I think Kingsley's back nine is the better of the two nines.  

One last word, my scoring on this thread (and all my posts on all threads of this nature) simply represents my opinion.  My opinion, like yours, is biased and flawed and shaped by my personal golf experiences.  Your opinions are all equally valid as just that...opinions.  I do, however, think that someone like Tom Doak's opinion should carry more influence (although it is not any more valid) because of the breadth of experience as both an architect and student/evaluator of architecture.  Oh, and whatever your age, your opinion is likely to change as you see more stuff (both the successful stuff and the dreck).  Thank you to those of you who have stuck with this process.  Although I am not sure that any of you changed my opinion  ;), I certainly learned a lot about both courses.

Bart
  
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« Last Edit: October 30, 2013, 09:37:23 PM by Bart Bradley »

Jason Thurman

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #415 on: October 30, 2013, 10:35:38 PM »
Round 17

Over 800 yards and not a single shred of nuance.

17 at Crystal Downs has another wonderful view. I must admit that I don't really see the reason for all the controversy here. It felt like there was room to miss in the left rough off the tee, and I hit a decent tee shot a bit short of the green. After a chunked second, it was an easy bogey. I won't suggest the hole isn't severe and "tricked up." I simply have to admit that I didn't see it in my one play.

17 at Kingsley is certainly a fun tee shot. As others have said, it's far from a great golf hole. I'm also not sure how to improve it.

Both holes may simply be an inevitable product of the terrain on which they're situated. I suspect that with more plays, Kingsley's 17th would grow on me just a little while Crystal's 17th would reveal its gimmicks. But based on my own experience, I have no choice but to give this round to Crystal Downs on the basis of its view and the number of choices available.


1st round: CD wins 10 - 9
2nd round: KC wins 10 - 9
3rd round: KC wins 10 - 9
4th round: CD wins 10 - 9
5th round: CD wins 10 - 8
6th round: CD wins 10 - 9
7th round: CD wins 10 - 7
8th round: CD wins 10 - 9
9th round: KC wins 10 - 8
10th round: KC wins 10 - 9
11th round: CD wins 10 - 9
12th round: CD wins 10 - 9
13th round: KC wins 10 - 8
14th round:  CD wins 10 - 8
15th/16th round: KC wins 20 - 17
17th round: CD wins 10 - 9

Running Total: CD 160, KC 156
"There will always be haters. That’s just the way it is. Hating dudes marry hating women and have hating ass kids." - Evan Turner

Some of y'all have never been called out in bold green font and it really shows.

Buck Wolter

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #416 on: October 30, 2013, 11:16:41 PM »
The 17th at Kingsley has gone through some well documented changes but my personal opinion is that they let the wrong half of the fairway go native. I would have left the fairway right up to the hill but let the hillside grow in. This would the long-hitter the option to go over the hill to the left but be left with a worse angle while the shorter hitter could play to the right for the better angle at the top of the hill. Currently I agree long hitters have a huge advantage, I have never thought about how it pairs with 7 but agree they sort of even out the advantage. I'm quite sure I have birdied 7 more than any other hole on the course ---17 not so much.
Those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end, for they do so with the approval of their own conscience -- CS Lewis

John Kirk

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #417 on: October 31, 2013, 01:45:58 AM »
...

« Last Edit: October 31, 2013, 02:31:13 PM by John Kirk »

Josh Tarble

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #418 on: October 31, 2013, 09:31:46 AM »
Buck, I think that would be a really good way to help add some serious interest to the tee ball.  Make the fairway basically a giant "C" with the fairway bunker right smack in the middle.  That would give the short hitter and a smarter player the option to go to a wide fairway, plenty of options in.  And the strong player would have to completely fly the bunker....because right now you're completely right, the difference may be 5 to 10 yards of actual driving distance, but if you can catch the hill, you're talking an 80 yard advantage at least.

Josh Tarble

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #419 on: October 31, 2013, 10:04:06 AM »
The final showdown.... :)

Kingsley Club #18 - 422 yards - Par 4
Another wild and crazy fairway...and I think this may be the best fairway of the bunch.  The strategy is to play up towards the right bunkers, hopefully long enough that your tee ball catches the big hill and bounds forward toward the green, staying on the top shelf.  Anything left of center will bounce down to the left, probably staying in the fairway, but leaving a blind shot.  Anything staying up on the top right shelf will give a clearer view of the green, but perhaps a slightly worse angle to certain pin positions.  Fairway left is probably best for getting to any back right pins but I'm not sure I'd purposely play down there because of the blindness of the shot.  The green is a two-tiered punch bowl of sorts...probably not quite the right description, but the front is a bit higher than the back and sideboards left and long right can be utilized to help get the ball close.  On most courses, a punchbowl green for the 18th would probably be condemned, but at Kingsley it's just the great, fun cherry on top of the of the fun sundae.  

The tee ball on the closing hole...looks far more sloped than it actually is


An up close view of the green, you can see some of the back/side boards long and the bunker long left gathers quite a few shots


Crystal Downs #18 - 400 yards - Par 4
A left to right bending hole and it's not overly long.  An ideal drive will cut off a little of the hillside right, but not too much.  I think the bending nature of the hole tempts the player into aiming further right than necessary (at least this player) and there is plenty of room out to the left.  I would guess fairway left is a pretty good angle into the hole, as it's right up the slope of the green, but I don't think right fairway is awful, all I do know is right junk is certainly not position a).  The green is another gem, severely sloping from back right to front left, with a pretty severe false front.  I can tell you from experience, long is dead  ;D Really just an ideal finishing hole to a wonderful experience and course.  

This is actually the blue tees, while closer to 17 green, I don't think the hole is quite as good from here (imo)


The look up towards the 18th green....definitely not the preferred angle


What two excellent finishing holes that ideally compliment the first 17.  I don't think I'd call either of them "best in the world" 18s, but if you want the 1st to give you an idea what is to come, I think you want an 18th that kind of sums up the day.  I'd so both of these do that perfectly.  I am going to give this one to Kingsley though for two reasons - 1) Kingsley's 18th just pushes you to play another hole because it's literally steps from the 1st tee - especially if you play the gold tees by the putting green.  It's too close to NOT play another round.  Crystal's 18th leaves you wanting another round, but you have to walk up that damn hill!  I would gladly do it given the opportunity, but it's not quite as perfect as Kingsley's transition.  2) This is kind of nitpicky, but the one thing I came away not liking was the amount of holes that bent from left to right.  By my count it was 6, compared to maybe 2 that turned from right to left.  I thought this was a bit odd, and probably stuck in my mind a little more because I can't even begin to comprehend what a purposely played fade feels like.  Kingsley Club - ALL SQUARE

I also feel pretty comfortable with the match ending all square.  I'm going to sum up my thoughts in the next post.


Running Score
#1 (Crystal Downs) - Crystal Downs - 1 UP
#2 (Crystal Downs) - Crystal Downs - 2 UP
#3 (Kingsley Club) - Crystal Downs - 1 UP
#4 (Kingsley Club) - ALL SQUARE
#5 (Crystal Downs) - Crystal Downs - 1 UP
#6 (Crystal Downs) - Crystal Downs - 2 UP
#7 (Crystal Downs) - Crystal Downs - 3 UP
#8 (Crystal Downs) - Crystal Downs - 4 UP
#9 (Kingsley Club) - Crystal Downs - 3 UP
#10 (Crystal Downs) - Crystal Downs - 4 UP
#11 (Kingsley Club) - Crystal Downs - 3 UP
#12 (Kingsley Club) - Crystal Downs - 2 UP
#13 (DRAW) - Crystal Downs - 2 UP
#14 (Crystal Downs) - Crystal Downs 3 UP
#15 (Kingsley Club) - Crystal Downs 2 UP
#16 (Kingsley Club) - Crystal Downs 1 UP
#17 (DRAW) - Crystal Downs 1 UP
#18 (Kingsley Club) - ALL SQUARE

Final Tally
Crystal Downs wins 8 holes
Kingsley Club wins 8 holes
2 Draws


BHoover

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #420 on: October 31, 2013, 10:11:10 AM »
Josh, I think the "proper" way to play 18 off the tee depends on the pin position.  If the pin is down front or on the left, then I would hit a hybrid to the right side of the fairway.  But if the pin is in the back or to the right, then I think the play is toward the left side of the fairway, even though it's not easy to hold the fairway down there.

Chris_Hufnagel

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #421 on: October 31, 2013, 10:14:48 AM »
Well done Josh...a great thread no doubt and lots of good back and forth about one of the greats from the golden age and (in my humble opinion) one of the gems from the modern age - albeit a course that can a bit polarizing - which in my humble opinion again is frankly a good thing as well...

Regarding the 18th at Kingsley - one of the best things about that green is that is just steps from the 1st tee and one of the best things I can say about any course is whether or not you want to get right back out there for another round and Kingsley certainly passes that test for me.

Josh Tarble

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #422 on: October 31, 2013, 10:46:54 AM »
Thanks for everyone who participated in this thread, I don't know if I judged it properly but it ended up in an outcome I felt comfortable with.  I don't know which one is really the better course, I could pick and choose things out of each that I would consider "better" but all I know, I don't feel like one is light years ahead of the other.

A couple things that people have hit on:

Kingsley Club's turf may be the finest playing surface I have ever played upon.  It was ideal for hitting iron shots, woods and even little chip shots.  It was bouncy and firm and incredibly fun.  It perfectly complements the architecture of the course.  The greens were running a perfect speed for the contours and rolled very true.  

At both courses the native was perfectly maintained.  I don't know if this was because of the soil or maintenance practices, or just nature.  But both were relatively easy to find ball (maybe all but a couple spots) and you could advance it out of it, but it was difficult to get a good strike on the ball.

It's true that the mowing lines at Crystal probably look a bit odd, but I didn't really mind them at all.  In fact I thought they "helped" in a sense.  On a few shots, I would have had balls running completely through the fairway and into the native if not for the junk.  I don't know if I'd want the turf running like it does at Kingsley. I don't think I'd be able to hit a single fairway.  I don't think the ground is more severe than Kingsley but I think it might be more abrupt...sharper edges and steeper slopes if that makes sense.  Kingsley I felt had big broad slopes while Crystal had sharper, steeper contours I felt like.

Crystal's greens are incredibly awesome.  Pretty easily the best, most varied set I've had the pleasure of playing on.  They do run quite fast, but they run exceptionally true and are a joy to putt on (if they aren't completely scaring you  ;D).  If they were a touch slower, sure that would be ideal, but it was the first place where I felt like speed was the thing forcing you to play strategically from the green back.  Typically it is firmness, but I felt like it was the speed that was forcing you to approach from the correct spot.  I hit the ball pretty well that day, but I never really found myself in a position that was totally impossible.  There may have been a few times I couldn't get the ball too close, but most of the time I at least had a shot at getting up and down.  Fact of the matter (actually my opinion of the matter) is that at their current speeds, they require you to be in proper position to score.  I actually think the greens at my home course are close to the level of Crystals (blasphemous I know) but we don't keep them quite that fast on a regular basis.  Because of that, anytime you are on the green you can probably make the putt...for our club championship they were running about the speed of Crystal's and it really made you think about your shots carefully. I liked that the speed+contours of the greens forced strategy on you.  I don't know if that would be the case if they were a bit slower.

So this is match play between a consensus Top 20 US course and an unranked but golfclubatlas-centric homer favorite.

Now this comment.  I have thought a lot about it, I have said multiple times that I can't wait to play the 10-15 courses better than Crystal.  It just fit my eye perfectly and I thought it was absolutely incredible.  I think it may have the "higher high" and multiple stretches of amazing golf.  4 - 9 is as good as golf as I've ever played and 12 - 16 may be just as good.  

In my opinion it says a lot that Kingsley is even whispered in the same category and I think that it really can hang.  The stretch of 12 - 16 at Kingsley is even better than Crystal's back nine stretch and the front nine stretch of 1 - 6 (minus 2, maybe) is very high quality golf as well.  I have thought a lot about why Kingsley isn't rated higher...I do think there are some polarizing holes (2, 9, 15) that probably turn a few people off.  But as a members course, those holes are great.  They force the player to make shots.  

My one thing about Kingsley, more so than anywhere I've ever played is that it's a course of "misses."  In that you really need to manage your misses and miss to the proper spot.  More so than hitting a good shot into many holes, some punish misses more severely than they reward makes while some holes reward misses just as much as a perfect shot.  I do not mind this personally in the slightest and I do think it's very score-able, but you have to have significant local knowledge and pick and choose spots to be aggressive or overly conservative.  If I didn't have Jud, Howard and Bill showing me around for 2 rounds it would have taken me a lot longer to figure it out.  It is a course that does not lend itself to an one or two round hit and run.  Which may factor into ratings.

I don't really know which course is better or what my round breakdown would be...I just hope that it's 1 & 1 and get to play both again.  All I know after a couple days in northern Michigan, is that there are two world class golf courses...and between the weather, the golf, the food and of course the people, I can't wait to return.

Greg Taylor

Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #423 on: October 31, 2013, 10:54:40 AM »
Well done Josh thanks for a great thread.

My comment is that halving match is a bit "and they all lived happily ever after"... I was after some 7&6 blood!

Are there any more death matches worthy of consideration?

How about Whistling Straits versus Kiawah...? Kingsbarns versus Castle Stewart?
« Last Edit: October 31, 2013, 11:22:04 AM by Greg T »

Ryan Taylor

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Re: The Kingsley Club vs. Crystal Downs - A Matchplay Event
« Reply #424 on: October 31, 2013, 11:04:31 AM »
Great thread.

A Royal County Down versus Royal Portrush thread would be epic.

Ryan
"Bandon is like Chamonix for skiers or the North Shore of Oahu for surfers,” Rogers said. “It is where those who really care end up."

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