Some interesting aspects and holes at Stourbridge
It's worth noting that the Club changed the routing/hole-numbering earlier this year. The old 1st is now the 3rd. I've used the 'new' hole number referencing in this thread.
Here is a little more flavour of the course.
This is the second shot on the 4th hole, par-4 of 410 yds doglegging left from a tee on a ridge.
and some photos of the 4th holes green complex with its quite extensive bunkering, firstly as seen from front-left and secondly, as seen from front-right
In an earlier post above I mentioned the bunkering and the cross-over holes. Here is an example of the fairway bunkering, in this case to the right of the fairway at the first of the cross-over holes, the 390 yd par4 6th.
And this fairway bunker comes into play on both the 7th and the 11th holes.
Below is a hole I found particularly interesting, the now numbered 16th. It plays downhill and can play as either a 270 yd par-4 or as a 180 yd par-3.
When playing as the par-4 version you tee-off over the preceding green and the hole plays as a very slight dogleg right and the green is blind. When in par-3 mode the top of the flag is just visible. But it's the narrowness of the green that fascinates me.
Here is the hole diagram - when in par-4 mode the tee shot has to be very exact or a pretty nasty approach shot from an awkward angle could await. When in par-3 mode it still plays interesting.
Two photos taken from the rear of the green -
And from the right side (as you play the hole) -
And from the left side -
As you see the green on this hole is incredibly narrow in the middle. I believe a pin on the very front of the green is just about possible and obviously there are several pin positions within the wider rear section but the middle, wow, that's tight, and the ball rolls down onto the green with considerable pace to it. Incidentally, that's my ball in the bunker (I played the hole as a par-3) in the earlier photo and I hit a real ripper of a bunker shot with a lot of spin and still only managed to stop it 6ft past the hole. The hole is SI-18 when played as a par-4. I can't imagine it's SI-18 when played as a par-3.
Anyway, that's a flavour of Dr MacK's Stourbridge and here's a Bing sat-map -
http://binged.it/10exzmgCertainly a course worth playing if you're either in the area. Fine condition too, especially the greens which were firm and rolled very well.
atb