The argument has been made before, but I think it is important to note that Pat is WRONG. I wouldn't want lurkers to think that Raynor designed both sections to be putting surface. Soil sample cannot change what Banks wrote. Soil samples cannot change history.
Even if Raynor only designed the back part as green, Ramsay is real sure they built the front as green as well. If he is right, I wonder who made that decision? Seems like a big departure from the architect/builder's plan.
I don't think its a departure in any way from the concept of the template. What better way to allow a ball to run from the front to the back then to build the front portion as a green?
Sven,
I strongly disagree with the first sentence: putting a pin on the front section is a HUGE deviation from the concept of the template. Macdonald envisioned a low running shot that had to travel between the parallel bunkers, run through the swale, and then stop on the putting surface. Simply hitting a much shorter, elevated shot to a front pin is a COMPLETELY different shot demand. And a very boring one, at that...
I agree completely with the second sentence. Given
today's turf management techniques in the U.S., I believe that maintaining the front section as putting surface is the best way to get the ball to not check and to release to the green. However, in the mid 1920's I bet the average fairway was far firmer.
Jim,
I have no idea who first decided that the front section should be putting surface. I'm just speculating, but it could have been any of the powerful people at Yale who had a say. It could have been their first greenskeeper, even before the course opened for play. Any amateur architect might have come up with that idea... To the untrained eye, the parallel bunkers almost scream: put a pin up front!
I think we are all familiar with stories about owners making suggestions to an architect. Perhaps someone strongly suggested it to Raynor and he threw up his hands and decided not to fight about it.
To all,
I'm still waiting for the first shred of evidence that Macdonald, Raynor or Banks ever contemplated a front pin location on a Biarritz.