News:

Welcome to the Golf Club Atlas Discussion Group!

Each user is approved by the Golf Club Atlas editorial staff. For any new inquiries, please contact us.


Pete Lavallee

  • Total Karma: 0
Not yet mentioned the 16th at Pebble Beach would be the poster child for this type of hole.
"...one inoculated with the virus must swing a golf-club or perish."  Robert Hunter

David Ober

  • Total Karma: 0
I'm going to nominate a few holes over the next few days. Keep in mind, though I play quite a bit of golf, I haven't played the number of "great" courses that many on this board have.


2nd hole at Wilshire CC. Fantastic, diabolical par 5, especially in tournament conditions when the greens are firm and fast. They need to lose the bunker short and left off the tee. Other than that, I pucker every time I hit my third on that hole. Hit a good shot and you are rewarded, and bad one and you are putting/chipping from the little depression thingy that guards the right side of the green.


16th hole at Lakeside. Wonderful par 4. One of Hogan's favorite holes ever, so I'm told.


1st hole, par 5 at Spyglass. Brutally, gloriously tough opener -- especially for the distance-challenged, like me. If I don't hit a very solid tee ball, I can end up with 160 or so into that hole after my lay-up ... and into the ocean wind, to boot.




JohnVDB

  • Total Karma: 0
There are times and holes where you might not have the skill required to stop a ball by the hole.  That is on you.  A great hole can demand that kind of talent. 


The 5th hole at Royal Dornoch is listed by one golf publication as one of the best holes in the UK.  There are 3 bunkers in front that demand you hit high a high wedge into it when the hole is on the front and you want to get close.  The green is 55 yards deep so you can land it by the hole and it will stay on the green if you can’t stop it.


The hole is only 312 yards from the members tees so when the hole is near the front I layup to leave a full wedge so I spin it, but when it is back I drive it right up to the bunkers and hit a pitch and run over them.


Interestingly the hole is the number 18 handicap hole for men, but still was selected as one of the best.


I setup a good shortish course for a US Senior Open qualifier once and put a bunch of holes right behind the bunkers that fronted the greens. The players were good enough that they could handle that shot and the ones that did it best qualified.

Carl Rogers

  • Total Karma: 0
7th at ANGC, probably not great, but interesting to me because it's is under the radar.
I decline to accept the end of man. ... William Faulkner

Ira Fishman

  • Total Karma: 3
There are times and holes where you might not have the skill required to stop a ball by the hole.  That is on you.  A great hole can demand that kind of talent. 


The 5th hole at Royal Dornoch is listed by one golf publication as one of the best holes in the UK.  There are 3 bunkers in front that demand you hit high a high wedge into it when the hole is on the front and you want to get close.  The green is 55 yards deep so you can land it by the hole and it will stay on the green if you can’t stop it.


The hole is only 312 yards from the members tees so when the hole is near the front I layup to leave a full wedge so I spin it, but when it is back I drive it right up to the bunkers and hit a pitch and run over them.


Interestingly the hole is the number 18 handicap hole for men, but still was selected as one of the best.


I setup a good shortish course for a US Senior Open qualifier once and put a bunch of holes right behind the bunkers that fronted the greens. The players were good enough that they could handle that shot and the ones that did it best qualified.


I actually was surprised how few holes came to mind. RD 5 was one of them. PH2 3 was another. Perhaps my definition of great excludes such holes because I am no longer able to hit the necessary shot, but I took a quick look at several difficult courses from my youth and still did not find that many holes with fronting bunkers.


Ira

Mark_Fine

  • Total Karma: -5
The redan style green and bunker is used on many par fours and fives.
« Last Edit: October 18, 2020, 03:58:04 PM by Mark_Fine »

Ronald Montesano

  • Total Karma: -19
Is the 18th at Pebble a great hole, or a great location for a hole?
Coming in 2025
~Robert Moses Pitch 'n Putt
~~Sag Harbor
~~~Chenango Valley
~~~~Sleepy Hollow
~~~~~Montauk Downs
~~~~~~Sunken Meadow
~~~~~~~Some other, posh joints ;)

Tom Bacsanyi

  • Total Karma: 0
Where does the Road Hole fit into this discussion? The pot bunker is pretty much right in front and draws a lot of water, although you could sneak a ball on the front right with a run up.
Don't play too much golf. Two rounds a day are plenty.

--Harry Vardon

Michael Felton

  • Total Karma: 3
Does it have to be bunkers or does water qualify? If water qualifies, then 13 and 15 at Augusta would be added. Also have 1, 2, 7, 17 and 18 with fronting bunkers there.


1, 12 and 15 at Royal St Georges. Especially 12 I think is a great hole.


4 at St Georges on Long Island


By my count at Shinnecock, 4, 6, 8, 9, 13, 14, 15, 16 and 18 all have bunkers in front that cover around half or more of the green.


3, 8, 16 and 17 next door at NGLA all have fronting bunkers.


2, 7, 8, 13, 17 and 18 at Pine Valley.

Mark_Fine

  • Total Karma: -5
As I said early on there are a ton of great holes with hazards (bunkers,...) in front of the greens.  It was RT Jones who I give the most credit for ushering in the aerial game but architects like Flynn and Wilson did so as well however they usually left partial openings for run-up shots.  But even very early on (pre-1900), there were holes that required obstacles to be carried in the air to safely reach their intended target.  The secret - don't overuse a design feature  :)

Matt_Cohn

  • Total Karma: 7
18 at The Country Club.

Jim_Coleman

  • Total Karma: 2
   Bel Air  -  2,3,7,9,13,14,16,18.

Ed Brzezowski

  • Total Karma: 0
David,
I am playing Merion next week and I can think of at least three holes there that are great golf holes with bunkers fronting the green, the par five 4th, the par four 8th and the famous 16th.  I played Philly CC yesterday and they have several great holes as well that have bunkers fronting the green.  Should I keep going 😊


16 at Merion is a good nomination.  Definitely a very interesting golf hole but one I have often thought would need a great deal of study to know if it actually plays like a great golf hole.  As for 8, surely that being the worst hole on the course is partly due to the front bunker?  Quite the let down after 7. 


Philly CC has some amazing green contours but you may be setting a low bar here. Isn't it an interesting course despite having a few holes with fronting bunkers? Not because of the fronting bunkers?






8 the worst hole on the course? Would you please explain your thoughts?






thanks
We have a pool and a pond, the pond would be good for you.

JESII

  • Total Karma: 0
Same question from me David...I love the 8th hole at Merion. 7 is cool as well, but I don't know that I'd prefer it to 8.






Michael Felton,


I'm going to push back on Shinnecock;


I believe 4, 6, 8, 13, 16 and 18 all offer approach opportunities from the preferred side of the fairway without going over a bunker. 

Michael Felton

  • Total Karma: 3
Same question from me David...I love the 8th hole at Merion. 7 is cool as well, but I don't know that I'd prefer it to 8.






Michael Felton,


I'm going to push back on Shinnecock;


I believe 4, 6, 8, 13, 16 and 18 all offer approach opportunities from the preferred side of the fairway without going over a bunker.


The OP said half the green was covered. Here is 16: https://www.google.com/maps/@40.8964648,-72.4398781,96m/data=!3m1!1e3 Not sure there's half the green you can see from the fairway there. 13 it depends if you count the short one. If you do, there's nowhere in the fairway that can see more than about a yard of the green without a bunker in the way. 18 if you hit it 270 off the tee from the not very back tee, you can't see any of the green past the front bunkers. That's here: https://www.google.com/maps/@40.8955246,-72.4404529,136m/data=!3m1!1e3


I'll withdraw 4 and 6. 6 I was thinking from the left fairway, but if you're in the right then the bunker is not so much in the way. 8 I think is pretty narrow in between the two bunkers. 

JESII

  • Total Karma: 0
Michael,


I didn't intend to include 16 so withdrawn...


13 and 18 both fit this question, and overall strategic golf, to a tee in my opinion.


I'm not 100% sure what you mean by "see the green". You use it in your objection to both. One can certainly hit a shot from the wide side of the fairway to both greens that lands 5 or 10 yards short, and dead at the center of it and be in great shape. If you're speaking of the visual obstruction...well...

JESII

  • Total Karma: 0
By the way, one of the coolest things I've ever seen on a golf course happened on that 13th tee.


Monday of the 2004 US Open, I bought a ticket and went out to see the guys prep for the tournament. I come up to the 13th tee and Justin Rose, Ian Poulter and two others I'm forgetting at the moment are waiting to hit their tee shots. They each had long irons or hybrids of some sort so were just targeting that left side at 230ish. Wind was into and from the right at a club to club and a half.


Rose had his 2 iron on a tee, although just barely above the turf. He hit it well, and it was low, but lifted just a little and fell just a bit to the left with the wind and then bounced left and just into the rough. After the other guys hit their shots, he drops a ball on the ground and steps on it...just enough to indent it into the ground a tiny bit. Hit this 2 iron like a rocket that the wind didn't touch. Stayed on that flat trajectory and landed in the middle of the fairway, ending up in the left corner.


 :o

Michael Felton

  • Total Karma: 3
Michael,


I didn't intend to include 16 so withdrawn...


13 and 18 both fit this question, and overall strategic golf, to a tee in my opinion.


I'm not 100% sure what you mean by "see the green". You use it in your objection to both. One can certainly hit a shot from the wide side of the fairway to both greens that lands 5 or 10 yards short, and dead at the center of it and be in great shape. If you're speaking of the visual obstruction...well...


I was thinking of them both as bunkers you have to go over to reach the green. By way of two further examples, would you consider these front bunkers? https://www.google.com/maps/@51.2763367,-0.2403473,142m/data=!3m1!1e3 The one on the right obviously is. The one on the left is further away from the front of the green than the bunker on 18 at Shinnecock.

JESII

  • Total Karma: 0
I would call the one on the left an approach bunker, thereby disqualifying it from this question...but that's just me.

Tim_Weiman

  • Total Karma: 0
Where does the Road Hole fit into this discussion? The pot bunker is pretty much right in front and draws a lot of water, although you could sneak a ball on the front right with a run up.
Tom,


I was also thinking about the Road Hole, though it probably isn’t what David had in mind. However, what does “draws a lot of water” mean? Do you mean tears?
Tim Weiman

Michael Felton

  • Total Karma: 3
Where does the Road Hole fit into this discussion? The pot bunker is pretty much right in front and draws a lot of water, although you could sneak a ball on the front right with a run up.
Tom,


I was also thinking about the Road Hole, though it probably isn’t what David had in mind. However, what does “draws a lot of water” mean? Do you mean tears?


I figured he meant catchment area. I remember reading somewhere that while the bunker itself is only something like 4 square yards, there is a vast area from which the ball will funnel into the bunker.

David_Elvins

  • Total Karma: 0
I was also thinking about the Road Hole, though it probably isn’t what David had in mind. However, what does “draws a lot of water” mean? Do you mean tears?


Tim et al,

I had thought of the road hole.  It does look much more in your face from the fairway than it does in an aerial view where it looks like a flanking bunker, and the ground contours definitely accentuate that.
Ask not what GolfClubAtlas can do for you; ask what you can do for GolfClubAtlas.

David_Elvins

  • Total Karma: 0
Same question from me David...I love the 8th hole at Merion. 7 is cool as well, but I don't know that I'd prefer it to 8.


Jim, Ed,


I loved the green contouring at 7, I thought it was worth travelling to see.  I also thought that unlike some of the other medium length par 4s at Merion, the hole has some options off the tee, in terms of line and length.  I could be reading it wrong but I think to a lot of pins there is an incentive hit your tee shot up the right half of the fairway.   There could also be some incentive to take driver and hit it long. 


Conversely, I think the 8th is very prescriptive.  For a decent player, Aim at the middle of the fariway off the tee, hit it to a distance you are comfortable pitching from (presumably with a club other than driver) and then pitch on. 


The 3rd at Leongatha is on similar terrain and of similar length and I find it so much more interesting.  The green does not demand a pitch and this allows for a large variety of clubs to be taken off the tee with a clear preffered line down the right to get an angle down the length of the green and approach shots ranging from 0-120y in length for decent players whilst also being very playable for average and elderly golfers.  There is no reason why the designers of Merion could not have built a green based on similar principles that would have fitted in with the design principles of the course.  It is much more interesting (and better) architecture than a fronting bunker that demands a pitch IMO, even though their are plenty of times I have chosen to try and play an exactiving pitch shot


8th Merion



3rd Leongatha




Ask not what GolfClubAtlas can do for you; ask what you can do for GolfClubAtlas.

Mark Kiely

  • Total Karma: 0
How about "Moat," the par-4 12th at PGA West Stadium?
My golf course photo albums on Flickr: https://goo.gl/dWPF9z

David_Elvins

  • Total Karma: 0
How about "Moat," the par-4 12th at PGA West Stadium?


It's a very cool hole, imo


Does it need the front bunker though? I actually think it detracts a bit from the hole as it turns the approach into an aerial approach to a yardage, which to some degree negates the advantage of hitting to the right side of the fairway and being able to see the green.  Not that I would change it, it fits the course perfectly and there is a definite skill to trusting youur yardages on a blind shot. 


« Last Edit: October 21, 2020, 10:29:09 PM by David_Elvins »
Ask not what GolfClubAtlas can do for you; ask what you can do for GolfClubAtlas.