I am against an endless succession of greens with rolls, bumps, and dips. I believe each course or each links should have at least four or five greens, well distributed, that are practically flat after the nature of the ground, with less artificial building up. One gets extremely tired of putting on nothing but molded greens with sudden dips and rises to work out. A few of these, when not overdone, are well enough, but there should be variety. C.B. MACDONALD
I saw this on Geoff S site header and thought it might make a good discussion topic.
With limited success, I will say I have flat, or at least "tilted plain" greens in my hip pocket list of green to include on any course, maybe 1-2, not the 4-5 CBM recommends here, although I can see that many being used:
- Sloped to front left or right corners are good on slightly uphill approach shots, where even the smallest rollover hides much of the green.
- A Redan tipping to a back corner, usually left back
- A pure cross slope green, a la Merion 5 (at least when I played it years ago, may have changed.)
- Small greens can usually drain all one direction without drainage consequences, so a small green can simply tip towards the golfer and drain out the front, especially when used on long par 4 holes where I would generally want the contours a bit simpler as a reward for a hard shot actually hitting the target (i.e., proportional)
In addition to those flat greens, I try to mix up the severity of cup areas my greens in groups of flattish (below 2% in cup areas), medium (about 2% in cup areas, and sloped (2.25% in cup areas) with the theory being that golfers might never get a true read on those remainder putts near the hole.)
In reality, the slope variations rarely get built exactly enough to work out in theory, although I can't say I've ever played one of my courses enough to really test that theory and no one else has mentioned that they noticed what I was doing. They probably comment on the 2.25% or greater cup areas, and not nicely, LOL.
Lastly, there are a few more, lightly used, but worth using once per course, green contour ideas, like 2 tiered greens, either front to back or side to side, and even 3 or 4 tier greens. Not sure if a Biarritz or Valley of Sin green counts as unique, but I have used them for variety. I have used collector swales on a few greens, and sometimes puffs in the middle of greens as the main feature, although usually when the cup areas are 2%, so obviously there are some overlaps in these categories. I'm sure there are others I am forgetting at this moment.
But, the main question remains? Would golfers notice a rotation of greens, a la,
1 - Gently rolling 2%
2 - Tilted plain
3- Gently rolling 2.25%
4- 2 Tier green,
5 - Gently rolling <2%
etc., as this is just an example.
Or would they think the greens needed more of a theme? And yes, part of CBM's quote was to make them flat to avoid building them up, but in the modern world, with most greens built up anyway, it is more of a design theory aimed at golfers enjoyment, not necessarily following the natural contour as the most important criteria. That said, of course the point is to pick sites where these contours work, i.e., I wouldn't use a tilted plain right when the cross slope is to the left, LOL.
Discuss. Yes, another "pure theory" topic many avoid, perhaps because it "just depends" would be the most common answer. That said, I always believed you should approach a design with an overall concept of what you think works for that course, not just wing it when you get to the field, LOL>