Jeff Warne said:
Back on topic, it would seem the challenge lies in finding ways to make angles matter architecturally by
1. contouring the greens such that they don't have to be rock hard to have them release (i.e. heat/humidity/budget/rain can ruin or make impractical any chance of consistent firm and fast-or at least firm) Have more greens that are tilted to favor the approach from one side, and or have the green run away form the player-OR at least have LESS tilt toward the player than most have.
Yes, this is an interesting topic to me.
If a green angles right to any substantial degree, say, +30 degrees or more, (setting up preferred angle from the left) the back left is usually the high side, just for visibility reasons, which tends to tilt the green a bit to the right, helping stop shots from those angles. I understand that if I tilted the green away from the right side, it would really reinforce coming in from the left play-wise.
Also, most greens are longer than wide, meaning the golfer from the off side must come in over a hazard, to a shallower target, and if you add a reverse slope, in many cases it would be impossible to hold the green, or, only possible by top flight players with high lofts and more spin.
I have built exactly two right angled greens that drain left, and it really doesn't seem to work visually. Also, setting up the preferred angle seems to reward longer, better golfers almost as their pure length does.
But then the question remains if that is what we really want? If contours work to make the approach from the left the only realistic option for play, is that penal or strategic? Or, do we want the shot from the "wrong (in this case right) side of the fw harder, but doable?
Ways to do this are to make sure the left to right cross slope is lower, say less than 2%, to help the approach shot from the right stop a bit less, and/or not provide any backing mounds that help contain a roll out shot from that side. Or, some combo where part of the back left of the green is narrower, flatter, has some hazard behind, etc., but there would also be some kind of bail out target on or on the fringe of the green from that side, i.e., the equivalent of a relatively open side and Sunday Pin side (which would usually be somewhere right.
Frankly, I have always figured that the angle itself, essentially coming in across the length of the target rather than with it is punishment enough, and the back left flare up is based more on what I need to make the back edge of the green visible than any play considerations, i.e., it may be pretty flat on a downhill approach where we can maintain visibility, but steeper as needed on uphill or level approaches.
It's that fine balance of giving an advantage to one angle, while not shutting the other one down completely to create a strategy. Again, if you can only hit the green from a narrow band of fw on the left third, is the tee shot any more strategic than a tee shot to the middle of an RTJ style narrow fw with bunkers on both sides?