I don’t think it’s bold to suggest that, for the informed golfing public and, more specifically, panelists, the qualifications of what constitutes a great golf course have shifted over the past four decades. The penal school of architecture has ceded to the strategic, and a quick search for articles penned by Ran on GOLF yields the following endorsements of that sentiment: “The highest level of architecture occurs when the player is given a multitude of options in response to both design (width, short grass) and agronomy (surfaces that release the ball) [...] As you peruse the various lists in this issue, you’ll realize that the days of narrow fairways and flanking bunkers is not what energizes golfers anymore, to say nothing of raters. We want puzzles, conundrums and options. 'Thinking' your way around a course is gratifying and why we keep returning to the sport” (
https://golf.com/travel/2020-2021-top-100-courses-united-states-ranking/); “Design themes from the Golden Age of architecture — width, strategy, playing angles, enjoyment, creativity stemming from 'bouncy-bounce' golf — manifest themselves across all of GOLF’s rankings, and this 2021 Top 100 in the World list reinforces these core themes. Fact: Courses that embrace short grass and give the player room to navigate based on their game strengths fared better than cramped courses choked with wrist-wrenching rough that necessitate looking for lost balls” (
https://golf.com/travel/playability-influenced-top-100-courses-world-ranking/).
Nor is Ran a single voice crying out in the wilderness. The espousal of strategic golf, and the persuasiveness and tenacity from him, members of GCA, Mr. Doak, Hanse, Andy Johnson of the Fried Egg, etc. have helped shift attitudes back to the tenets you find in MacKenzie’s
Spirit of St. Andrews. Look no further than the clubs that saw the most significant jumps in GOLF’s latest World rankings: Oakland Hills South, St. Patrick’s, Baltusrol Lower, Inverness, Ohoopee. Each course has either fully embraced–or restored–width, angles, and short grass to accentuate their own routings, green complexes, and the unique challenges players face to recover and score.
And yet, despite all that, Pine Valley has been the undisputed number 1 ranked golf course in America since rankings began. A course that, from my armchair navel gazing, utilizes penal, heroic, and strategic schools, but possibly in that order of descending priority. Though there is width on fairways, and the golfer may choose just how much of the doglegs to bite off, there nevertheless seems few holes at PVGC where you could sensibly draw drastically different tee ball directions that hold equal strategic value, as you might on the Lido’s Channel hole, for example.
So while views have changed, the king hasn’t been dethroned. I’d like to openly ask: Why not?
The quality of the greens are one significant factor, according to Ran: “As much as the course’s fierce appearance, Pine Valley’s greens have kept it glued to the top of our rankings for decades” (
https://golf.com/travel/top-100-courses-us-4-key-takeaways/). And Mr. Doak offers a brief explanation as well, partly due to the data collection of the rankings system:
https://golf.com/news/tom-doak-explains-pine-valley-leads-top-100-ranking/.
But what I’d like to think is that if there ever was a moment for a club like Cypress, TOC, or NGLA to overtake the top spot, now would seemingly be it, yet it still hasn’t happened. That’s what’s prompting this topic.
To be clear: I’m not questioning Pine Valley’s greatness. What I’m suggesting, however, is that it’s ironic to be in an era defined by the renaissance of the strategic school of design, yet the course that holds top billing appears to flout that paradigm more than others. And it’s that irony I’m interested in hearing people actually familiar with the club either confirm or refute. My participation will be limited only to the prompt. I have not played it. Perhaps you think my premise is flawed, and that PVGC is far more strategic than I infer. I'm here to listen and be educated.
Below is my own synopsis of the holes, per aerials, which of course fails to recognize nuance and undulation, but is a helpful guide for my own initial understanding of the course:
Hole 1: Par 4. Dogleg right. Forced carry off tee with sand on both sides of fairway. Green complex falls away long, right, left.
Hole 2: Par 4. Straight. Forced carry off tee with sand on both sides of fairway. Forced carry approach.
Hole 3: Par 3. Forced carry approach to island green surrounded by sand.
Hole 4: Par 4. Dogleg right. Forced carry off tee with sand on right side of fairway. Sand front left and front right on greenside approach, with a central hazard bisecting the fairway. Clubhouse in play for severe right miss.
Hole 5: Par 3. Forced carry approach over water and sand to green complex surrounded by sand, though with a front apron.
Hole 6: Par 4. Dogleg right. Forced carry off tee with sand on right side of fairway. Green surrounded by sand except for long left and front approach.
Hole 7: Par 5. Slight dogleg right. Forced carry off tee with trees lining fairway. Forced carry for second shot. Forced carry approach to green surrounded by sand but for long left.
Hole 8: Par 4. Straight. Forced carry off tee with sand on both sides of fairway. Two separate green pads surrounded by sand but for small tongues of turf for access.
Hole 9: Par 4. Straight. Forced carry off tee with sand on both sides of the fairway. Two separate green pads with sand primarily on the left and right sides.
Hole 10: Par 3. Forced carry approach to green nearly surrounded by sand.
Hole 11: Par 4. Slight dogleg right. Forced carry off tee with trees lining fairway. Approach over centerline bunker and right bunkers to a green with sand right, long, and short left.
Hole 12: Par 4. Straight with perpendicular left green. Forced carry off tee with sand left of fairway. Green set severely left of fairway with sand short, long, and left.
Hole 13. Par 4. Dogleg left. Forced carry off tee with trees lining fairway. Forced carry approach with sand left and long/right.
Hole 14: Par 3. Forced carry approach over water and sand to island green surrounded by sand.
Hole 15: Par 5. Slightly serpentine. Forced water carry off tee with sand left and trees/water right of fairway. Second/third shot narrows with sand left and right on final approach to green.
Hole 16: Par 4. Straight/right. Forced carry off tee with trees lining fairway. Forced carry over rough on approach, with water on right, sand short left.
Hole 17: Par 4. Dogleg right. Forced carry off tee with sand right and trees left of fairway. Forced carry approach to a green all but surrounded with sand.
Hole 18: Par 4. Slight dogleg right. Forced carry off tee with sand right and trees left of fairway. Forced carry approach over road, water, and sand, to a green with sand front, left, right.
Happy holidays.