I doubt they were intended to play that way in 1927
I remain extremely confused by this thread, so I will bring this up once more. Everyone keeps talking about downhill putts, as if putting is the only thing that green speeds affect, but when I put myself in a historic mindset of strategic thinking, I keep coming back to approach contours. I promise I'll leave this thread alone if what I'm saying isn't relevant.
So, slower green can have larger contours and shorter distances between hole locations and those contours. Now, these contours could be focused on making putting challenging (yes, I'm all in agreement there), but architects can also build contours that defend against approach shots.
In 1927, shots we much lower and more running, and these contours could be built to funnel balls away from certain pin positions. However, even in 2024 large contours could still deflect spinny, high-lofted shots away from certain pin positions. In both cases, an approach from a bad angle can eject balls that land just feet away from certain pins, and send them off the green altogether.
The slower the greens are, the more exaggerated (
more effective) these defensive contours can be, which means they can force players to concern themselves more with position. The slower green speed might mean less concern with being below the hole for putting (debatable but I'll concede the point), but they still mean more concern with holding the green altogether on the approach.
Now, as a mid-handicapper, this stuff affects me all the time. I don't know how big the error bars are for a player with Matt Cohn's exceptional skill, but I know that, in regards to the modern game, the subtleties of a
double plateau are probably lost because high-skilled players can stop a short iron on all three plateaus fairly trivially. However, the defensive contours that I'm talking about have been around for years, think
#4 Gingerbeer at the Old Course, but the ball flight gets higher in the modern era, the contour needs to be pushed back onto the green for it to be effective, rather than be in front of the green.
My thesis here is that the modern game is defined bit higher, longer shots, that stop quicker, which is a different strategy, but to bring back some of the older strategies we can build slow greens, with more tiers, with bigger defensive contours between those tiers. This would reward smarter angles, while making thoughtless bomb and gouge approaches more risky, by basically putting a big dangerous threat in the middle of the green (one that can be avoided by hitting into it instead of across it).
Why I bring this up repeatedly is that this thread is about historic green speeds. I play a lot at Gleneagles SF, and the
9th/18th has a massive contour across the center of the green. Even though the greens don't run too quick there, it's enough for any putt down the contour to send the ball off the front of the green, which is a testament to the greens being
significantly slower when it was built in 1962. I really think that greens have been softened dramatically (again, 2015 neutering of
#11 High In), and the running approaches that were a strategic concern (Ginger Beer) have been lost.
Hope I didn't miss some big point here that went over my head.
Edit: whoops, I guess I had some very bad post timing as Jeff seems to be making a similar point just above:many think faster greens with less slope are the same as slower with more slope, but they completely forget about the effect of more slope on a pitch or approach, and these slower highly sloped greens can also be kept firmer/drier due to less fear of losing them in warmer conditions.
Now my point is moot if you are talking about an unchanged course over 75 years, but those really don't exist-certainly not the same pin placements (newer speeds would negate certain pins) or fairway agronomy.