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Rob Marshall

  • Karma: +0/-0
I went to the CME Championship at Tiburon today. I've previously played the course 3 or 4 times. There are two heights of turf on the entire course. Greens and everything else. I started thinking about other courses I've played like that and the only other one I could remember was Streamsong Blue. Why do this? Are there advantages?



If life gives you limes, make margaritas.” Jimmy Buffett

Matt_Cohn

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Courses with only one height of turf other than greens
« Reply #1 on: Yesterday at 08:25:55 PM »
I feel like there are a lot of these now. In the Bay Area, Baylands. Menlo is close but does have literally about 1% rough.

Chris Hughes

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Re: Courses with only one height of turf other than greens
« Reply #2 on: Yesterday at 09:03:59 PM »
That is very interesting, never heard of it before.


However, in the past when I've heard folks complain that "the bunkers are inconsistent" my reaction is "well do you also want the grass cut the exact same length everywhere too"??


After they stare blankly for a few moments I explain that assessing different conditions/lies is all part of "playing" golf, including in the bunkers.
"Is it the Chicken Salad or the golf course that attracts and retains members ?"

Kyle Harris

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Re: Courses with only one height of turf other than greens
« Reply #3 on: Yesterday at 10:11:33 PM »
Plenty of advantage. Less different kinds of equipment and less subsequent management and overhead.
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Rob Marshall

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Courses with only one height of turf other than greens
« Reply #4 on: Yesterday at 10:36:46 PM »
That is very interesting, never heard of it before.


However, in the past when I've heard folks complain that "the bunkers are inconsistent" my reaction is "well do you also want the grass cut the exact same length everywhere too"??


After they stare blankly for a few moments I explain that assessing different conditions/lies is all part of "playing" golf, including in the bunkers.


In saw Korda and another player chip from just off the green when most of the players were putting from similar spots. It was very tight and I didn’t see any plays with putter that turned out poorly.
If life gives you limes, make margaritas.” Jimmy Buffett

Tim Gavrich

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Courses with only one height of turf other than greens
« Reply #5 on: Today at 07:31:15 AM »
It seems to be a relatively prominent feature of Greg Norman's work over the years. The first course I ever played that used the two-cut scheme was The Reserve in Pawleys Island, S.C., originally a Norman design. Norman's course up the beach at Barefoot Resort is also primarily like that, too. Norman's now-NLE Great White course at Doral, same thing: fairway cut and green cut, with crushed coquina shell "rough." It's an appealing look that probably doesn't work everywhere, but at places like The Reserve or Tiburon that are routed through pines, there's an interesting crispness to it.
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Adam Lawrence

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Re: Courses with only one height of turf other than greens
« Reply #6 on: Today at 08:20:58 AM »
I think it's a great thing. Eliminating maintained rough, so you have fairway cut right up to unmaintained native seems to me possibly the best way to make courses look more natural. Just as fairway striping is wholly unnatural and therefore stands out like a sore thumb, so do lots of different heights of cut. You either have straight lines between the different heights, or you have the terrible wavy edges. Neither exist in nature.  I want to see as little evidence of the hand of man as possible on a golf course. The fewer heights of cut there are, the less you see the hand of man.
Adam Lawrence

Editor, Golf Course Architecture
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Thomas Dai

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Courses with only one height of turf other than greens
« Reply #7 on: Today at 09:30:34 AM »
Sounds damn good to me!
Sections, not all, just sections, of some links and/or hilltop courses particularly animal grazed ones, can be a bit like it.
Was it the original intent at ANGC?


Atb

jeffwarne

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Courses with only one height of turf other than greens
« Reply #8 on: Today at 09:40:57 AM »
Well yes and no..

Depends on the height of that cut.
Many modern courses have jumped the shark, placing higher value on agronomy skill over golf skill.
Putter from everywhere devalues creativity and skill with various chipping/pitching weapons


Now if the HOC of sheep grazing, where there's still some turf and it's still firm, it's perfect because generally all options are on the table as a player of reasonable ability can put club on ball(unlike the modern high ends where few IF any players can consistently get predictable contact to make anything but putter or hybrid/fway wood an actual realistic, viable option}


But I do understand from a maintenance perspective that it makes sense-as I said, my quibble is HOC and firmness.
"Let's slow the damned greens down a bit, not take the character out of them." Tom Doak
"Take their focus off the grass and put it squarely on interesting golf." Don Mahaffey

Dónal Ó Ceallaigh

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Courses with only one height of turf other than greens
« Reply #9 on: Today at 10:13:19 AM »
I would like to see green collars and aprons cut to the same height as the fairway, which would mean elimination of collars and aprons. I think green aprons look terrible, add nothing useful to the game and in many cases are over watered.


There's nothing more frustrating than an approach shot landing on the apron and sticking there. I also think fairways are cut too low these days. I always thought is was nice playing off fairways - on parkland courses - that were cut with gang-mowers.

Charlie Goerges

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Courses with only one height of turf other than greens
« Reply #10 on: Today at 10:27:31 AM »
Well yes and no..

Depends on the height of that cut.
Many modern courses have jumped the shark, placing higher value on agronomy skill over golf skill.
Putter from everywhere devalues creativity and skill with various chipping/pitching weapons


Now if the HOC of sheep grazing, where there's still some turf and it's still firm, it's perfect because generally all options are on the table as a player of reasonable ability can put club on ball(unlike the modern high ends where few IF any players can consistently get predictable contact to make anything but putter or hybrid/fway wood an actual realistic, viable option}


But I do understand from a maintenance perspective that it makes sense-as I said, my quibble is HOC and firmness.




1000% agree!


I'm not interested if the single cut is ridiculously tight. Fairway lies are often already to tight for players like my dad who is less skilled and getting older. He needs some cushion under the ball to get it up in the air (and I prefer some).
Severally on the occasion of everything that thou doest, pause and ask thyself, if death is a dreadful thing because it deprives thee of this. - Marcus Aurelius

Jesse Kodadek

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Courses with only one height of turf other than greens
« Reply #11 on: Today at 01:47:32 PM »
Rock Creek Cattle Company is like this, and only occasionally has a small strip of rough before fairways transition to native areas. As explained in the description on this site, there was a good reason for this, as Tom Doak is quoted:


"We’ve built a lot of wide fairways but these are something else. The impetus here was all the rocks in the ground.  We wanted to make a wide enough playable area so that people wouldn’t be taking drops [legal or illegal?] to avoid hitting a rock on their second shot … and once we tore up the ground to sift through it, it made more sense to make it all fairway than to have a belt of rough between the fairway and the native roughs."

Kevin_Reilly

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Courses with only one height of turf other than greens
« Reply #12 on: Today at 02:06:39 PM »
I can't remember a time (since 2015) that I had a shot from non-fairway height grass at Orinda - and not because I am Calvin Peete!  Single level turf everywhere.  Thank you Josh Smith.
"GOLF COURSES SHOULD BE ENJOYED RATHER THAN RATED" - Tom Watson

Rob Marshall

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: Courses with only one height of turf other than greens
« Reply #13 on: Today at 04:12:07 PM »
“Putter from everywhere devalues creativity and skill with various chipping/pitching weapons”

Which is why I don’t like tight run off areas on too many holes. At my course in NY everyone just uses a putter. Was practicing today hitting three balls to the same pin using a different club for each ball.
« Last Edit: Today at 07:28:40 PM by Rob Marshall »
If life gives you limes, make margaritas.” Jimmy Buffett

Tom_Doak

  • Karma: +3/-1
Re: Courses with only one height of turf other than greens
« Reply #14 on: Today at 05:49:40 PM »
There are a lot of modern courses where nearly everything is cut at fairway height until you get to the native.  I can't identify where that started, exactly; for sure by the time we did Streamsong it was fairly common.


It's partly a matter of location.  It works where you have fescue or Bermuda fairways, because it's not much more expensive to maintain those at fairway height than as rough . . . it doesn't work as well in an area where you'd want bent grass fairways with all of their requirements, which is why Diamond Springs is bluegrass instead of bent.


It's also a matter of location because in some places you don't identify the native as "rough" but in grassier areas you do . . . for instance, St. Patrick's roughs are all "native" fescues but you see that as two heights of cut, whereas the native at Streamsong or Tara Iti is just open sand.



Joe Hancock

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Re: Courses with only one height of turf other than greens
« Reply #15 on: Today at 06:50:22 PM »
Topography matters a lot in this matter.
" What the hell is the point of architecture and excellence in design if a "clever" set up trumps it all?" Peter Pallotta, June 21, 2016

"People aren't picking a side of the fairway off a tee because of a randomly internally contoured green ."  jeffwarne, February 24, 2017

Forrest Richardson

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Re: Courses with only one height of turf other than greens
« Reply #16 on: Today at 09:38:37 PM »
Yes, Baylands was designed that way. And Mr. Lawrence will recall The Links at Las Palomas in MX has been that way since 2007 when it opened with 100% SeaDwarf Paspalum, including greens.
— Forrest Richardson, Golf Course Architect/ASGCA
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