The first time I played #7 at the blue, I didn't like the how it fit in the flow of holes, it made me a little anxious....thinking WTF Tom, but the setting was nice, and the company too as we waited. Then I hit what seemed like a great shot, and it hit the green and ended up in the water. And I said I'll get you next time you SOB. I don't want Tom to fix the hole, I want to play it until I get my fair share of good bounces.
Golf holes with no uncertainty are dull, and making them appear hazardous while building concave shapes to protect golfers in the name of fun is the most boring golf of all.
Hi Don:
I will post something about #7 here and hope it does not interrupt people from posting about it on the Streamsong Blue thread.
From the first time I set foot at Streamsong, our client Rich Mack pointed over the lake at the green site for #7 and said, "What about a hole playing over to there?" Bill Coore pointedly did not have a hole there on any of this routings, though he did have what became #16 Red at the end of the lake, to a green site that was not so obvious to me or to Rich Mack.
When Bill and I did the 36-hole plan, we had the 7th Blue as a short par-3 along the tee side of the lake, not playing across. I don't think either of us really loved that idea; it might even have been one of the things that helped Bill choose to build the Red course instead. I was concerned we'd have to do something that took away from 15 Red, and then on top of that, The Mosaic Company was concerned about the safety of golfers being on the slopes of the big lake, which were not 100% stable. [When we worked near any of the lakes, the guy in the dozer had to have a life preserver.] I was really not excited about building a hole where you missed the green right, and found a sign saying you weren't allowed to go hit it.
Once it was determined we would build the Blue course, I had all of my associates down to do a walk-through, and when we looked at #7, Brian Schneider asked why I hadn't gone across the lake instead? Honestly, no one had ever looked at the green site from the current tee . . . Rich Mack had always been looking at it straight across from the line of the forward tee, which was not a good hole, and I had just dismissed the idea of a green over there. Plus of course didn't fit well into the routing.
But from the angle of the current blue tee, the scale of the hole reminded me of the 9th at Yale, and if we cleaned up the shoulder of dune that came in front of the green on the right, it wasn't an impossible carry for most golfers. It was a way more appealing option than the problematic short par-3 on the near side, apart from the walk back over the bridge. So, I suggested it to Rich Mack, knowing he would jump at it. And people sure seem to like taking photos of it.
The green is more difficult than I intended, or realized. There was a lot of slope from left to right and front to back, and Eric took a dozer over there three different times to soften it, but it's still nasty. If Mike Keiser owned the place, we'd have changed it last year when they re-grassed all of the greens [if not before then], but we've discussed it more than once and the client has always been in favor of leaving it nasty.