I took some approx. measurements on Google Earth as the existing course still there:
(These assume the golfer isn't walking thru lines of play on other holes, ie cutting across the 2nd green from 16 to 17)
Transition | Yards |
1 green to 2 tee | 190 |
3 green to 4 tee | 120 |
6 green to 7 tee | 160 |
11 green to 12 tee | 220 |
15 green to 16 tee | 135 |
16 green to 17 tee | 250 |
17 green to 18 tee | 225 |
Kalen,
I was being a bit charitable to Fazio with some of my green-to-tee walk estimates and I missed 17-18. Thanks for doing a more careful job collecting the numbers.
But I suspect that practically speaking, the actual walks are probably a bit less bad than your numbers suggest. One, I'd start measuring from 15 or 20 yards off the back edge of the green because you're always going to have to get a bit away from the green for the next tee (maybe not at St. Andrew's). Maybe you already did this.
And I'd also always knock off what I think is an average (and reasonable) walking distance between holes. I'd say that's around 50 or 60 yards. When assessing the architect's routing, they get a free, no-questions-asked 50 or 60 yards between every hole. Beyond that is when you start to deduct points. And with some of the walks at Pine Barrens, like 3-4, there isn't much left, maybe 50 or 60 yards.
To be sure, this still leaves a few 140 yard walks and more if you're playing forward tees (whether we should discount that is another discussion). I'd knock Pine Barrens for having several of those. Yet on the courses where the gaps between holes really start to bother me, you get several walks over 200 yards, even discounting the initial 50 or 60 yards. These especially become a problem if the course allows both carts and walkers. These long walks will really challenge the walkers to keep ahead of the riders.
The Pine Barrens longer walks, while still too numerous, are never so long that this would become a real problem. I think you have to keep something like that in mind when criticizing a course for having long green-to-tee walks. Anything over 120ish yards is a problem and it's especially a problem if there are several of them, but this is far less of a practical problem than if you have a few 300 yard walks.