Sandstorm wrote: Fri Dec 08, 2023 11:42 am
TedMaul wrote: Fri Dec 08, 2023 11:27 am
I played the great Chicago courses this summer (Chicago Golf Club, Old Elm, Glenview and Shoreacres and your description of US courses could not be further from the réalite.
Try some of the courses on West side of Maui. Flat and open does not describe them!!
To be fair my golf in US has mostly been limited to Florida and South Carolina, played about 50+ courses and base my descriptions on them. Every course has an island green par 3, a par 5 around a lake, a dogleg short par 4, a lake on 18th hole with a big fountain in the middle, big fairway bunkers or waste areas with about 12" of lip on them and usually huge greens that are mostly flat and run fast. Almost all have big flat straight fairways with cart path down the side, occasionally some have an Eisenhower tree in the middle, tree lined fairways with lots of pine needles underneath them, 5 sets of tees from 5,500 to 7,200+ yards and the occasional mounding at the sides of the fairways to provide definition.
Renaissance course in Gullane, the site of the Scottish Open, is essentially an American course built on links land. It has been plonked into the middle of Scotland and isn't a links course. It was built with US money and is designed to give rich Americans want they want in a golf course ie big flat fairways, etc. but in Scotland. Despite all the money spent there and the posh surroundings it isn't anywhere near my top ten courses in East of Scotland let alone in Scotland.
Dont get me wrong I love playing golf in America and our trips have been brilliant fun but most of the courses do blend into one another. They are what they are and we enjoy playing them but it is all about hitting it as far as you can off the tee, avoiding the lake on the left/right and then gouge it out of semi rough into big flat greens. Hopefully the pulling back of ball distances will bring back into play the more unique and quirky courses in UK, Ireland and Europe and avoid the ongoing quest to make existing courses longer like they had to do with the Old Course.