Well, goodness me! We have four candidates for the three available general committee positions, which means we have to have an actual election - for the first time in many years.
Monday, 26 September 2011
Committee Election
Mike Clayton (7)
18 South.
Monday, 19 September 2011
Mike Clayton (6)
16 South.
There is much debate at the club on the pros and cons of the changes made by Mike Clayton on 16, 17 and 18. Previously, these were a strong par 3, a very strong par 4 and shortish par 5. The strong 16th and 17th have effectively been sacrificed in order to have the elevated tee on 18, thereby reducing it to a par 4.
17 South.
In its original form, Mike Clayton’s 17th had a number of flaws. A ridiculous 2-tiered green and insufficient landing area in the back part of the green combined with punitive rough close to the back of the green being the most obvious.
I think any green should offer the chance of being able to putt the ball close to the hole from any part of the green. If you are on the green, it should not be physically impossible to get the ball close to the hole. Very difficult is fine, but impossible is stupid. That goes for 8 South as well.
The recent changes made by the club have not only improved the hole, but demonstrate that Mike Clayton is not the paragon of all things golf at the club that some people seem to think.
Tuesday, 13 September 2011
Mike Clayton (5)
14 South.
I’ve seen well-struck shots land on the green short and left and then run back down into the deep bunker. I think if you can make good contact and hit a shot that lands on the green, you probably deserve to stay on the green. You certainly don’t deserve to end up in a bunker. That’s a design flaw with this hole.
15 South.
Monday, 12 September 2011
Course Care
I interrupt the discussion on Mike Clayton to comment on the course care video that has been recently uploaded onto the club’s web site. I think the vast majority of members know what the process is to repair divots, pitch marks and bunkers, it’s just that a very large proportion of them choose not to do so. It’s not an ignorance thing, it’s an attitude thing – they don’t give a stuff about maintaining the course for other members. In other words, they don’t give a stuff about other members.
So in order to make these selfish members change their ways, the club needs to change their attitude. Not very easy, I suspect. At least the club is making a start with the video on the website.
While I’m on the subject, perhaps the committee could encourage the ground staff to take a look at the video. On a number of occasions I have seen the footprints of large workman’s boots in bunkers. Some of the ground staff are entering bunkers and not raking up afterwards. In my view, even worse than members not raking up. These guys are paid to maintain the course in the best possible condition.
Mike Clayton (4)
9 South.
Another lost opportunity. An extraordinarily unfair green. For most golfers (who can’t fade a 7-iron 180m), the green offers about a 3m gap to hit your shot in order to hold the green. Hit left of the gap and you run 3-5 metres off the green. Hit right of the gap and you end up in the greenside bunker. The bunker is quite deep but narrow, resulting in the sand forming in a V-shape at the bottom, making an explosion shot onto the (away sloping) green almost impossible.
To make the situation worse, just to the left of the green, where the vast majority of tee shots end up, there are seven (count them - seven!) watering system covers to get in between the next shot and the hole.
To make the situation worse, just to the left of the green, where the vast majority of tee shots end up, there are seven (count them - seven!) watering system covers to get in between the next shot and the hole.
If Mike Clayton had removed the bunker altogether, the hole would have been greatly improved. You would have had a slightly bigger gap to aim for, and an ever so slightly misdirected shot would not be so severely punished.
I don’t know of anyone who likes this hole, other than Mike Clayton.
So, both par 3s on this nine are holes where the vast majority of mid to high handicappers cannot hope to hit their tee shots onto the green. Oh what fun!
Thursday, 8 September 2011
Mike Clayton (3)
7 South.
This used to be a severe dogleg right with the dogleg protected by a substantial stand of mature trees. These trees have been replaced by the sandy wasteland, and the hole in general and view from the green have been opened up significantly.
Many people bemoan the loss of the beautiful, mature trees, but I think this hole has been improved. The view from the tee is more appealing and the hole offers a good risk/reward choice.
8 South.
What a lost opportunity! And what a stupid green!
For the first 400m or so of this par 5, the fairway is a ridgeback with slopes running off to the rough on either side, particularly the left. This is another hole where an oh-so-slightly misdirected shot off the tee or second stroke will be unduly punished by ending up in a difficult lie in the rough (if you can find it at all!). What an opportunity we had to greatly improved the hole by taking that ridgeback out, thereby making the landing areas for first and second shots much fairer, and providing a magnificent view all the way to the green from the tee.
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