Friday, January 27, 2012
Olympic Golf
The ancient game of golf is on its way to the ultimate global forum: the Olympics. Next up: building a golf course worthy of the occasion.
By the end of next week, after months of jockeying, a winner will be chosen in a world-wide competition to create the course that the world's elite golfers will play at the 2016 Games in
Eight of the biggest names in golf design, including Jack Nicklaus, Greg Norman, Gary Player and Tom Doak, will make their final, 45-minute presentations to the selection jury on Tuesday and Wednesday. Soon after, a contract will be awarded for what is without question the most glittering golf-architecture prize of the decade.
Sunday, January 15, 2012
Jersey Meadow, Houston
<<JM02a.jpg>> <<JM02b.jpg>> <<JM03a.jpg>> <<JM03b.jpg>>
<<JM04a.jpg>> <<JM04b.JPG>> <<JM05b.JPG>> <<JM06a.JPG>>
<<JM06b.JPG>> <<JM07b.JPG>> <<JM08a.JPG>> <<JM08b.JPG>>
<<JM09a.JPG>> <<JM09b.jpg>> <<JM10a.JPG>> <<JM10b.jpg>>
<<JM11a.jpg>> <<JM11b.jpg>> <<JM12a.JPG>> <<JM12b.jpg>>
<<JM13a.jpg>> <<JM13b.jpg>> <<JM14a.JPG>> <<JM14b.jpg>>
<<JM15a.jpg>> <<JM15b.jpg>> <<JM16a.jpg>> <<JM16b.jpg>>
<<JM17a.jpg>> <<JM18a.jpg>>
<<JM-Bacon-Egg-Cheese-onJalapenoBread.jpg>>
Saturday, January 14, 2012
Brackenridge Park, San Antonio
6243 Yds, Par 71, Slope 126, by A.W.Tillinghast, re-fit by John Colligan,
http://www.sanantoniogolf.com/courses/brackenridge/
They say:
"Brackenridge Park Golf Course, which is the oldest public golf course in Texas, was the first ever host to the Texas Open Golf Tournament in 1922. This historic golf course has the honor of being the first inductee into the Texas Golf Hall of Fame."
It's hard for me to say how the original Tillinghast design has been changed . . . and whether it could be considered an improvement, except in this way: I have also played Memorial Park in Houston, a contemporaneous effort by Braedemus, and Gus Wortham in Houston, the Blackhawk CC in Madison, WI, and "The Horrible Horseshoe" hole at Tour 18, from Colonial CC, another Tillinghast design. From those courses I have inferred certain design principles that I see are kept or not kept in the modern redesign by Colligan:
he has dropped / added holes . . . a former par 3 was pointed out to me . . . it looked like a really interesting hole, all carry and trouble all around that looked like a net loss to me, in that the terrain is sorta flat as a whole, and any trouble is an adornment
he has artificially elevated some greens, this is a net gain, imvho, much more challenging and interesting, shot-value-wise and visually.
he has left well enough alone (imvho) in many cases, so that the original routings, layouts, green complexes, bunker shaping, remains. There are some straightline fairway edges and squarish greens that look old fashioned to me, but not necessarily in the Tillinghast mold, so I don't know whether Brackinridge got an "economy" job way-back-when, or if it was done for modern greenskeeping reasons.
an entirely competent, desirable, effective re-fitting.
the course condition was forgiveable: playable, but damaged, from winter conditions and The Drought.
c.f. Top 10 Tillinghast courses:
http://www.golf.com/golf/gallery/article/0,28242,1682923,00.html