Lee Trevino Has No Future As A Golf Digest Panelist
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The constantly-changing No. 1 course in the land according to the Golf Digest panel just isn't very good if you ask Lee Trevino. Which Lorne Rubenstein did (thanks reader Jordan for the link).When you come to think of it that is the secret of most of the great holes all over the world. They all have some kind of a twist. C.B. MACDONALD
The constantly-changing No. 1 course in the land according to the Golf Digest panel just isn't very good if you ask Lee Trevino. Which Lorne Rubenstein did (thanks reader Jordan for the link).
Longtime readers know I'm not a fan of the Golf Digest panel's architectural intuition, starting back when they debuted Shadow Creek in the top 10 in 1993 (lots of renovations later it's climing up the list again!).Fascinating because it should encircled with a giant Ground Under Repair line.
I finally studied the morphing of the Eisenhower and Zaharias courses at Industry Hills for the LPGA's KIA Classic and to my shock, they are playing quite possibly the worst par-4 in southern California and maybe all of Earth: the infamous ninth of the Zaharias, which I believe is the 10th on this week's Eisenharias layout.
I think the aerial speaks for itself, but if this Google Earth view of the 308-yard ninth doesn't excite the senses, let me help with a few details.
It begins with a magical walk down an asphalt path from the eighth green. At the tee the player will find not one, but four protective screens to guard the neighboring houses from a snap hook. The difficult-to-locate landing area offers neither strategic angles of attack nor spectating room on this coin pocket of the former landfill's mountainside. Good luck this week, ladies!

**The art department sent these 9th hole images in from a few years ago.


Thanks to Ron Whitten for Tweeting Demorris Lee's profile of 98-year-old Innisbrook designer Larry Packard who still lives in Tampa and attends the tournament.Former T&L Golf writer Tom Dunne visits Pinehurst and pieces together a compelling look at some of the course changes.
The Restoration of Pinehurst No. 2 from outandback on Vimeo.
Matty G reports that the Whistling Straits developer and Pete Dye recently made a trip to Bandon Dunes and also stopped in at a site south of the resort to look at the Crook family land that has long been considered for a development.The new Masters Journal is out and and usual it's an impressive publication, but this year it's a must-have for MacKenziephiles due to the inclusion of the original hole diagrams and green complex watercolors that appeared in the hard-to-find original program.
But I've been pulling my hair out trying to figure out this unlabeled page 101 image. Anyone care to guess what old hole we are looking at? I'm pretty sure it's Augusta based on the trees, bumps and the whacky shape of the green, which screams MacKenzie.
**You can by the Masters program through the official website.
Good news...the remote and otherworldly The Machrie is open for play while they look for a buyer, reports Anthony Pioppi.
Thanks to reader Jordan for noticing the appearance of Golf Digest's Augusta National Change Tracker, which debuted on the iPad and is now viewable online.
Jordan notes: "The trees look like a disease that is slowly taking over the place."
Geoff Shackelford is a Senior Writer for Golfweek magazine, a weekly contributor to Golf Channel's Morning
Copyright © 2022, Geoff Shackelford. All rights reserved.