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
Phil On New Muirfield 16th: "It's certainly more difficult."
/Phil Mickelson didn't sound particularly excited about Jack's redesigned 16th at Muirfield Village.
Q. The new 16th out there, what was your experience like on that?
PHIL MICKELSON: It's certainly more difficult. You know, you're hitting over the water. I thought that you were going to hit more up the green, kind of like 16 at Augusta, but really, you're coming at it from a whole different angle where you're having to fly over the water. I had to change the way I look at that hole.
I thought if we shot up the green I might think about 2 a few times, but really, I'll just try to make it 3 there.
Meanwhile, Dave Shedloski explains Phil's enthusiasm for a 2-iron that is part of his tee shot package heading into Congressional. It is NOT a supplement for his driver. At least for now.
Muirfield Village's New 16th To Debut
/According to the GCSAA's preview, the hole is opening this week so I don't know if that means it actually has not seen any play yet, adding to the intrigue. In the photos I've seen it looks like a knock off of Augusta's 16th hole, but with more than one decent hole location.
Here's a YouTube video showing the destruction of the old hole, no great loss for golf architecture.
In this second video is it me or does it look like they added a back left bunker at the last minute?
**Jack on the new hole during today's press gathering at Muirfield Village:
Obviously we have one change, major change, on the golf course, which is the 16th hole, and the 16th hole which used to play to about 214, plays about 200, 201, whatever they put down for the yardage on it. It's a little bit shorter. We took drainage that was coming through in the green that was piped, took that out and put a lake in that area. They ended up at the base at the top of the hill there, those of you that know the area there, the left of 16 was an area we had a little sort of drainage that went down into the creek that goes along 15.
And we used that area to -- we took where the drainage came from and we took the drainage and took it the other direction. In other words, instead of having it come down through the golf course, we stopped it there and took it back towards -- to the street out on Muirfield Drive.
And then they built a lake in that area, put a green alongside it. It's a kind of hole that I think will probably play easier with a good shot under the prevailing wind. The prevailing wind is a westerly wind, southwesterly wind, that usually when we hit the ball before the green was sitting sort of this way, and I think a lot of shots hit in there went through the green very easily or into the back bunker, and I never really cared for the way the ball went into that green.
So what I did is I took the green and put it more this way, which sort of lines up with the prevailing wind. And with the prevailing wind you have the ability to feed the ball back into the green so you don't have to worry about having to stop the ball as easily if you play a smart shot.
And if the wind turns the other way, if there's no wind, then stopping the ball on the green is not an issue.
I think that works out very well. The water is all along the left side of it. I think there's going to be a lot more 2s, there's going to be a lot more excitement. There's more gallery area. There's some hospitality tents there -- I don't know if you call them tents, what do we call them, skyboxes type things -- they're not skyboxes, either, but I don't know what they call them.
Q. Chalets.
JACK NICKLAUS: Whatever they are. (Laughter.)
I think you're going to find a lot more birdies. I think you'll find a lot of fairly conservative 3s, and I think you'll also find a few double-bogeys that will come in there, which an errant shot will not be rewarded and a good shot will be rewarded, which is what a good hole should be anyway.
Wentworth Owner: "I have seen some wonderful shots out of the trees"
/Now Ernie Wants To Hear Constructive Criticism Of His Wentworth Redo x 3
/"The course set-up is making guys lash out."
/Ernie Responds To Wentworth Design Bashing: "I do not believe you will find better surfaces to putt on anywhere in the world."
/Poulter Says Wentworth Changes Still Stink; Ernie Will Take It Lightly
/"It's not fun. I was here as a kid watching those great shots but you can't remember them now. We'll have to fill up the archive with some new ones."
"There is no such thing as a really terrible golf course. If you’re playing golf on it, how awful can it be?"
/
On Monday, Charles McGrath wrote about the beauty of even the most apparently wretched courses, even citing one of note that might look a little rough but which is actually great fun and well worth repeat visits: George Thomas's Marion.Cuba Inching Closer To Fulfilling Hyman Roth's Dream ... At Least For Non-Americans
/
Randall Archibold informs us in an NY Times front page story that Cuba is closer to opening the floodgates to golf resort construction. But Americans, don't get too excited just yet.Ernie: Euro PGA Tops TPC Because Of Me!
/Tony Jimenez tells us about Ernie Els' pre-BMW Championship self-congratulatory back-patting over this year's redo of last year's redo at Wentworth.
I know, I know, you'd think he might be a bit more humble since he's a year removed from unraveling over having to fix a renovation which in places was so horrendous that no one could stand to play another tournament over it. Instead, he came out swinging!
“I’ve noticed more and more people I used to count on for 36 holes saying, ‘Uh, I don’t think I’ll play another 18."
/Far be it for me to question Mike Keiser's business acumen, but I'm still trying to wrap my head around the concept of a $100, 13-hole par-3 course to compliment the full-length courses at Bandon Dunes. Thanks to reader Bob for Mike Stahlberg's story about the latest Coore-Crenshaw-The Boys addition to the resort
Featuring holes ranging from 65 to 180 yards in length, Bandon Preserve sits atop a swath of sand dunes that tumble toward the Pacific just west of the first tee at Bandon Trails.
The site is bounded by the beach on the west, Cut Creek on the north and McKee Preserve on the south.
The land affords some spectacular ocean views and contains “a lot of great golf terrain,” Keiser said.
That inviting terrain is the second reason, Keiser said, that he decided to build a par-3 for those “aging Boomers to have a golf experience in the afternoon.”
The Preserve course has already been roughed out and shaped.
After irrigation and drainage systems are installed, the goal is to have it seeded by June.
Public play is expected to begin in mid-2012.
“Now that we see how good it will be — because I think it’ll really be super, and much more popular than I ever thought — we’re going to charge a lot and give profits to the south coast conservation effort,” Keiser said.
“We think we’ll charge $100.”
Tiger's Halted Cliffs Course Now Officially Halted
/Michelle Boudin and News Channel 36 report on Jim Anthony confirming that, like a lot of projects these days, the halted Cliffs course he is building with Tiger really is not under construction right now, but he's aiming for a 2013 opening.
Phil's Least Favorite Architect List: Dye With A Bullet!
/Good news Rees, Phil's over you now that he's seen Pete's 13th green in a new light. Dave Shedloski explains what happened Thursday at The Players and shares this quote from Mickelson after a double bogey derailed a good round.
"I don't know what to say. I don't know if it's the set-up or the design, but I just don't agree with that," Mickelson said after a one-under 71 left him seven behind leader Nick Watney after the first round. "I thought the question was would it stay up on top and be by the hole or was it going to roll down in the low area? I didn't know it could possibly go in the water. I think when I design golf courses, I try not to screw the player like that. I try to keep it a little bit fair. I don't know what I could have done differently."
Shark Likely To Have Another Course Bulldozed
/The Paulson banktruptcy filing on Doral includes the revelation that the group is not including the Great White course as part of the package, according to this Bloomberg story. This raised a few eyebrows until Douglas Hanks and David Neal explained that they want to develop Norman's Miami masterpiece.
The owners of the Doral resort want to spin-off one of its five golf courses for residential or commercial development, according to court filings.
The move to separate the Doral’s “Great White’’ course — named after designer Greg Norman — probably would not impact the resort’s annual PGA golf tournament, which is played on the famous “Blue Monster.’

