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A golf
course architect is not just a service provider.
The service an architect provides should grow out of
their philosophy and advocacy for particular ways
they feel the game should be played. So, while
every architect can provide design services, a
particular club may not benefit from every
architect’s services. It is important the architect
test their compatibility with those whom are in
charge of the club, and with the particular style of
architecture of the course. With regards for
Augusta National, it is particularly important to
test the membership on just what it means to have a
course that in the words of one former club
spokesmen, “We’re always trying to keep the golf
course current with the times…We will keep the golf
course current with the times,” and “Our objective
is to maintain the integrity and shot values of the
golf course as envisioned by Mr. Jones and Alistar
MacKenzie.” In recent history it seems these two
statements have been difficult to reconcile together
into a suitable mandate for future improvements to
the course. In the case of Augusta National
there is a wealth of information about what was
envisioned by Mr. Jones and Alistar MacKenzie,
including Mr. Jones feeling that the course should
provide a game that is more enjoyable for the people
who support it, is wide open to accommodate the
average player providing alternative routes to avoid
trouble while rewarding players who can make the
carries over bunkers to gain a better view, angle of
approach, or added distance from the sloping
fairways. Testing the membership by soliciting
their reactions to a hole-by-hole analysis of what
it would take to modify the present course in order
to more closely meet the goals and concepts of the
original designers would be a good test toward
determining whether the relationship will be
compatible.
A good
start to determine compatibility is the opening
hole. From early pictures it appears a player could
place the tee shot down the right side of the
fairway to have a good angle to approach the green,
particularly when the pin is anywhere along the left
side of the green. That is not true today because
of the trees that have crowded into the right edge
of the hole. It even appears that the original
fairway may have encircled the bunker. Mr. Jones
comments in his book “Golf is My Game” points out
the advantages in the variety of strategies that are
present when there was fairway beyond and right of
the fairway bunker. Reinstating the original tee
location would be necessary as well. Hole 5 is
another good example where the more dangerous but
advantageous play off the tee was down the left side
where 2 bunkers are positioned with fairway beyond
and left of the bunkers. Today, the fairway is now
rough and there is really only one route to play.
Today most bunker carries are impossible for members
because bunkers have been repositioned so far from
the tees and tees have been pushed farther from the
bunkers. Also some interesting fairway bunkers that
challenge the average club member have been
eliminated. These bunkers should be considered for
reinstatement like the original fairway bunkers on
holes 2, 14, and 18. Some present day fairway
bunkers appear to be close to their original
location, like on hole 8, but the tees that brought
them into the strategy of play for the average
player have been eliminated. With a movement back to
the original bunker locations and a reinstatement of
the original tees it appears the course could be
made to play about 6,700 yards again which would be
ideal for today’s average club member and would
return the strategy to the teeing game. There were
some interesting green shapes that have been lost
and as a consequence it appears some very
interesting pin positions were lost as well. As Mr.
Jones has emphasized the course must provide its
sternest test at the greens by “tighten it up by
increasing the difficulty of the play around the
hole.” Some interesting greens in the original
design were holes 4, 6, 7, 9, and 18.
If the
reaction of the club were favorable to these
suggestions it would be time to press the most
important idea of the master plan work for a course
of such stature: the idea that the ground on which
the game is played is owned by men, the design of
that ground is owned by mankind. No one living
person has the need to unilaterally control its
evolution; rather a collection of people whose
outlook closely matches that of the original
designers should then be entrusted with guiding the
club along a different path. Such persons may
include an architect that collaborated on a
biography of MacKenzie, and a player/architect that
has won the Masters and by all appearances seems to
represent the spirit of Mr. Jones. In this way a
committee of persons whose design services is most
compatible with the original course design can best
help the club make the need to keep the course
current tie in with the integrity and shot values of
the golf course as envisioned by Mr. Jones and
Alistar MacKenzie.
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