Golf architecture Author:A. Mackenzie Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: CHAPTER III IDEAL HOLES There are few problems more difficult to solve than the problem of what exactly constitutes an ideal hole. The ideal hole is surely... more » one that affords the greatest pleasure to the greatest number, gives the fullest advantage for accurate play, stimulates players to improve their game, and never becomes monotonous. The real practical test is its popularity, and here again we are up against another difficulty. Does the average player really know what he likes himself ? One often hears the same player expressing totally divergent opinions about the same hole. When he plays it successfully, it is everything that is good, and when unsuccessful it is everything that is bad. It frequently happens that the best holes give rise tothe most bitter controversy. It is largely a question of the spirit in which the problem is approached. Does the player look upon it from the " card and pencil" point of view and condemn anything that has disturbed his steady series of threes and fours, or does he approach the question in the "spirit of adventure" of the true sportsman ? There are well-known players who invariably condemn any hole they have taken over six for, and if by any chance they ever reach double figures, words fail them to describe in adequate language what they think of that particular hole. It does not by any means follow that when a player condemns a hole in particularly vigorous language he really dislikes it. It may be a source of pleasure to his subconscious mind. Although condemning it, he may be longing to play it again so as to conquer its difficulties. Who is to judge what is an ideal hole ? Is it one of our leading players, or any golfer who simply looks upon it from his own point of view ? I have known of an open champion expressing his o...« less