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Old 06-15-2007, 02:00 PM
Antitrust32 Antitrust32 is offline
Jerome Park
 
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Ft Lauderdale
Posts: 9,413
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pgardn
Kev or anybody else.

What does par mean on a course like this?
I hear all these players describing the greens like it is some bizarre putt-putt course where you can end up further away from the hole than you started on every putt. Surely the USGA or whatever can get more creative than making sure there is no flat part on a concrete green and then putting the hole at the top of one of the numerous mounts on the green. Thats to easy to make "hard".
Dont you try and make a course with the intent of making it challenging and playable. When no one has a real possibility of breaking par on a course (assuming it does not rain) what the heck does par mean? I dont like watching people constantly trying to lag putts and hardly ever trying to actually make a long to medium range putt. Do people really like to watch a winner come in at 10 over...? What is so special about that?

I dont want to see a course where everyone and their mother can birdie all the holes, but I dont like seeing a course that plays to luck either. The greens seem absurd based on what I have read.


No way the winner is 10 over. I say 3-5 over at the most. I happen to love this type of golf competition, when the course is so difficult with very high and thick rough and extremely fast and undulating greens. The difficult course makes for a great competiton.

Really, you cannot blame all those high scores on the greens, you need to hit fairways to be in contention here.

The US Open is always this hard!

Tiger is hitting the the ball really smooth right now. He is the the zone. He looks like a winner.
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