Golf Club Atlas

GolfClubAtlas.com => Golf Course Architecture => Topic started by: Dan Kelly on July 10, 2008, 07:52:50 AM

Title: Breather Holes
Post by: Dan Kelly on July 10, 2008, 07:52:50 AM
Tom Doak writes to Peter Pallotta, in the thread titled "The Architecture Should Accommodate That Shot":

"This topic of 'breather holes' has come up several times of late.  I think it deserves its own thread, although it's too late for me to start it tonight.  I will have somewhat different things to say about it than you think -- the result of working not in a vacuum but on real pieces of ground."

It's a new day! And it's early! (At least it is here.)

What have you to say, Tom (et al.), about "breather holes"?
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: TEPaul on July 10, 2008, 08:47:20 AM
I know most every other golf analyst on here would probably disagree but I'd like to see a course or a few that were basically nothing but "breather" holes!   ;)
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Dan Herrmann on July 10, 2008, 08:56:23 AM
Tom - You need to go play FDR!
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Adam Clayman on July 10, 2008, 09:00:28 AM
I'd assume designers don't make them on purpose. They are interpreted as such after the fact. Serendipity which distinguishes between collections of holes and a great course.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Phil McDade on July 10, 2008, 09:05:18 AM
Dan:

Maybe this has a tie-in to the relentless thread.....

I like "breather holes;" more specifically, I like change-of-pace holes -- ones that represent a change in the overall strategy employed at a course. For instance, I've always liked courses that require a puckered tee shot into a narrow corridor after several fairways that are wide and relatively accomodating to not-perfectly straight tee shots.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Dan Herrmann on July 10, 2008, 09:16:13 AM
I too like breather holes.

We have one at #7 at our course.   It's a very good hole on its own, but each course has to have an easiest par 4.

It comes at a perfect time - just after the first 1/3 of the round.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: W.H. Cosgrove on July 10, 2008, 09:56:03 AM
In theatre the playwright creates pacing which brings the audience to a peak brings them back down and then brings everyone to a final climax of the drama.  Actually it sounds a lot like sex. 

The golf course and its design should do the same.  One reason I think some of us react to Fazio is that he often creates 18 separate clamactic/dramatic scenes without any rest in between.  My home course, while humble, dose this very well with an easy and reassuring beginning and then several rises and falls in drama before the last few holes simply grab you by the throat and throw your strong round into the dirt and stomps all over you.  A stunning and dramatic finish.

The Board recently floated the trial balloon that the nines should be reversed, the members reacted pretty aggressively to retaining the present dramatic structure. 

Basically the "breather" hole are essential for the drama of the architecture to reach its full potential, without them we are simply left exhausted and over stimulated. 
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Bradley Anderson on July 10, 2008, 11:05:04 AM
I have never heard of breather holes, but I have heard of warm-up holes, where the architect starts you out with three holes that are generally not as difficult as the remainder of the course.

I visited Farnklin Hills last week and that first hole looked like a really tough opening hole. I can't recall ever seeing a par four opener that looked more intimidating and really long off the tee.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Adam Clayman on July 10, 2008, 11:44:04 AM
Bradley, The concept first struck me while I recalled my feelings when I first played Pebble's 15th.
 After subsequently caddying there, the concept was reenforced to me after watching all caliber of players handle not only that hole but the strong finish.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Jeff Shelman on July 10, 2008, 12:03:04 PM
I agree with whoever said change-of-pace.

At my club, some people might say that that Nos. 10 and 11 are kind of breather holes. No. 10 is only about 312 yards, but the green is very difficult in that it runs away from you and from right to left. No. 11 is 350-360 from the back, but the green is quite elevated. You might have 9i or wedge in, but you have to make sure you hit it in the right spot.

Now I probably make more birdies on these two par 4s than any of the other 4s, but there are also times when I make bogey. In some ways, these "breather" holes are kind of pressure filled because if you slip up and make a bogey on one or both, you're in trouble because there is little let up the rest of the way.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Tom_Doak on July 10, 2008, 07:00:50 PM
For me this is a subject that's worthy of its own book.

I've said on other threads that I do not enjoy "relentless" architecture.  It's not just that I'm a 10 handicap and I recognize that most people don't enjoy walking up the 18th hole punch-drunk and bloody -- it's that the thing I value most in a golf course is a VARIETY of holes, and if every single hole is "a hard par but an easy bogey", there is not much variety there.

Life is not a series of "tough but fair" challenges, and neither should a golf course be.  There should be some holes where par is a great score -- two-shotters where the stroke average for low-handicappers is more like 4.5 -- and there should also be some holes where a birdie or even an eagle are on offer to the 10-handicapper who hits a couple of excellent shots.  Par fours should have stroke averages from 3.5 right up to 4.5 and everything in between, based not just on their yardage but on differing levels of challenge from tee to green. 

Really taking this philosophy to heart is what allows us to build a golf course that fits the land, instead of trying too hard to modify the land to include certain types of holes.

We don't design in a vacuum, we design on pieces of ground.  A couple of people have asked recently if I deliberately chose to build most of the par-5 holes at Pacific Dunes on the long, flattish plain where holes 3, 12 and 15 are located ... but the truth is just that it was a plain that had to be crossed three times, and that was how far across it was, so we tried to make three differing holes of similar length in that space.  If it had been 400 yards across, we'd just have made three differing par-4's, and tried to find our par-5's somewhere else.

Likewise, where there is occasionally a fairly featureless stretch of ground which has to be crossed in the routing, I may well build a hole which some call a "breather".  I love the fact that good players EXPECT to make birdies on these holes, and because they do so less than 50% of the time, they can be affected psychologically just by making a par -- and particularly if their opponent makes a birdie.  So I may throw in a "weak" hole now and then when the land tells me to ... but it's not because I am deliberately trying to put a "breather" at a certain point in the round.



Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Dan Kelly on July 10, 2008, 07:18:44 PM
Life is not a series of "tough but fair" challenges, and neither should a golf course be.  There should be some holes where par is a great score -- two-shotters where the stroke average for low-handicappers is more like 4.5 -- and there should also be some holes where a birdie or even an eagle are on offer to the 10-handicapper who hits a couple of excellent shots.  Par fours should have stroke averages from 3.5 right up to 4.5 and everything in between, based not just on their yardage but on differing levels of challenge from tee to green. 

Really taking this philosophy to heart is what allows us to build a golf course that fits the land, instead of trying too hard to modify the land to include certain types of holes.

We don't design in a vacuum, we design on pieces of ground.  A couple of people have asked recently if I deliberately chose to build most of the par-5 holes at Pacific Dunes on the long, flattish plain where holes 3, 12 and 15 are located ... but the truth is just that it was a plain that had to be crossed three times, and that was how far across it was, so we tried to make three differing holes of similar length in that space.  If it had been 400 yards across, we'd just have made three differing par-4's, and tried to find our par-5's somewhere else.


This probably deserves a thread (or a book) of its own, too, but I'll ask it here:

Imagine if the land said to you: "There aren't any good par-5s here. There are just a whole bunch of great par-3s and par-4s here."

Has that ever happened? Is any golf-course developer, anywhere, bold enough to let you build exactly the best golf course that you see on the land -- par and total yardage be damned?
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Tom_Doak on July 10, 2008, 08:00:39 PM
Dan:

I'm sure there are a handful of potential golf developers out there who would let me build a course without par-5's or even without par-3's, if that's what I thought fit the land.  I may have one in Japan right now.

I've had one or two such clients before -- or at least clients who talked in those terms.  The funny thing is, on those occasions, the routing worked out as a more balanced and normal plan.  I guess I must really be a contrarian.  :)

Most clients are NOT going to be comfortable with a weird mix of holes, and if they aren't comfortable they would never be able to sell it to their customers.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Phil McDade on July 10, 2008, 08:07:29 PM


This probably deserves a thread (or a book) of its own, too, but I'll ask it here:

Imagine if the land said to you: "There aren't any good par-5s here. There are just a whole bunch of great par-3s and par-4s here."

Has that ever happened? Is any golf-course developer, anywhere, bold enough to let you build exactly the best golf course that you see on the land -- par and total yardage be damned?
[/quote]

Dan:

I think a long time ago it did, particularly with a few of the Scottish courses I encountered. Shiskine at Blackwaterfoot, on the Isle of Arran, comes immediately to mind, as does Stonehaven near Aberdeen. Both are ultra-quirky (over-the-top clown's-mouth for some) on tiny parcels of land -- Stonehaven is on 60-some acres, Shiskine certainly less. Tee shots crossing other fairways, blind holes, incredibly challenging carries over ravines, punchbowl greens -- essentially a golf course (in the case of Shiskine, one with only 12 holes) built on the land that was available. But golf course development in Scotland back then was totally at odds with how a lot of golf course development occurs today, obviously.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Tom_Doak on July 10, 2008, 08:46:02 PM
Phil:

Absolutely, some of the old Scottish courses are like that.  The Scots didn't have so many expectations of what a golf course should be like -- they just went with the flow.  And they're still that way, much more accepting of less-than-championship courses than any other golf consumers I've run across.

They're also way too frugal to develop any new courses themselves, or to hire someone like me to build one.  ;)
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Peter Pallotta on July 10, 2008, 09:19:29 PM
I'd assume designers don't make them on purpose. They are interpreted as such after the fact...

Yes, somewhere along the line (I don't know exactly when) golfers and/or architecture afficiandos/critics started reflecting back on the courses they played and picking out (and picking on) the "easy" or "breather" holes. They had nothing better to do I guess...but what a web of artificiality and expense they engendered. 

Peter
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Jason Topp on July 10, 2008, 09:22:35 PM
I really like a "breather stretch."  In other words, a series of holes where the player feels like he or she should make up some strokes.  I think it adds some excitement to the round for the good day and relief for a bad day.  The loop is the best example of this.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: John Moore II on July 10, 2008, 09:26:04 PM
I think 'breather holes' are a great thing to have. In many ways, I feel like Tobacco Road may have 5 or 6 holes that could be classified as a 'breather.' However, those holes can really jump at you if you hit the ball offline. And many times, the hole an average player can see as a breather, the better player can see then as a pressure to score (but that has been said a few times before).
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Sean Leary on July 10, 2008, 10:05:49 PM
Would you guys consider the middle holes at Merion East a breather stretch?
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: JESII on July 10, 2008, 10:13:31 PM
Anyone care to take a stab at the difference between a "breather hole" and a half-par hole on the short side...you know...340 par 4 or 480 par 5?


Sean,

Not me...but the middle stretch at Pine Valley, maybe...from 6 through 12.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Sean Leary on July 10, 2008, 10:22:22 PM
JES,

I might agree with you on that.Interesting thought actually.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Tim Bert on July 10, 2008, 10:37:19 PM
I love the breather hole, and I love the breather stretch as well.  I also love the breather hole that follows the hell hole or vice versa.

At my home club, we've got a great 1-2 combo on the front nine.  A tough par 4 that plays 419 from the member tee and 468 from the championship tee followed by a breather par 5 that plays 473 from the member tee and 508 from the championship tee.

The par 4 usually plays into a cross wind that is also slighty hurting.  It also plays slightly uphill.  The par 5 plays parallel in the opposite direction, so the wind is usually helping a bit (and it plays downhill.)  There are days where I may use the same club to approach both greens.

To top things off, both have interesting greens.  The par four has a vertical spine that splits the green left / right down the center.  If you land on the wrong side, it can be a difficult 2-putt.  The par five has two distinct tiers - the front is the upper tier and the back is the lower tier.  When the wind is helping it can be difficult to stop your long approach on the green unless you run it into the bank in front of the green.

These two holes really make par irrelevant.  As a 10 handicap, I'm looking to come away from the pair with a total of 10 strokes.  In the past 2 months (9 tries) I've accomplished this 4 times.  Interestingly enough, in that same stretch I've made three 4s on the par five and only one 4 on the par four.   
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: JSlonis on July 10, 2008, 10:52:36 PM
Anyone care to take a stab at the difference between a "breather hole" and a half-par hole on the short side...you know...340 par 4 or 480 par 5?


Sean,

Not me...but the middle stretch at Pine Valley, maybe...from 6 through 12.

Good topic.

I've made too many high scores on 6-11 at PV to consider that a breather stretch. ;)  I do think #12 is a breather hole.  For me, the only one on the course besides maybe #17.  You need a breather on #12 though, because 13-15 will knock you square on the jaw.

Sean,

I don't think there are any breather holes at Merion.  That shorter middle stretch can get you at any moment.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: John Moore II on July 10, 2008, 11:24:21 PM
Anyone care to take a stab at the difference between a "breather hole" and a half-par hole on the short side...you know...340 par 4 or 480 par 5?

I would say the difference is how the holes are played and if they actually present the player with a breather. The 17th at Oakmont (never played) doesn't seem to be any kind of breather for anyone, and its only 310ish yards. While for a moderate player trying to make a par, the 18th at Kapalua, even at 675yds, due to wind and the hill, can be a breather.
--A breather need not be a "short" hole, it simply needs to be the type of hole where the player does not have to hit perfect shots in order to make (personal) par.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Ed Oden on July 11, 2008, 12:04:59 AM
Does a hole need to be a -half par in order to qualify as a breather hole?  Seems to me its really more a question of relativity to the difficulty of the other holes on the course.  For example, I don't think Shinnecock has any -half par holes.  But I'd still say there are a few comparitive breather holes such as 8 and 13.

Also, in my opinion, the best breather holes are those that have the potential for disaster despite their generally benign nature.  In other words, a par should be a relatively easy proposition if the hole is played conservatively.  But there should still be danger lurking for those that are agressive in search of a birdie.

Ed
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: John Moore II on July 11, 2008, 12:37:18 AM
Ed--I certainly do not think a hole needs to be a half-par in order to be a breather. #7 at Tobacco Road I consider to be somewhat of a breather and its not a half par at all. 18 at Kapalua is not a half-par either (except for pro's) but it seems to be a breather. And as I said before, many times, half-par holes are no breather at all.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Sean_A on July 11, 2008, 02:08:31 AM
For me this is a subject that's worthy of its own book.

I've said on other threads that I do not enjoy "relentless" architecture.  It's not just that I'm a 10 handicap and I recognize that most people don't enjoy walking up the 18th hole punch-drunk and bloody -- it's that the thing I value most in a golf course is a VARIETY of holes, and if every single hole is "a hard par but an easy bogey", there is not much variety there.

Life is not a series of "tough but fair" challenges, and neither should a golf course be.  There should be some holes where par is a great score -- two-shotters where the stroke average for low-handicappers is more like 4.5 -- and there should also be some holes where a birdie or even an eagle are on offer to the 10-handicapper who hits a couple of excellent shots.  Par fours should have stroke averages from 3.5 right up to 4.5 and everything in between, based not just on their yardage but on differing levels of challenge from tee to green. 

Really taking this philosophy to heart is what allows us to build a golf course that fits the land, instead of trying too hard to modify the land to include certain types of holes.

We don't design in a vacuum, we design on pieces of ground.  A couple of people have asked recently if I deliberately chose to build most of the par-5 holes at Pacific Dunes on the long, flattish plain where holes 3, 12 and 15 are located ... but the truth is just that it was a plain that had to be crossed three times, and that was how far across it was, so we tried to make three differing holes of similar length in that space.  If it had been 400 yards across, we'd just have made three differing par-4's, and tried to find our par-5's somewhere else.

Likewise, where there is occasionally a fairly featureless stretch of ground which has to be crossed in the routing, I may well build a hole which some call a "breather".  I love the fact that good players EXPECT to make birdies on these holes, and because they do so less than 50% of the time, they can be affected psychologically just by making a par -- and particularly if their opponent makes a birdie.  So I may throw in a "weak" hole now and then when the land tells me to ... but it's not because I am deliberately trying to put a "breather" at a certain point in the round.





This about sums it up.  I would add that a breather hole has to have something about which it which at first takes the golfer by surprise and then perhaps gets into his head as the main hurdle to success - which in all likelyhood is a false assumption.  Only because nobody talks about the hole I will use Brora's 12th - a clever little hole.  When played downwind it takes a lot of self control to holster the driver.  Its definitely a reachable par 4, but the lay of the land pushes the ball right and there are bunkers centre and left to protect the easier line to the green.  Inevitably, the brash player will find himself short and right in a spot of rough with a slightly uphill approach over a bunker.  The problem is that now the wind is your enemy because you definitely don't want to hoist the ball in the air if it can be avoided, but that blasted bunker!  Its a wonderful hole which begins a trio of breathers, all of which can muck up yer card if you miscue mentally or physically. 

http://brora.manage-golf.com/brora/public/the_course/hole12.jsp

This is a good subject - thanks for bringing it up.  I think I said on the relentless thread that a prefer a courses of breathers with the odd toughie sprinkled in.  It may sound wierd, but there is a certain sense of satisfaction to watch a rabbit eat your lunch and yet you know he can't carry a ball much more than 175 yards.  Its proper golf. 

Ciao
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Matthew Mollica on July 11, 2008, 07:14:05 AM
From their chapter entitled The Ideal Golf Course-

"Imagine, for instance, a repetition of eighteen holes, all of the supreme excellence of the most exceptional hole we can think of at the moment - the Seventeenth at St. Andrews. The strain of it all! Eighteen tee shots of the same intensity or eighteen approaches which courted disaster in the same dire form! It would to a certainty break our hearts and leave us nervous wrecks or golf lunatics in real earnest. In fact, it would be no ideal course for us, however much theoretically we might admire it. We must be allowed to ease the tension at occasional intervals for our sanity, so that our brains may cool, and our hearts expand with renewed life and freedom. We must count on at the very least one indifferent hole in a round; to be quite on the safe side, we will allow an additional half of indifference as well, for the sake of extra relief. The course we think of should be noble in spite of its defects, as perfection throughout would be a monument of chilly precision incapable of inspiring us or of stimulating our jaded imagination. Is it not true to say that where we cannot criticise we experience a difficulty in feeling enthusiastic?"

p. 45-6, The Architectural Side of Golf, Wethered & Simpson (1929)



and again in further discussion regarding compilation of holes to form an ideal course-

"We therefore intend to include one thoroughly amusing but bad hole for the sake of variety and a brief interval of mental tranquility - the Seventeenth at Prestwick - and at least another that is open to criticism, the Sixteenth at Westward Ho!"

p. 48, The Architectural Side of Golf, Wethered & Simpson (1929)


Great passages, especially in the context of this discussion.

Matthew
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Tom_Doak on July 11, 2008, 08:35:13 AM
Matthew:

I remember those passages well, but your re-quoting of them here brings me to another issue I had never thought of:  PERFECTIONISM.

I think perfectionism is the real problem with modern designs and with a lot of modern designers.  Who is more perfectionist than Jack Nicklaus, who made his first career on it, except perhaps Tom Fazio, who doesn't ever want you to glimpse a cart path?  And Ran has accused both me and Bill Coore of being too perfectionist in our construction and finish work, to the point that there's nothing that appears quirky.

One of the things I admire about Pete Dye is that he's not a perfectionist -- if he was a Tour player himself you would call him a grinder.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Dan Kelly on July 11, 2008, 09:10:34 AM
I think perfectionism is the real problem with modern designs and with a lot of modern designers.  Who is more perfectionist than Jack Nicklaus, who made his first career on it, except perhaps Tom Fazio, who doesn't ever want you to glimpse a cart path?  And Ran has accused both me and Bill Coore of being too perfectionist in our construction and finish work, to the point that there's nothing that appears quirky.

Very interesting stuff.

Once more, Tom, you've made me think that what you do for a living is analogous to what I do for a living.

I edit words.

You edit the land.

The writers I've been editing for almost 20 years now are not Writers. They are amateurs. They are readers of my newspaper. They send me their own stories, and I choose those I like best. Their writing is full of quirks -- quirks that professional writers have mostly learned to eliminate, or that professional editors mostly eliminate for them.

I could eliminate those quirks -- and it's my strong instinct to do so. (I am a big-time perfectionist, and I got very rigorous training in matters compositional, at home and in school.) I could "perfect" their writing -- making it all seem just as "professional" as the writing by our full-time reporters. But that would diminish its flavor and its authenticity -- so I leave as much of the quirk as I can, consistent with my overall goal of making their work entertaining and understandable. If that means that I have to leave, untouched, a lousy simile or a hoary old cliche (that might be one right there!) ... well, so be it. People want to hear *their* voices, not mine.

In my peculiar job, doing *nothing* to eliminate an imperfection occasionally produces perfection.

How does an editor of the land achieve perfection? How does he rein in his own perfectionism?
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Tom_Doak on July 11, 2008, 09:42:45 AM
Dan:

My mom was an editor, too, that's probably where I got it from.

Most modern architects "edit the land" with a D-8; what they are really doing is totally rewriting the land, and as you note, there is a big difference.

To rein in one's perfectionism, recognizing it is the first step.

I guess what helps me remember what not to do is the fact that I've seen so many courses.  I've seen a lot where certain architects have just repeated their same shtick, and I've seen a lot of cool little old courses which have unique features because they didn't rewrite.  And I know which of those two scenarios I've enjoyed more.

That is why I normally avoid "blue sky" discussions here of "ideal" set-ups for golf courses, or anything else that smacks of a formula.  Most pieces of land were not written to fit the forumla.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Tom Huckaby on July 11, 2008, 10:01:38 AM
Wonderful stuff.  I believe in breather holes just as Tom D. explained it.  It's been eye-opening to me how important these are as we've dissected Pacific Dunes in Tim Bert's thread.  And to me, the more a hole LOOKS like a "breather" but doesn't really play that way - ie can jump up and bite you if you take it too lightly - the cooler it is.

But a question for you, Tom.

Your definition of a 10 - on the very scale you created to measure worth of golf courses - would seem to dictate that the ideal has 18 fantastic holes - OR AT LEAST THAT'S HOW PEOPLE SEEM TO APPLY IT.

Remember the definition of a Doak 10 - "if you miss even one hole you would miss something worth seeing."  People apply that to courses and say, this hole or that hole is no big deal (or bad or whatever) thus it can't be a Doak 10.

Given "breather" holes are so important and play such a vital role in the overall course... is this an error in the definition, or are people applying it wrong, getting too caught up in the "if you miss one hole" thing?

I've tended to believe it's the latter... that is, not every hole has to be super great for a course to get a Doak 10... the "what you'd be missing" part on a hole not otherwise obviously great being the subtlety of it, how it fits in so well with the WHOLE of the course...

Is that correct?  And if so, might we adjust the Doak scale definition a bit, since it does get misapplied so often?

Just a thought.

TH
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: TEPaul on July 11, 2008, 10:22:25 AM
Dan and TomD:

Really fine posts there. The only thing I can see that may be left out---particularly in TomD's post is WHY do so many architects gravitate towards the "formulaic" when they reshape land and perhaps purposely remove real uniqueness (quirk et al)?

My answer is not provable but my sense has always been because most all architects are simply concerned about disapproval and criticism, and that leads to ever increasing "formulae" and standardization. In a sense it's a vicious cycle as inceasing standardization is then what more and more golfers demand.

In my opinion, it's a classic example of the cart leading the horse. Thankfully with a pretty good slice of architecture in recent times that vicious cycle seems to be diminishing and some "horses" are beginning to lead the "cart" again just as some of the best did in the beginning of the last century.

Obviously, it's not coincidental that those architects who are beginning to lead again are the same ones who've looked to the past for some of their inspirations.

However, perhaps a larger and deeper question is to ask what were those men who created those wonderful "horse leading the cart" courses back then looking to for their inspirations?
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Dan Kelly on July 11, 2008, 11:08:23 AM
Thankfully ... some "horses" are beginning to lead the "cart" again just as some of the best did in the beginning of the last century.

Tom I --

Or just maybe the carts are still leading the horses -- but the horses are learning to walk backwards.

What we need are more backward-walking horses!

Dan
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Tom_Doak on July 11, 2008, 02:09:27 PM
Tom H:  You are right about the definition of a "10" in The Confidential Guide.  People are always quoting it to tell me why some course is worthy, or not worthy; and I really didn't mean it that way.  Ballybunion is one of the 10's on the Doak scale (and probably not the only one) where there are a couple of holes of which I don't think so highly ... but I still gave it a 10, so my definition must be not quite right.

I guess a better definition would be that every hole has to add something of value to the course as a whole.  However, I do not have enough cash on hand to buy back all of the Confidential Guides and make the edit.

Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Tom Huckaby on July 11, 2008, 02:16:10 PM
Tom H:  You are right about the definition of a "10" in The Confidential Guide.  People are always quoting it to tell me why some course is worthy, or not worthy; and I really didn't mean it that way.  Ballybunion is one of the 10's on the Doak scale (and probably not the only one) where there are a couple of holes of which I don't think so highly ... but I still gave it a 10, so my definition must be not quite right.

I guess a better definition would be that every hole has to add something of value to the course as a whole.  However, I do not have enough cash on hand to buy back all of the Confidential Guides and make the edit.



LOL!

Of course we cannot and shall not have all of the CG's edited... but given that the coin of the realm IN THIS FORUM for evaulating golf courses does seem to be your scale... and people do misapply this so often... how about one and all HERE give up on this "every hole must be fantastic" way of looking at a Doak 10, and rather look at it as Tom now explains (which I always kinda figured, btw - patting myself on the back):

10: Nearly perfect.  Every hole at the very least adds something of value to the course as a hole. MUST see these courses to appreciate how good golf architecture can get.

Whaddya think?  Start here and perhaps others get the idea...

Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Dan Kelly on July 11, 2008, 02:18:41 PM
Or maybe: "... Even the breather holes can take your breath away."
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Tom_Doak on July 11, 2008, 02:21:05 PM
Tom P:  You asked aloud,

"WHY do so many architects gravitate towards the "formulaic" when they reshape land and perhaps purposely remove real uniqueness (quirk et al)?

I agree with many of your comments about standardization and quirk.  You left out the fact that in addition to the modern architect, the modern CLIENT is much more concerned about the economics of his project and about not alienating the potential paying customers with features they might not like, certainly more than William & Henry Fownes were worried about it, anyway.

But I don't think that's the entire reason.  I think that the truth is the old architects had the advantage of NOT having seen so many other courses that they felt locked into a particular style and standard of design.  That's why some of the great courses were conceived by amateurs -- because they started with the dual advantages of not repeating their own past stuff, and not having seen so many other courses that they felt they had to conform.  All this conformity and increased peer pressure has happened since then.

I was trying to explain this the other day to someone who wants us to consider a project of totally blowing up and rebuilding a course.  I explained that for eighty years, everything that's happened around that course has reinforced the initial routing, so it's that much harder to come up with a new and different routing that really fits the ground.  It's the same for me when I try to route a course on property that someone else has looked at before -- I'd rather NOT see the other guys' routings, because it inhibits my brain from looking at how to do something different.  And it's just amazing to me, if I don't look at their routings until I'm finished, how different those routings are than what I have come up with on my own.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Tom_Doak on July 11, 2008, 02:21:51 PM
Alright, Huck.  You're my new editor.  Every time the discussion comes up from now forward, you are welcome to post the revised definiton.

Have fun with that.  ;)
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Tom Huckaby on July 11, 2008, 02:22:41 PM
Or maybe: "... Even the breather holes can take your breath away."

MUCH better phrasing.  I like it.  How about a combination? Or is it better with simply your phrase?  I leave it to the experts.

10: Nearly perfect.  Every hole at the very least adds something of value to the course as a hole; even the breather holes can take your breath away. MUST see these courses to appreciate how good golf architecture can get.






Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Tom Huckaby on July 11, 2008, 02:23:10 PM
Alright, Huck.  You're my new editor.  Every time the discussion comes up from now forward, you are welcome to post the revised definiton.

Have fun with that.  ;)

You send them to me.  I now have a task in life.

 ;D
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: TEPaul on July 11, 2008, 02:38:36 PM
"It's the same for me when I try to route a course on property that someone else has looked at before -- I'd rather NOT see the other guys' routings, because it inhibits my brain from looking at how to do something different.  And it's just amazing to me, if I don't look at their routings until I'm finished, how different those routings are than what I have come up with on my own."


TomD:

I actually have two routings for that Ardrossan property---one by Coore and one by Hanse and neither one of them ever saw the other one. They are very different even though they did use some of the same landforms for holes but pretty much in reverse. There were a few areas Coore wouldn't go near because he said it was 'too easy to get stuck in them' but Hanse used them and fairly creatively it seems even if it was hard to tell with the trees. Essentially Coore just stayed away from those areas that had a lot of trees.
 
 
 
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Kalen Braley on July 11, 2008, 04:38:24 PM
Ahh hell!!

Why can't we just adapt the Mary Poppins criteria for a Doak 10:

"Practically perfect in every way!!"   ;D
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: BCrosby on July 11, 2008, 04:59:14 PM
TD says:

"Likewise ... I may well build a hole which some call a "breather".  I love the fact that good players EXPECT to make birdies on these holes, and because they do so less than 50% of the time, they can be affected psychologically just by making a par -- and particularly if their opponent makes a birdie."

Exactly so. Breather holes mess up your usual scoring expectations. Or better put, they can turn your normal scoring expectations upside down.
 
RTJ's mantra of "hard par, easy bogey" was so dominent for so long that it scared off a lot of innovation.  Turning the mantra upside down - as in "hard birdie, easy par" - takes some courage. That's going against the grain of what most golfers expect of good holes. Most golfers do think that relentless = good.  But breather holes are not a sign of weakness. They balance a good course.

For example, both ANGC and PVGC have several breather holes, depending on your definition. ANGC and PVGC are not great despite those holes. They are great - in part - because of those holes and the contrast they offer with other holes.

Bob   
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: mark chalfant on July 12, 2008, 12:13:00 AM
#4 and #5 at Longmeadow (MA)  are an ideal breather pair.But  neither thE 140y. fourth or the clever 318 can be taken for granted. On the fifth a gully or two slash through the fairway.

Then at the 6-9th  at LCC is more perilous with a drop shot par 3 that comes between three especially rigorous yet scenic par fours 
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Philippe Binette on July 12, 2008, 08:34:36 AM
As far as no par 5, Elie in Scotland is 16 par-4 and 2 par-3, par 70 (if I remember it well./

I think that this discussion on breather hole and routing is great.

To me, I like a breather hole because it can give you momentum after a bad start, or can kill momentum if you play it bad and make bogey.
An example of breather would be a par four in the 360-370 range where there's seamingly no pressure of the tee, maybe a simple bunker, it would seem that when you get on the tee, you know you'll have 9-iron/wedge to the green no problem. I don't see driveable par 4s as breaher, unless they are really simple, because your mind have to take a decision, and dramatics are invloved out of decisions (to be or not to be)

As for routing, it's very subjective but I also think that you see what you want to see out of a routing. If you're looking to built a course where the Tour will come in 2-3 years, you're not looking the same way at the piece of ground in front of you then if you're trying to built a 6500 yards second course for a club.
At Sagebrush, if the owners insisted to have a walkable course, the course would be shorter, would not go to where the 12th hole is, maybe would not go down to 7th green and 8th hole. If you compare the virtual routing with the actual one, which is best ????.
Routing is really, really key on a great piece of ground, but what you do with the holes is just as important on a site where you have to move a lot of dirt to have golf on it.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Ronald Montesano on July 12, 2008, 10:21:36 AM
Doak 10 definition includes "Every hole at the very least adds something of value to the course as a hole."

How do we arrive at a standard interpretation of "something of value"?  We do not.  Something of value might run the gamut from a properly-situated stand of trees for bladder relief to the Valley of Sin (no, the two are not redundant.)

Breather holes?  Thumbs up, especially when you consider the Hurdzan-Fry and the MacKenzie approaches (and probably every other common-sense architect) of building holes that chops can bogey but scratch and plus golfers grind over to make pars and birdies (albeit from a completely different tee deck and angle).  Certainly you can adjust the journey from tee to green but once on the putting rug, there are no breather putts.  A bad putter is naked to the world.  Makes me anticipate Oakland Hills and the PGA for the putting.  I always despised that course, but now have a reason to watch.  Ironic in that I usually appreciate the full shots and turn away from the putting.

I played Niagara Falls (USA) CC on Thursday's Porter Cup media day.  The course is originally a Tillinghast, but has been massaged by RTJ and Cornish/Silva since its birth.  The tee to green journey, when flat and plain, is balanced with slick and slopey putting.  The entire first seven is a stretch of breather holes, but pin location and stimp speed can add strokes quickly.

I think that a site claimed to exclude good par fives is ridiculous.  A little imagination from the architect/designer will produce a different rendering.  To quote Mick and his boys, You simply cannot always get what you want... If the architect/designer claims that the property will not accommodate a balanced course, it is the human, not the earth, that must be abandoned.

Finally, take the aforementioned course and its preparations for the Porter Cup.  It was stated in the release that the rough is being grown a wee bit higher and thicker, beginning at the 260 yard from-the-tee point and around the greens.  Aren't all breather and groaner holes subject to maintenance, too?
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Adam Clayman on July 12, 2008, 11:51:07 AM
I'd like to echo those who feel breather holes, left disrespected, can bite one's score and spit you out.

When courses change their configuration by switching the nines, or in the case of BWR, they often ruin the artful routing the designer had in mind.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Tom_Doak on July 12, 2008, 12:02:39 PM
Ronald M:

It's a little off topic, but I disagreed with your next-to-last paragraph:

"If the architect/designer claims that the property will not accommodate a balanced course, it is the human, not the earth, that must be abandoned."


That leads me to two questions:

1.  Balanced for whom? and

2.  Have you ever played Rye or Swinley Forest?  Both are terrific courses with no hole over 500 yards.  Sounds like you would dismiss them out of hand, in which case, it's YOUR OPINION that I would abandon.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Ronald Montesano on July 12, 2008, 12:56:17 PM
How'd you feel about the other paragraphs?
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Tom_Doak on July 12, 2008, 02:21:19 PM
Well, I don't know Niagara Falls CC, so I can't comment on that part of your post. 

The fact that "something of value" is open to interpretation?  Sure, it always is, that's why we're all here.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Matt_Ward on July 12, 2008, 02:49:12 PM
When I hear the term "breather holes" I simply see the terminology as nothing more than a give away in terms of overall hole quality.

I am not suggesting -- although people keep suggesting it that all holes have to be rigidly strong and unyielding with a heavy dosage on the difficulty meter. Quite the contrary.

The issue for me is whether "breather holes" truly ADD to the overall experience when playing. If they are simply thrown into the pile as a means to get to the better hole just ahead then I see them as being a less than -- rather than a more to element when playing.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Tom_Doak on July 12, 2008, 03:37:40 PM
Matt:

What can they add, from your perspective?  Do you think a relatively "soft" hole has merit if it can bite you in the ass when you go to sleep on the tee shot or the approach (but not both)?  Or if it might cause you to let down your guard for the next hole in the chain?
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Tim Bert on July 12, 2008, 05:54:15 PM
I love the breather hole, and I love the breather stretch as well.  I also love the breather hole that follows the hell hole or vice versa.

At my home club, we've got a great 1-2 combo on the front nine.  A tough par 4 that plays 419 from the member tee and 468 from the championship tee followed by a breather par 5 that plays 473 from the member tee and 508 from the championship tee.

The par 4 usually plays into a cross wind that is also slighty hurting.  It also plays slightly uphill.  The par 5 plays parallel in the opposite direction, so the wind is usually helping a bit (and it plays downhill.)  There are days where I may use the same club to approach both greens.

To top things off, both have interesting greens.  The par four has a vertical spine that splits the green left / right down the center.  If you land on the wrong side, it can be a difficult 2-putt.  The par five has two distinct tiers - the front is the upper tier and the back is the lower tier.  When the wind is helping it can be difficult to stop your long approach on the green unless you run it into the bank in front of the green.

These two holes really make par irrelevant.  As a 10 handicap, I'm looking to come away from the pair with a total of 10 strokes.  In the past 2 months (9 tries) I've accomplished this 4 times.  Interestingly enough, in that same stretch I've made three 4s on the par five and only one 4 on the par four.   

I played this morning and went birdie - birdie on the two hole stretch mentioned above.  Less than 3 foot putts on each hole, and almost chipped in for eagle on the par 5.

I played again in the afternoon and went triple - par, which is much more typical.

Over the course of 43 rounds, I've taken exactly one stroke more on the par 5.  The par 4 plays as the toughest against par for me, and the par five plays the easiest against par.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Bill_McBride on July 12, 2008, 09:14:40 PM
How about a "breather" hole that looks easy but is nothing of the sort unless you bear down and hit a a precise shot?

Here I'm thinking of say #14 Pacific Dunes or #6 Cuscowilla!
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Matt_Ward on July 14, 2008, 10:57:21 AM
Tom D:

You asked me ...

"What can they add, from your perspective?  Do you think a relatively "soft" hole has merit if it can bite you in the ass when you go to sleep on the tee shot or the approach (but not both)?  Or if it might cause you to let down your guard for the next hole in the chain?"

For starters, I don't like the term "breather holes" -- it conveys a clear sense of a "less" situation. I much prefer "change of pace" hole because it makes it a point to go in a different direction / form than the hole or holes that preceded it. No doubt an architect must determine what part of the land will be used for what type of holes. I give architects of immense talent a big time salute because fitting certain holes into the available land that is there is never easy. You have to accomodate any number of important items -- the golf course being just one of them.

When I see a course throw forward a series of strong holes -- I can only hope the architect will be smart enough to realize that change of pace holes are not per se weaker or easier holes but ones that test a different part of one's game. No doubt some courses offer breather holes that are mudane and quite honestly fairly boring to play. Pebble Beach has a few of these types of holes, as a case in point.

Tom, I often use the metaphor of a great baseball pitcher as a great analogy to what I am talking about. In baseball you have guys who can only throw blazing heat. They have not become "pitchers'" in any real definition of the word. Great design can mix it up -- the so-called "breather" hole may appear to be "easy" but the skillful architect is never one to allow such an experience to be just filler between the really outstanding holes. No course, save for the very few ahve bulletproof 18 holes. It's tough to do without the right piece of property, the best of ownership and the most talented of architects. However, if I hear the term "breather" it simply means to me that a lessening of the golf experience is happening. That doesn't mean to say the experience in playing such a course is lessened considerably but it does mean to me that the overall experience is indeed a notch or two below what could be.

Architects are no doubt in the hot seat because they often use "breather holes" as the bridge element to get to the better piece of land in order to deliver even more outstanding holes. I often rate any course not from the total amount of stellar holes but how many inferior ones does it possess and if it does have such holes -- how were they designed and where do they fit in to the total experience when playing.
Title: Re: Breather Holes
Post by: Jon Wiggett on July 15, 2008, 03:28:26 AM
In my experience the tougher holes usually demand your attention and although they maybe harder to score on this fact also helps to lessen the 'feel bad' factor when the score is too high. A simple or breather hole often lulls the golfer into not thinking and so taking a shot or 2 more than desired. Also the feel bad factor is much higher.

Tom D,

interesting comment about Jack N being a perfectionist. One of his best quotes as a player is to the effect that you have to learn to accept the inperfect in order to play good golf. Not sure what I want to say with that.