Nicklaus Admits He Used To Design For His Own Game; Has No Regrets
/Jeff Shain in the Miami Herald examines the design operations of Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus. Thanks to reader Nick for the link, which includes quotes from Brad Klein about the nature of the mass produced player-architect model.
First, a Palmer anecdote:
'This is certainly an ideal situation for me to stay in the business of golf,'' Palmer said during his visit to Deering Bay. ``We'd like to hope that [golfers] appreciate what we're trying to do.''There's always hope.
Not that Palmer and Nicklaus have the capability to get intimately engaged in each design -- though it's available for developers willing to pay higher prices.Well, better there than in the field where they could do real damage.
Both, though, leave a mark on nearly every blueprint that crosses their desk.
''He's real careful with not pushing his thoughts on us,'' said Erik Larson, Palmer Design's vice president and one of his lead designers. ``But there are certain design philosophical items that he embraces that he wants to make sure we incorporate.''
Hazards and greens should be visible. Subtly rolling greens, rather than severe humps and bumps. Make the round visually pleasing.
''Give the golfer something to look at,'' Palmer said, standing on the 13th tee of PGA National's Palmer course. The par-3 green slopes off to a collection area behind, but it all runs together.
Palmer suggests two bunkers instead.
''One on the left and one on the right,'' he said. ``That'll make a better target.''
Hey, how about a big highway stripe down the center of the fairway too?
As the caravan gets ready to move on, he adds: ``This is potentially the best hole on the course.''
He has a stronger suggestion for No. 18, where a fairway bunker melds into a larger waste area bordering water.
''We have a beautiful hazard here and it's not showcased,'' he said, all but ordering up sod and vegetation.
Palmer's suggestions will be incorporated this summer.
All in a hard day's work.
As for Nicklaus, he did reluctantly admit in his book that he favored the left-to-right approach shot in his green designs. Still, it's nice to read it in a newspaper.
'[Nicklaus has] evolved dramatically,'' Klein said, ``both as a function of the market as well as changes in Jack's own game.''
Early Nicklaus creations frequently caught criticism for favoring a left-to-right ball flight -- matching Nicklaus' playing style. As time has evolved, though, so have the patterns.
''Pretty soon I found out,'' Nicklaus acknowledged. ``I learned from that and adjusted what I did.''
I think his work was more interesting when he was designing for himself.