"IF YOU LIKE GOLF"
bi-weekly online golf column
by
Chris Dortch
October 25, 2005
As workers scrambled with last-minute preparations, golf course
architect Bill Bergin showed a visitor around the newly
refurbished Chattanooga Golf and Country Club earlier this week.
The look on his face told all—this is a job well done, and Bergin
knows it.
“It actually turned out better than we’d hoped,” Bergin said.
That’s a popular sentiment around the historic course these days.
“What Bill has done here is just phenomenal,” said head
professional Bruce Etter. “This is better than we even
envisioned.”
“Outstanding,” said greens superintendent Jeff Hollister.
You would expect the architect, head pro and greens superintendent
to be effusive in their praise of the restoration job that has
restored a bit of Donald Ross magic to the country club. But the
sentiments of Bergin, Etter and Hollister are supported in the
form of some irrefutable numbers.
Bergin’s design philosophy is to build courses that are
challenging to the better player and playable for the handicap
player. When Chattanooga’s course rating came back from the
Tennessee Golf Association, they clearly showed Bergin had
accomplished his goal yet again.
The par 71 course has a rating of 73.6 from the back tees and a
slope rating of 133.
“For a 73.6 course rating, that’s a fairly modest slope,” Bergin
said. “Our course ratings, which are based on the scratch player,
are generally fairly high. However, our slope ratings are much
more modest in relation to the course ratings, and slope is based
on the average player. That lets you know for the average player
our golf courses are pretty user friendly, yet for the better
players they’re challenging. That’s exactly my goal on every piece
of property that I work on.”
“What Bill has done,” Etter said, “is make the golf course harder
for the back tee players and easier for the front tee players.”
Bergin did that by giving players options. In some cases, he had
to work to find those options, given the small piece of property
upon which the golf course sits. Members are going to love the new
No. 11 hole. Formerly a par-3, Bergin pushed the tees back to 300
yards and came up with a classic risk-reward short par 4. The
elevated back tees offers fantastic views of the property, plus
mountains, the river and downtown Chattanooga, that were
previously unseen.
How do you play the hole? Handicap players can take the safe
route, hit an iron off the tee and a wedge into the green that is
guarded on the left side by a pond and on the right by a huge
tree. Better players and big hitters can take a chance of driving
the green.
The same is true of No. 17, a 325-yard par 4 that probably won’t
be driveable by most players, but that won’t prevent them from
trying. The more prudent play is an iron off the tee, because
there are perils aplenty. The lake on the right side of the tee
has been widened and lengthened. The green is elevated, and shots
that miss right are in trouble. A deep pit in front of the green
that was used in the old days to move logs to the river has been
restored and is in play. Trees that formerly lined the right side
of the fairway have been removed. Long-time members will hardly
recognize the hole.
All along the course, greens that were formerly too severe to
accept the shot that was required of them have been flattened out
a bit, but are no less challenging. Good examples of that are at
No. 2, No. 15 and No. 18, the par-3 finishing hole.
“I
prefer greens with gradual movement, sometimes in several
different directions,” Bergin said. “I call it equal opportunity
golf—subtle contouring requires a greater understanding of the
nuances of an individual putting surface.
“Today you see too many large multi-tiered greens, which favor the
better player who is more apt to control his approach shot and is
capable of hitting to the proper level, leaving a flatter putt.
Tiered greens present a situation where the average player is
punished unduly, resulting in long awkward putting or chipping
over ridge lines. Ours is a simple philosophy—hard par, easy
bogey.”
Work began on the country club last January, and the course will
reopen Nov. 3-5, with a President’s Cup tournament scheduled for
Nov. 4. There is still a grow-in period that will allow fescue
framing areas to reach about knee high and the Bermuda fairways to
fill in and flourish, but the course is generally going to be
ready to offer its new and unique challenges right away.
“This one’s got the look we wanted ahead of when we wanted it,”
Bergin said. “But I can’t wait to see it two years from now, when
all the grasses have grown in. It’s beautiful now. It’ll be even
more so then.”
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