Tuesday

Peachtree Trip

Full review on Peachtree is coming, some time is needed to look and ponder just how good the course really is. But a Top 5 ranking in the Johnny B Top 25 is almost assured.

But to the parts of the trip outside the course...

First, on the way into town while listening to the radio, a story came on about a young lad who's parents purchased him a $200,000 Ferrari for his 16th birthday. He proceeds, however long later, to get into a wreck and get rather severely injured. Poor guy. But on the Al Hunt Radio Show, as they are about to go to commercial, the producer starts playing Tom Petty's Mary Jane's Last Dance and Al starts saying a prayer for the lad who wrecked his car. The mixture of the song and the prayer was quite odd, certainly the producer must not have known a prayer was upcoming. Talking to the Lord while playing a song about drug use...don't hear that everyday.

Next, while on the interstate, a motorcycle comes by doing at least 125 mph. Does it make someone a terrible person for wishing they could turn directly in front of idiots like that and cause them to wipe out?

The atmosphere at Peachtree is very nice. Certainly golf only and understated. Anyone who bags in this course either hates any and everything associated with Robert Trent Jones and/or Bobby Jones or they flat out don't know what they're talking about. This course has "it," that is for sure.

Oh, one of the golfers playing in the group today was a member at Piedmont Driving Club. A conversation about the "incident" was never had. Link to said incident here: http://www.businessinsider.com/letter-from-president-of-atlantas-piedmont-driving-club-over-drunk-behavior-2012-6 for those who don't know.

All in all, this was a fun trip. The course was awesome, the drive not bad. Have to make effort to get to Atlanta a but more often.

Saturday

Peachtree

On Monday, this writer will be playing Peachtree Golf Club in Atlanta, GA. Peachtree has a long history and is typically said the be the second best course in Georgia behind Augusta National.

Here is a link to an article on the Itinerant Golfer website:
http://theitinerantgolfer.com/peachtree-golf-club/

Pictures and a full review will be posted here shortly after playing on Monday. Should be a good day.


Thursday

The Problem with Golf Course Rankings

All the major golf magazines do it. It is done on this site. And most golfers rank the best courses they have played, though likely not in a list as large or complex as one of the magazines. But how do we define how different these courses are? How can you really say that one course is better than another when the numbers from some ultra-complex formula, submitted by numerous people, most of whom have likely not played both courses in question, only separate the courses by a tiny fraction?

Truth is, though the magazines would never admit this, you can not. As an example, in the current Golf Digest list, Los Angeles Country Club (North Course) ranks #47, Eagle Point Golf Club ranks #48; this writer has played the latter and not the former. The ranking score for LACC is 62.85, the score for EPGC is 63.83. Going only by the Digest methodology and not getting deep into personal preferences and such, is there really a difference between those two courses? The best answer is "not really." Of course you can go into the statistical break down of the individual categories and see that LACC is supposedly better in some areas while EPGC is better in others, but that basically only serves the purpose of justifying some bias as to why one SHOULD better than the other (something this writer is guilty of).

The same goes for the ranking seen on this site, either the Top 25 or the overall ranking. What really makes Tobacco Road (#14) better than Ross Bridge (#15)? That is all subjective. And so are the magazine lists. Because regardless of how many criteria they put in place or how many averages, the lists are still nothing more than an average of a given number of objective opinions.

Ross Bridge is an especially good example of potential bias, right here where you are reading. The course just flatly fit this writers eye. It was extremely long while not being boring. It had the best turf conditions seen thus far in Alabama. Even being ultra long, it had good variety. Those are all things that this writer likes to see on courses. And the ranking reflects that. This course fit many of the things that are good in golf courses in the South, where the majority of the courses profiled here are located.

But the bias does not extend to local area courses. How many raters go to Bandon Dunes having never played a links course elsewhere and skew the ranking they give the course, either positively or negatively. Same goes for any number of other courses that are supposedly the best in a given area. How often do people who live in that given area rate said course higher simply because it is the best in the area?

In the end rankings are fun to read and even fun to make on your own. But keep in mind that they are all either a single person's opinion or a compilation of opinions. They are certainly not factual data sets (though it is a fact that Eagle Point ranks #48 in the 2011 Golf Digest ranking), these lists are merely opinions. Take them as such and have fun.