Friday, May 10, 2013

Satellite Photos of the TPC Sawgrass.

The TPC Sawgrass boasts maybe the most famous hole within golf—the island green 17th—but other course doesn't evoke such interest. However, in examining it closely with satellite images from Google This planet, I found a course that's don't just long (more than 7, two hundred yards), but that is usually mentally taxing. As a superior school golf coach, I helped my competitors plan their way around a new course by drawing lines using a scorecard, helping them to plan their shots to increase reward for the risk. Most important, I idea, was to plan the tee shot to help you could get the best glance at the green.

But that became fiendishly difficult at the TPC Sawgrass. Usually, the most effective look to the earth-friendly is guarded by impacting bunkers, water or trees and shrubs (and sometimes all three). On everyone holes I couldn't establish where the "bail out" shot was.

Of course, I'm thinking to be a mid handicapper who coaches high school graduation golf. The Tour player likely see it quite differently. But with the Golf Blogger's perspective, it sounds like a trip through the game of golf hell. I firmly believe that all hole should have various options for play, including a simple one that's bound to trigger a bogey, but at a minimum prevents a disaster. But I don't believe that Pete Dye agrees by himself.

At any rate, you can see a couple of satellite tv for pc photos below, and hole-by-hole satellite photos of the entire TPC Sawgrass lessons here.

Link: Napoli - AC Siena - Series

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