FORE Magazine

Top Menu

  • About Me
  • Contact Us
  • Home

Main Menu

  • Current Issue
  • Digital Book
  • Profiles
  • Sustainability
  • Travel
  • 19th Hole
  • Classic Course
  • FORE Her
  • More
    • Know the Rules
    • Handicap Hints
    • SCGA Junior
    • Where Are They Now?
    • News
    • Public Affairs
Sign in / Join

Login

Welcome! Login in to your account
Lost your password?

Lost Password

Back to login

logo

FORE Magazine

  • Current Issue
  • Digital Book
  • Profiles
  • Sustainability
  • Travel
  • 19th Hole
  • Classic Course
  • FORE Her
  • More
    • Know the Rules
    • Handicap Hints
    • SCGA Junior
    • Where Are They Now?
    • News
    • Public Affairs
Summer 2023
Home›Issues›Summer 2023›Recommended Reading: Course Knowledge

Recommended Reading: Course Knowledge

By Tom Mackin
August 16, 2023
5425
0
Share:

Ever redesign a golf hole in your mind? Pontificate to friends about how you would reposition some pesky bunkers? Or maybe think to yourself, ‘Man, what was (insert designer’s name) thinking here?’ Of course you have! Opinions on golf course designs tend to flow from golfer’s mouths faster than a downhill putt at Augusta National. But do you really know enough to step inside an architect’s mind?

Author Geoff Shackelford is here to help. Sink into your architect’s armchair and soak up the guidance he provides in the slim but engaging Golf Architecture for Normal People. The Southern California native and writer for multiple golf publications, including his own Substack newsletter (The Quadrilateral) and FORE, provides a handy framework for grasping and enjoying the art of course design.

Look, it’s no easy task to create 18 holes that flow together, test better players and also keep those less-skilled coming back for more. As Shackelford puts it, “The golf architect’s toughest task has always been in finding the yin and yang between forgiveness and intrigue.”

But in this visual medium, it helps to know what you’re looking at, and Shackleford provides an informative big picture. He sprinkles in history lessons about those who planted the game’s architectural roots, defines common terms and helps hone your eyes when it comes to identifying some of the tricks of the trade.

He does so without getting too deep into the rough, so to speak. To judge a course, he offers a straightforward, three-part evaluation system he has named R-E-D (the D is for dogs, and well, it makes great sense). It’s smart, concise and far more logical than the existing raft of argument-inducing, top-whatever rankings floating around the golf world. To be fair, Shackelford, a self-described recovering ranking panelist, does credit those with helping “facilitate the restoration of run-down and mangled classics and have brought respect and notoriety to under-appreciated gems designed by once-overlooked architects.” And the book’s appendix does include 11 brief course lists of his own.

But then he knows the art of course architecture better than most, having worked on numerous course projects (like co-designing Rustic Canyon GC in Moorpark and helping restore this year’s U.S. Open venue, the North Course at The Los Angeles Country Club, both efforts with acclaimed architect Gil Hanse), and he’s penned numerous books on the topic, including one about his design hero, George C. Thomas.

Yet despite all his lofty credentials, Shackelford is looking for the same things we all are in a golf course, no matter our course architecture pedigree. As he writes, “The most engaging golf courses lure us in, feature plot twists and rarely seem desperate to make a first impression. This may explain why the obvious, straightforward design quickly grows stale while the ones with some bit of mystery endure. More importantly, the very best let us win.”

Previous Article

This Game Belongs To You

Next Article

Tee for Thee

0
Shares
  • 0
  • +
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Tom Mackin

Related articles More from author

  • ProfilesSummer 2023

    The Firefighter: Gary Klasse is Ready to Pass the Baton After 50 Years Helming the Socal Firemen’s Golf Association Tournament ...

    July 21, 2023
    By Judd Spicer
  • Public AffairsSummer 2023

    Golf And Water: Seeing the Forest for the Trees

    July 21, 2023
    By Craig Kessler
  • Handicap HintsSummer 2023

    Handicap Index Calculation

    July 21, 2023
    By Kevin O'Connor
  • ProfilesSummer 2023

    Dug from the Dirt: The Ballard of Rancho Park’s Steven Vilts

    July 20, 2023
    By Randy Youngman
  • Golf GroupsSummer 2023

    Club Spotlight: Speedgolf Southern California (Speedgolf SoCal)

    July 20, 2023
    By SCGA Staff
  • Summer 2023

    This Game Belongs To You

    August 7, 2023
    By Adam Hawk

Recent Posts

  • FeaturedRecommended ReadingSpring 2026

    A Man in Full

  • FeaturedModern ClassicSpring 2026

    Renaissance at Pelican Hill

  • 19th HoleFeaturedSpring 2026

    Ember & Rye

  • At The TurnFeaturedSpring 2026

    A Pinch of Genius

  • Club SpotlightFeaturedSpring 2026

    A Thoroughly Modern Golf Club

FeaturedPublic AffairsSpring 2026

Free(ing) The Tee

Let’s set the scene of the First Act in this three-act tale about tee time brokering. SCGA Public Affairs Director Kevin Fitzgerald found himself chairing a City of Los Angeles ...
  • Ember & Rye

    By David Weiss
    April 20, 2026
  • Home Away From Home

    By Adam Hawk
    April 20, 2026
  • Game of Throws

    By Robert Earle Howells
    April 20, 2026
  • A Pinch of Genius

    By Mike Reynolds
    April 20, 2026
© 2016 FORE Magazine About Us | Contact Us | Advertise