Round No. 2, Sunday, April 29. Score: 45

April 29, 4:00 pm
Light rain, calm winds

This was going to be my birthday round to myself. Sure, last year it was Whistling Straits, but we’re on a tighter budget this year.
It happens.

I went into the pro shop to get out as a single, walking, and there were three yahoos ahead of me; mid-20s, backwards baseball caps, looking to get out, too.
The nice guy in the pro shop, Jeff (I have no idea what is name is, but I’ll just call him Jeff), was looking at the radar map on weather.com, and explaining clearly that THERE ARE NO REFUNDS OR RAIN CHECKS ONCE YOU TEE OFF.

Now, for those of you unfamiliar with such things, this is golf pro shop talk for “the skies are about to open on biblical proportions.”

The yahoos were seemingly okay with the news, and I was overjoyed. (It’s one of my not-so-secret loves, playing golf in inclement weather. [Aside: is there such thing as ‘clement’ weather?] The inner, child-like side of me likes to play make-believe, and playing golf in wind and rain makes it easy to pretend you’re on the windswept links at Portmarnock or Ballyliffin. Child-like? Or childish? You decide.)

Anyway, I decided to let the yahoos tee off and play all of the first hole before teeing off, so there would be a gap between them and self.

Frequently at RiverBend (and, from what I’ve seen from other golf course/club websites) it seems like golf is not the prime function. Of the golf club. There are weddings, receptions, family reunions, work parties . . . half the time I’m there, there seems to be a wedding reception or family reunion: uncomfortably well-dressed men standing out on the veranda, overlooking the first hole and practice putting green, ostensibly watching the little kids who—also uncomfortably well-dressed, except for the small girls who like dressing like princesses—cavort around on the beautiful bentgrass tee and fairway.

The men are usually smoking cigars.

I went to the practice green with a couple of balls, just to work on my putting, as I do before every round. (Also, this allowed the aforementioned yahoos to get through 1.) I could feel about four sets of eyes on me from the balcony: frustrated golfers, brought to this family reception or wedding reunion, jealous out of their minds that I had freed myself from the shackles of modern society long enough to walk nine.

It’s nothing, I’m sure, like playing with a gallery, and for the life of me, I don’t know how the Ams in Pro-Ams can take back the clubhead on the first tee, with 1,000 interested and critical eyes on them. But putting with people watching is kind of like walking across a quiet, crowded room when you know everyone’s watching. It’s just walking. One foot in front of the other. But the very process becomes odd and mechanical when there’s an audience.

To my great pleasure, I starting sinking putts with a zen-like purity. Short putts went straight in the middle. Long putts went in or got tap-in close, and giant lags were ending up inside the leather. Despite my best efforts, I couldn’t help peeking up to the veranda out of the corner of my eye (I pretended I was watching a pair of Canadian Geese—with which RiverBend is overrun—come in for a landing) and was gratified to see the audience was respectful of my mad putting skillz. That’s a good feeling.

Just before teeing off, I kicked a couple of balls into the longer grass about 10-15 feet off the green, and practiced my long 8-iron bump-and-run chip shots. (The idea is to use a moderately-lofted club, as opposed to a wedge, and just get the ball a couple of inches off the ground over the long grass that would slow it down, and have it land on the green and start rolling like a putt.)

The second chip I hit checked perfectly on the green and rolled about 45 feet, directly into the cup. Jeff had come out of the pro shop to check the skies, and evidently was watching me chip. He saw that one and cheered down to me for the great shot. I smiled up at him, but played it cool, like 60 foot chips from off the green routinely go in. No big deal.

I glanced down the fairway, and the yahoos were replacing the pin at one and headed to the second tee.

Go time.

Hole No. 1. 315 Yards. Par 4.

Looking in to the first green, from the correct side of the fairway
This is one of the holes I’ve come up with a plan of attack. 4-hybrid down the right side. Iron to the green. No more pulling the driver or 5W way left.
The bunker sand. Not your typical American course


So, in accordance with the prophecy, I pulled the 4H way left instead.  Rough, 160 yards in. I hit it about 160, had 160 left to go, so naturally hit another 4H. caught it fat, and went into the bunker short right. (Guess I was lucky it didn’t go into the lake.) Sand wedge over the green left me chipping from behind the green, downhill, for par.

Not the start I had been hoping for.
I hit a very thoughtful EW chip, rolling the ball down the hill to 3 feet. A short putt for a bogey. Not ideal, but could be worse.


Then I missed the putt.
Two over after one very short, easy hole.
Deef Breaf.



Hole No. 2. 365 yards. Par 4.
Mentally regrouping on the second tee, I thought about the gameplan. Keep this one in play. Get back a stroke here, and I’ll be back on track. No damage.
Nice smooth 5-w, slow backswing, and a nice high tee shot, left-center of the fairway, just over the crest of the hill. Not perfect, but not far from it.
Second shot, 175 yards from a wet fairway, uphill. Smooth 5H. Put a great swing on it, slow and smooth. Beautiful shot. On the green. Pin-high. Beautiful.

First putt 18 feet. Hit a nice lag, on the wet green, that cozied right up to the pin. 6” later, in for a par.
A very nice recovery hole after the first. Back on tract. Two over after two.

Hole No. 3. 481 yards. Par 5.
Feeling good after the second hole, I had a nice feeling on the third tee. This hole, a long one, used to intimidate me. No dogleg, so you can see the flagstick from the tee, and it looks SO far away. I just want to kill the ball. And what happens when I want to kill the ball? I hook. Into the trees, and then I’m dead meat. I took another deep breath, teed it up high, and put a nice, smooth, slow backswing on the driver, with a pause at the top.

Mother duck, and babies, in the pond off the third tee.

Walking down the fairway after the drive, my phone buzzed. A text from Obie, my erstwhile best friend, with whom I haven’t communicated in a couple of years. We kind of lost touch (I lost touch), and then with the recent changes in my life, haven’t gotten back in touch. He had left me a message a day before, and I finally resolved, after all this time, to write him, to get back in touch. I was going to do that around my birthday (a couple of days off). But now he’s texting me. So, after a couple of years of silence, I responded. Not much, just ‘thanks for not giving up on me.’
But it felt good. That’s been hanging over me for months, years. It felt good to be in touch.

Back to golf.

It wasn’t a bomb, but a good drive. Into the fairway. Absolutely an opportunity from there. Did the exact same swing with the 5W. long, smooth, slow easy swing. Another great shot, in the fairway, about 110 yards out. Two nice shots, back to back. Maybe my eased conscience was helping.

I pulled the 9i for my third, and took a perfect, dollar-bill-sized divot. The ball flew high and straight to the green. After a fairway hit, I had a GIR to go with it. 18 feet below the hole, I hit another great long lag putt, leaving less than a foot for a par. I took my time this time, knocked it in, and had back-to-back pars. After a tough first hole, I really locked it up. I felt good about that, because one of my fears with this 40-40-40 project was that I would shoot a big number early, and mentally deflate and get myself out of it, and then be out of it for the round. The goal is to shoot +4 over the course of a round. I could shoot +4 on the first hole and par my way in and get the score. Hell, I could shoot +12 on the first and birdie in and get it. (Unlikely).
So, it was nice to see that I could buckle down and get it back after putting up a big number.

Hole No. 4. 270 yards. Par 4.
This is the hole I honestly think I have a good shot to birdie. But I realize something about myself: on the loonnng par-5 third hole, it’s so long I rear back and try to kill it. And then on the short par-4 fourth, it’s so SHORT I rear back and try to kill it. In both cases, I would be better served to swing easy and let the club do the work.

DAH!


Second shot on No. 4. Play it safe!

Anyway, I put too big a hit on my tee shot and (say it with me now), hooked it to the left. Trees. I was almost directly stymied by a good-sized trunk. Only 120 or so yards off the green, there was about a 2” gap I could try to punch through with a knock-down 7-iron threaded the eye of a needle to try to run it up to the front. Not a high-percentage shot. I addressed, waggled and . . . thought better of it.

I made a much smarter chip out to the fairway, leaving myself a clear shot, 85 yards short.

I hit an 8i bump-and-run, a shot I’m still working on, onto the green, pin-high but about 15 feel below the hole. Again, I made a good run at it, but it never had a chance, and I rolled in the 3’ follow-up for a bogey. Disappointing, because that should be no worse than a par hole, but maybe I learned a lesson there.

+3 after four holes.

Hole No. 5. 125 yards. Par 3.
Easy 7-iron. Easy 7-iron. Easy 7-iron.
MASSIVE TOO-HARD SWING I’M GOING TO KILL THAT BALL!
Just to mix things up and keep things fresh, my desire to kill the ball on hole number 5 resulted in a flare push to the right. Pin-high, but off the green 10 yards to the right, and with 40 feet to work with on top of that.
Deep breath, read the green as if for a putt, and a nice smooth EW chip that rolled down to three feet. Very nice.
Knocked that bad boy in for a par.

+3 through 5 holes. It wasn’t going to be easy, but I had an outside shot at 40. In only my second attempt.

Hole no. 6. 340 yards. Par 4.
Once again to my first nemesis hole. A hole that should be cake for me, with my draw, but which somehow seems to foil me every time.
I tried to put a smooth driver on it, using my old, closed stance (which generally produces a draw) and – what do you know? A low, running hook. Not a high, towering draw, but the ball moved right-to-left and settled just a pace or two from the white aiming stake in the middle of the fairway, 150 yards out.

I’ll take it.

I tried to muscle a 7-iron up there onto the front of the green; a 7H may have been too much, and with a back-to-front slope, I didn’t want to be above the hole. (It’s easier to putt uphill than downhill; you never want to leave your ball above the hole, if it can be avoided.)

It was a lovely 7-iron, but unfortunately a tad short; 1 pace off the green in the fringe. This is the shot the jigger E-club was made for, and so I pulled it out, out of my loyalty to its inventor, Michael Bamberger (who is also the author of one of my favorite books, To the Linksland, but more on that later.)

As I say, I WANT to love the jigger. It’s a useful club, and the story of its invention is a good one. And I (used to, anyway) kind of “knew” the inventor, which was also neat. But I don’t pull it out regularly enough to get good at it, and so I haven’t really dialed it in. What I need to do is spend some time practicing with it around the green, so I know what it can do. It generally hits the ball a little further than I intended (it has a very heavy head), so this time I backed off a bit, and left the chip a good seven feet short. Seven foot putts are not automatic for me, and I left the putt – directly on-line – three inches short.

Bogey. +4 after six holes, and now I had to par in to get my 40. With the two hardest holes on the course to come.

Hole No. 7. 518 yards. Par 5.
A par-5. Nobody should bogey a par-5. Just throw a 5-wood out there into the fairway. And then another one, further down the fairway. And then an iron up around the green. Chip up close, and try to make the putt.

I even wrote in my score book, as direction to myself, “PUT 5-W IN PLAY!”

And what did I do?
What do you think?

Pulled the driver. Tried to kill the ball.
Why?

I hit a short, wicked, snap duck hook off the tee, which, in fact, ended up on the front of the tee box of the par-3 fifth. The ball was in long grass, about eight inches below my feet, and miles from the green I was shooting for. It was a horrible shot. (After this monstrosity, I teed up another ball, and put a nice, smooth, easy 5W on it. Not tremendously long, but up on the right side of the fairway, short of the bunker. A spot I could easily have played from.)

From my downhill lie, in the rough, with a line of trees between me and the fairway I was aiming for, I needed something good. I gripped my 7-iron all the way at the end of the grip; in fact, my left pinkie wasn’t even on the grip I was choking it so far down. I tried to swing slowly and under control, and actually hit a very nice recovery shot out into the fairway, advancing the ball a pretty good distance.

My third was from 215, but in the fairway with an opening to the green. A nice 5W would get it up there in front, with a chance to chip up and at least have a shot at par. A good 5W can go about 200 from the fairway for me, so I tried to kill it.

When will I learn?
I caught it fat, taking a huge divot and leaving it still 150 out from the green. That’s when I deflated. I lost the head, as they say.

Hit a 7H up and over the green, into the rough on the far side. An EW chip managed to hold the green, but 18 feet from the cup. Two putts later, I had a double bogey.
Again.
I double bogeyed the par-5.
Pathetic.

+6 for the round, and the dream, for that round, was dead.

Coming off the seventh, I got an e-mail from Henry, my 9-year-old. He doesn’t have a cellphone, so he can’t call or text, only e-mail if he wants to reach me.
The e-mail I got?
“What do I do if the fire alarm goes off?”

Immediately, my mind starts racing. I know his mother had to go drop off Charlie at a classmate’s for a homework project they were working on. Henry’s home alone. Is the fire alarm going off, or is he just being cautious? I emailed him back, asking if the fire alarm WAS going off. If it was, he should go to the neighbor’s and have her call mom . . . Then waited for my e-mail to send, and waited for him to write back. Evidently she was cooking chicken, which sometimes smokes in the oven, and just wanted Henry not to worry if it went off. By the time I got the full story, she was home. It was an interesting diversion in the round.

Hole No. 8. 402 yards. Par 4.
After my disastrous double on number seven, I wasn’t going to shoot 40, but I could still prove to the eighth hole that I was not its bitch. I could prove that I can keep the ball out of the trees (or backyards) down the left side. I could prove that I am not intimidated by its length. I could prove that, when I come to that hole at +4 for the day, I can still shoot my 40.

Again, in my book, I had written “5W in play!”
And this time? I did it. Again, not too long (the fairways were quite wet by this point, killing any roll, or at least that’s what I told myself), but I was down there in the fairway, right side, and not down in the trees at the corner of the dogleg. I was still a little over 200 yards from the green, so I put another nice smooth 5wood on it, and got it up there, about 40 yards short. In good position, fairway short of the green, but I had to go up and over the guarding front bunker, so I couldn’t hit my little bump-and-run that I’ve been working on. I pulled out the 60 degree wedge, with a reasonable chance to knock it close and maybe even have a putt for par.

Nice timing for my worst swing of the round; I skulled the 60 all the way over the green, back onto the path to the 9th tee. It was a truly horrific shot.
Alas.
From behind the green (about the same distance away), I hit the 60° again, this time onto the green, but as far from the pin as possible. I had a 42 foot putt, which I lagged up to about a foot. I knocked that one in for another double bogey. I was +4 after six holes, and +8 after eight.
Disheartening.

Hole No. 9. 155 yards. Par 3.
I approached the ninth tee fairly well deflated. I had had such a round going, and now I needed to par the last just to break my previous best score (which wasn’t very good at all.)
I pushed the 6-hybrid off the tee, down the hill off the right side of the green. Missed my spot by 30 yards. I pulled the 60 degree wedge again, and knocked the ball to 20 feet above the hole. Try as I might, I couldn’t will that ball into the hole.

Bogey.
Ended with a score of 45 again, as I had done the previous round.

I tried to take some positives away from it. I did start out really well. I showed I can play number two moderately well, and I proved again that I need to follow a gameplan on the long number 7, my nemesis.

I started walking up to the clubhouse from the ninth green, a path which takes one right past the first tee. Sure, it was still raining, but sunset was still an hour or more away. The course was empty.
How about nine more?

The pro shop was dark when I got upstairs, locked up for the day, but I found Jeff in the bar parlour, with the remaining stragglers from the wedding reception, and asked if I could get a replay rate. A couple of the guys chuckled (I looked a little like the bishop from Caddyshack; I had been basically standing in the rain for more than two hours, soaked), but Jeff said “yeah, I don’t think the hard stuff is going to come down for a while” and sent me back out.

Free golf. Happy birthday to me.

April 29, 6:30 pm.
Steady rain, calm winds.

Hole No 1. 314 yards, par 4.
After playing the first nine, I noticed all of my tee shots were coming up shorter than usual. I attributed that to the wet grass, killing any fairway roll. So instead of pulling the 4H, I teed off with the 5W, trying to keep a smooth swing to keep it down the right side.

It was beautiful. A perfect 5 wood right down the right side, leaving only 145 yards straight into the front of the green.
I pulled the 6H and hit another lovely shot, which landed on the green just short of the flag but rolled all the way to the back, leaving me a 12 foot downhill putt. I got a little eager with the putt, and rolled it five feet past. But it was now directly below the hole, and I had been able to see the slight break as the ball rolled past the hole. It actually even left a little track on the rain-soaked green. All I had to do was hit it back along that line, firm enough to get there.
I did, and it nailed the back of the cup.

Par. Even after one hole.

Hole No. 2, 365 yards, par 4.
I knew I had to keep the ball in play, and I put another good 5W on the tee shot, and got it into the fairway. This could start to be a new habit. Another nice 5W flew just short of the green, but right up in the neck. Not bad. A good chip could get me up there with a chance for a par putt.
I tried to be a little delicate with it, and ended up leaving the 8 iron chip shot about 30 feet short. I gave it a good run, but left that one a foot short, and tapped in for a bogey.
+1 after two.

Hole No. 3, 480 yards, par 5.
Two easy five woods in the fairway left me about 150 yards short of the green. I hit a very nice 6H uphill to the green, but it released through the green and ended up on the back fringe. I took a run at the 30 foot downhill putt, and it actually lipped out. It left a 4-footer back uphill, which I rolled in.

+1 after three. Hm.

Hole No. 4, 270 yards, par 4.
I pushed my five-wood right, but on a very short hole, it didn’t matter. I was over near the trees, but if I had a shot, it wouldn’t be a bad miss. Getting up to the ball, I found I had about 85 or 90 yards in, and a clear shot between trees, albeit over the bunker. With a back pin placement, I hit a full EW and left it about 20 feet below the hole. I gave it a good knock, and it flew past the hole, stopping about 6 feet past the cup, with a sidehill lie. Again, the wet greens helped me, and I’ve gotten much better about watching the ball as it passes the hole to see the read on the way back in.
I knocked that bad boy in, for another par.

+1 through four holes.

Hole no. 5, 125 yards, par 3.
Another easy 7-iron. This one held the green, but on the far right edge. And the flag was on the far left edge. I paced it out: it was a 55’ attempt. I actually rolled it up there pretty well, leaving a 4-footer. Which lipped out.
Tap-in bogey, and I’m +2 after 5 holes.
Still, encouraging.

Hole no. 6. 340 yards. Par 4.
I’ve got a shot at this thing. Forty is in my sights.
Again, I put a standard (my old standard) driver swing on it, the one that should induce my old hook, because this is the one hole where I can use that hook as a slingshot around the corner.

I over-cooked it and hit a duck hook into the lake.
*#%@.
Penalty shot. Still on the tee, hitting my third.
Pushed out way right through the trees onto the second fairway. Still have a chance to go for the green. Reared back to wallop a 5W, and topped it.
135 yards in, over water, hitting 5th shot.
High 5H that sailed, sailed, sailed right. Into the other lake.
Dropped six.
Hitting seven, a little 8-iron chip.
Two putts later, and I’ve taken a nine on the par-4, +5 for the hole and +6 for the round.

This was about the time that I realized exactly how wet I was getting, out there in the rain for three, almost four hours. Even with the pre-round stretching I had done, my back was tightening up, and it was getting dark.

The back of the sixth green actually leads to the ninth tee; you have to take a detour to the left to get to seven and eight, so I took the opportunity (smell my pants) and just went straight over to nine. For some crazy notion, I’m convinced I’m going to ace this hole someday. I don’t generally think that, and, given the two, the much shorter par-3 fifth hole is probably statistically more likely, but I always have a little zing of excitement on this tee. As if it’s just a matter of time. (don’t read too much into this; I felt the same way about the much shorter par-3 ninth hole at Golden Gate GC in San Francisco. Never smelled a hole-in-one there, either.)

Anyway, I teed it up on nine, wondering as I did so if I managed to ace it, if I could then go back and play seven and eight to make it an official round, or if the rules of golf said you had to play all of the holes in a proscribed order?

It turns out it didn’t matter. My 6H airmailed the green. Probably the purest shot I hit all day.
I chipped it up from behind the green, but my heart wasn’t in it. I putted with the blade of my wedge, didn’t hole out, and called it a day.

I hadn’t gotten my 40. After falling apart on seven and eight in the morning (by which I mean 4:00 PM) round, I didn’t even manage to better my previous best score, finishing with another disappointing +9 45.

But, you know what? It was golf. And golf beats not-golf, almost every day, and twice on Sundays. I look forward to next Sunday.

  

Preparing for Round Two

It's a cool but beautiful day here in Chicagoland. The afternoon forecast is for around 60 degrees and clear until about 4:00, when the rainfall potential rockets up to about 60%.
I plan to play around 4:00.

The goal for today is to eliminate the double bogeys.
I had one last time on holes number two, seven and eight. Eliminate those three double bogeys, and I'm at 42, which is within two of my goal, just two rounds into the year.

On the second hole, I just have to stay out of the left-hand trouble. Where I am every. Single. Time.
I think today it's a five-wood off the tee, try to keep it in the fairway. When I'm over on the left, behind the trees, par is dead and bogey is dying. Keep it in the fairway at two, and I've got a shot.

The seventh hole . . same deal, actually. Just get the tee shot in play. Just put the ball in play. Then a nice five-wood down to 100 yards, then wedge onto the green and two putts. That should be a par hole. I can't let this hole freak me out. I'm mentally dead on the tee. I have to get over that.

The eighth hole is like the second; out-of-bounds all the way down the left. And not just OB, but trees in the dogleg, which destroy any chance for par. I've got to keep the ball in the fairway here. It's a long par-four. This is one that I can give a stroke on; play it like a par five. Hit to the fairway. Iron up around the green. Chip on and two-putt. Get out of there with a bogey.

Incidentally, my 41st birthday is Tuesday, so if I'm going to make 40 at 40, it's gotta be today.
No pressure.

Round No. 1, Sunday, April 15. Score: 45

My first assult on 40 took place yesterday afternoon, on an overcast day with strong winds and intermittent rain. While the weather made for an enjoyable semblance of a Scottish summers' day, such conditions do not readily lend themselves to scoring well on the golf course.

I arrived at Riverbend around 4:00 or so, hopeful that by that time of day the course would be somewhat cleared out and I'd have it to myself. There are few better experiences than being the last person out on a golf course, coming down the final fairway as the sun is setting. It's as close to perfection as I know.

I watched a twosome tee off, and putted on the practice green for another 20 minutes or so, and then headed out myself. The winds were strong and gusting to borderline ridiculous, and out of the due south, which meant holes 1, 4 and 8 would be directly into the teeth of the wind, holes 3, 7 and 9 would be directly downwind, and 2, 5 and 6 would have a hearty crosswind.

First hole: 312 yards, par 4
(playing directly into the wind)
When I came up with this plan to go around Riverbend in 40 whacks, I looked at the holes that gave me trouble, and tried to establish a gameplan where I could avoid trouble. My entire history on number one I've hooked a driver way out to the left, adding needless length and complexity to the hole. It's not a long par-4, but it does have a creek running across the fairway about 2/3 of the way down, and you have to be careful for that.

I decided that the prudent play would be to scoot the ball up the right side of the fairway with a 4-hybrid, leaving myself just a mid-iron into the green. I opened up my stance to promote a bit of a fade, and gave the 4h a good, smooth swing. Just as intended, the ball went right at the center of the fairway, and landed not far from the white aiming stake at the top of the hill. An auspicious start.

My second shot left 145 yards to the green, from an elevated fairway. Again, right into the heart of the wind. I didn't take that latter bit into account, and my 7-hybrid blew up into the breeze and ended 20 yards short of the green, to a front pin position. A very good chip and putt and I could save my par.

Unfortunately, when you haven't played in a while, it's the short game that really exposes your rustiness. My E-wedge chip was woefully short, and the ball stopped in the front fringe. I used my Michael-Bamberger-designed-Jigger-E-club chipper with great success, and my fourth shop rolled to within two feet of the pin. One easy putt later, and I had a bogey, and was already one over for the day, and had used up a quarter of my spare shots.

+1 after one hole

Second hole: 364 yards, par 4
(strong left-to-right wind)
This hole is always very difficult for me, as I tend to hit the ball right-to-left, and there is an out-of-bounds fence (and road) along the entire length of the left side of this hole. When I do keep it in bounds, I'm generally down in the long grass behind a stand of large trees, with no shot to the green.

I did what I could to keep the ball in the fairway. I still pulled the ball left, but it was more of a straight pull than a hook, and with the very strong wind working with me, I managed to keep the ball somewhat in play. I was on the very left edge of the fairway, but in play, and with a shot at the green.

My second shot was 155 yards, uphill, and it called for a smooth 6-hybrid. Unfortunately, I caught the shot fat, and the ball knuckled to rest about 35 yards short of the flagstick, which was at the back of the severely back-to-front sloped green.

I tried to bump-and-run an eight iron back to the flag, but caught it hot and it rolled all the way to the back fringe. Compounding that, I hit the jigger back downhill also too hard, and after my alloted four strokes, was looking at a tough 15-foot uphill put just for bogey.

I rolled the first put the best I could, but left it wanting, and two-putted for a double bogey 6.
My dreams of 40 were evaporating fast.

+3 after two holes

Third hole: 474 yards, par 5
(straight downwind)
This is a pretty long hole, and that always brings out my inner urge to kill the ball. Which never works, and usually just results in a massive hook. (This hole, too, has an out-of-bounds fence along the left side.) Looking back, I should have hit a smooth 5-wood (especially with the helping wind), but again I hit the driver and again I pulled the ball into the left rough.

My second shot was still 240 yards out from the green. A nice smooth 5-wood should put me up inside of 100 yards with a reasonable chance at par. Perhaps over-compensating for pulling my drive, I pushed the 5-wood to the right, directly into the bunker 40 yards short of the green on the right side. A hellishly long bunker shot. My prospects for 40 looked completely dead.

One stunning bunker shot later, and my ball was 10 feet left of the flag, with a putt for birdie. I pushed the putt a couple of feet past, which was unfortunate, but left myself a makable par putt.

Actually, I took a quick video at that point, to capture the feeling of the Scottish links experience I was having:
Over there they call it 'goff', without the L

I got in for my par, which was a good score on that hole for me.

+3 after three holes

Fourth hole: 278 yards, par 4
(directly into the wind)
This is ordinarily a manageable hole. It's very short for a par-4, with little trouble. In this round, it was playing directly into the teeth of gale-force winds, but even so, par was certainly within reach.

I decided to play a Scottish shot to go with my Scottish weather: a low punch shot that stays down and cuts through the wind. (Tiger Woods has popularized this shot in recent years, calling it a 'stinger'.)
I teed the ball up low, took an abbreviated backswing and kept my hands very low through the follow-through. The stinger actually came off, and I had a low, boring ball flight that went up the right side of the fairway, leaving me only 90 yards in to the green. (That indicates how strong the wind was: on the third hole, downwind, I hit my driver about 235 yards. The next hole, I hit the same club less than 190.)

I used another Scottish shot, the cut-down 7-iron bump-and-run, which unfortunately ended 10 feet past (and above) the hole. Generally, you want to keep your ball below the hole; it's easier to putt uphill when gravity is working to slow the ball down, rather that putting downhill when any off-line ball is picking up speed and can run way too far past the hole.

As you guess, I hit the ball off line and it picked up speed and ran way too far past the hole. Although I was on the green in two shots, I took three putts to get the ball in the hole, and spoiled any shot at 40. You just cannot three-putt a green. Ever.  Highly frustrating, especially after my two fine shots to get there.

+4 after four holes

Fifth hole: 127 yards, par 3
(cross wind, right-to-left)
This short par-3 is usually just a 7-iron. It's always just a 7-iron onto the green, and then two putts.
With the strong wind (which was a little into my face), I decided to try an easy 7-hybrid. It, of course, flew too long and rolled off the back of the green. I hit a very useful E-wedge to four feet and stuck the putt. A nice and unexpected par.

If I could do the same thing for the next four holes, I'd be in at +4 (40), and I'd have achieved my goal!

+4 after five holes

Sixth hole: 345 yards, par 4
(cross wind, right-to-left)
This is the hole that always vexes me. On the holes where I absolutely cannot go left (number 2 and number 3), I always manage to somehow hit a hook that risks going out of bounds.

This is a nice right-to-left dogleg hole, that positively sets up for my nice draw. I should own this hole.
And what do I do, every time?
A straight push to the right.

And what did I do this time?
A straight push to the right.
I simply don't get it.

Anyway, I managed to have a decent lie in the right rough, with 160 yards in to the green. I usually hit my 6-hybrid 160, but something told me I needed a bit more, so I hit the 5-h.
I was right in needing more; even the 5 left me 20 yards short of the hole.

I chipped up with my 8-iron bump-and-run (I'm determined to master that shot this summer), and left myself 25 feet for par. I missed the putt, and got another bogey. Unless I could birdie two of the remaining three holes, 40 was not to be.

+5 after six holes

Seventh hole: 519 yards, par 5
(downwind)
I really hate this hole.
I shouldn't. It's sixteen hundred feet of beautiful manicured grass and native wetlands, bordered by trees and home to protected wildlife.
But oh, how I hate this hole.

This is a long double-dogleg to the right. And, like clockwork, my draw that abandoned me on the sixth hole (where it would come in useful) is back with a vengeance on the seventh, where a draw is the very last thing you want. I think this comes from my knowledge that this is a long, nasty hole, and so I try to kill the ball, and when you try to kill the ball, you rush your swing and start the downswing before the backswing is complete, which gets your hands behind and closes the face and -- say it with me -- causes you to hook the ball.

Knowing that is what happens every time I reach this tee, I took a deep breath, forced myself to take my time, and put on a nice smooth swing to promote a nice, high, power fade. Of course, I rushed, tightened up, and hit a monster hook, almost back to the fourth fairway.

&%#!!

I was far left of the trees on the left side of the fairway. I took out the 5-wood and basically replicated everything I had done on the tee. I took my time, pictured a nice high fade, set up for a nice high fade, and hit a nasty hook.

My third shot was "in jail", which is golf terminology for behind a series of trees, making your view towards the green look like you're standing behind jail bars. Because I evidently fancy myself one of the top dozen or so golfers in the world, I decided to take a page from new Masters champion Bubba Watson and hit a preposterous hook out of the trees and onto the green. Because, you know, what could go wrong?

This kind of shot really isn't possible if you
respect the laws of physics

I'm sure you'll be shocked to learn that I did not pull off the shot as masterfully as Bubba did. (Get it? Masterfully? I slay me.)

My non-hooking seven iron went straight into the water hazard. (Or, as Ty Webb would say, straight into the lumberyard.)

I dropped (penalty stroke), hit a beautiful high 60 degree wedge onto the back of the green, lagged my jigger to 4 feet, and had a nice one-putt double bogey.

Gag.

+7 after seven holes

Eighth hole: 411 yards, par 4
(directly into the wind)
Like the fourth hole, the eighth was playing directly into the teeth of the increasing wind. This is another hole with OB left, and another hole where my trusty hook shows itself. It's beyond vexing: on the sixth hole, I need a hook, and can't hit one to save my life. Then on the seventh and eighth, I can't avoid hitting one.)

Except today. I copied my setup for my stinger from the 4th hole, and hit another nice low burrowing drive up the right side of the fairway. It's one of the only times I've ever played this hole from the fairway. Of course, with the wind even stronger, I was lucky to hit the drive about 180 yards. I had 230 left, and I hit a nice smooth 5-wood. Again it landed in the fairway, 110 yards from the green. A smooth 9 iron should have put me on, but I should have hit a low 7-iron. The 9 blew up in the wind, and landed 20 yards short of the green.

A poor chip left me 20 feet short of the hole, and I two-putted for a double bogey.
This is generally a difficult hole for me, and with its length is more of a par four-and-a-half, and it's one of the holes I've resigned myself to taking bogey, even when I break 40. And it was playing stupid hard into the wind, so a bogey would have been a good score.

But the double bogey? Not so good. One bad decision (the 9-iron), and I couldn't recover.

+9 after eight holes

Ninth hole: 165 yards, par 3
(directly downwind)
 
I like the nith hole. It sets up well for me, it's a comfortable distance (a full 6-hybrid), and a receptive green. I put a nice smooth swing on the ball to end my round, and saw it carry nice and high, tracking straight for the flagstick. It dropped short, took a hop, and started rolling. It was tracking all the way, and stopped just short. If it had had 10 more feet of roll, it would have been very close to a hole in one. It felt that good.
 
My birdie putt lipped out, and I had a tap-in par to end the day.
Not bad.
 
+9 after nine holes
 
Okay, so I didn't break 40. But for my first official round of the year, 45 ain't bad.
Two bad blow-up holes, and I could easly have trimmed that to +6.
 
I really think 40 is within my sights this summer.
 
Onward and upward.

1st hole - 316 yards - Par 4

The first hole is a very short par-4 (playing only 316 yards from the white tees), but the kind of design I particularly like. Instead of every hole favoring the long hitters, I respect a good par-4 where shotmaking and placement are key.

Number one at River Bend has an uphill drive; in fact, I suppose you would call it a blind tee shot. Only about 200 yards off the tee is the crest of a hill, beyond which you cannot see the creek cutting across the fairway at about 220 yards off the tee. Presumably a monster drive could carry the creek, but it would require about 250 yards of carry, and that's not going to happen.

Tee shot at No. 1 - aim for the white stake

The smart play is an iron or hybrid, keeping along the right side of the fairway if possible, and then a mid- to short-iron to the green. Bunkers left and right, and a severely back-to-front sloping green, it's better to be short than long on this hole.

From the crest of the hill - green sits back from the creek

Strategy: 4-hybrid just over the hill, iron to the front of the green, two putts. PAR

2nd hole - 377 yards - Par 4

Although significantly longer than the first hole, the second is still reasonable at 377 yards. There is out-of-bounds all down the left side (a fence, outside of which is the road), and trees and a bunker (and, further down the fairway, but not in play on the drive), the lake.
Fence and road out of bounds left
Note stand of trees 220 yards down the left side 
of the fairway, near the fence

My usual shot here, despite myself, is a draw (nice word for a hook) that ends up either OB-left over the fence or at least in the trees. In fact, I think there's about a 10-square-foot patch of grass behind three big trees that 90% of my tee shots end up in. My goal is to develop a straight or even left-to-right shot (I've just discovered that foot position can influence shot shape, if you really trust your swing.)

My typical view of the second green

If you can get into the fairway, it's an uphill shot to a green protected by mounding and a front-left bunker and a rear-right bunker. It's a long green, front-to-back, so you can leave yourself a long putt here. Being uphill, the second shot plays longer than it measures, and I generally end up short of the green and have to chip on.

Strategy: Driver into fairway, iron (one more than I think I need due to the hill) to the green, two putts. PAR

3rd hole - 481 yards - Par 5

A par-5 of reasonable length (481 yards), this should not be a difficult hole. It's turned 90 degrees from the second hole, but there is another fence with another out-of-bounds all down the left hand side. On the right are trees, and beyond them the fourth fairway. Right is not completely dead here, although it makes for a tough shot. Definitely a three-shot hole, a massive drive is not absolutely necessary here. (This is one of my problems; I see the green 500 yards away and feel like I have to crush it. But I could hit my 5-wood out there 200 yards in the fairway, and then hit a 4-hybrid another 180 yards in the fairway, and then have a simple 100 yard wedge to the green. Easy.

Tee shot at three. The green is straight ahead*.
*In the next county

But I never approach it that way; I haul off and try to kill my driver, which results in a wild hook out onto the road OB left or, when I really make sure not to hook, a towering push into the fourth fairway 100 yards right.
Halfway down the fairway, you can almost see the green from here

There is a massive bunker on the front right, extending most of the way down the right side of the green, and a severe drop-off and trees to the left. (I've been nestled down under the trees at the bottom of the hill more times than I care to remember.)
100 yards out; giant bunker on the right of the green,
knobby hills and severe drop off to the left

Strategy: 5-wood into fairway; 4-hybrid into the fairway, wedge onto green. Two putts. PAR

4th hole - 284 yards - Par 4

Another good short par-4, but without the hazard of number 1. This is just a straightaway fairway, like a runway right up to the green. There are trees left and right, and a bunker on the left side of the green, but this is a hole I generally play pretty well. When I manage a straight drive, I have just 40 or 50 yards in to the green. A good chip and I'm there.
Number 4: Good short par 4

Strategy: Driver into fairway; wedge into the green. Two putts. PAR

5th hole - 128 yards - Par 3

This can be an intimidating hole, but it's so short that I usually don't flinch. There is about a 100-yard carry over water to a plateau green, which falls off on the back right to more water. Bunker back left, but it's a fairly generous green, and a good 7- or 8-iron will usually take you home.
Strategy: Iron onto the green. Two putts. PAR
Nice short par-3. A pretty hole

6th hole - 345 yards - Par 4

This should be great fun for me. It's one of the only really right-to-left dogleg holes on the course, and you'd think with my complaining about my right-to-left ballflight on 1, 2, and 8, I'd welcome this hole. But, vexingly, the one place that I could use my hook, it rarely comes out.
Tee shot at number 6- should start at the dark 
green tree and draw a bit to the left.

A nice long drive with a slight draw will leave you out on a ridged fairway, with a moderate second shot over water to a receptive green. I can generally be up around the green in two, and a chip on and two putts should be a bogey.
From the top of the fairway, it's a short iron over a creek
to a long, deep green. Fall off behind, water back right

7th hole - 511 yards - Par 5

This is a nasty hole. A long par-5 that essentially has two doglegs to the right. The opening tee shot is a 100 yard forced carry over the junk, and should be a nice sweeping fade, left to right. There is water all along the right side of the fairway, and the green is curled around behind the water, so you really have to go around the water to get there.
The tee shot at No. 7.
I hate this shot.

My usual tee shot is straight or a draw, so I basically add 50 needless yards to an already long hole. My second will scoot up along the left side of the fairway, leaving me an unreasonably long third shot to an elevated and well-protected green.

The second shot. The green is still very far away,
around the water to the right. 
It's a bitch of a hole.

I'm rarely actually around the green complex in three shots, so with my fourth getting me up around the green, I'm generally doing well do two-putt for a bogey.

On a par-5. Not pretty.

8th hole - 409 yards - Par 4

The eighth is one of my bugaboo holes. It's a long par 4, with (say it with me) out of bounds all down the left side. Back in my old days of the uncontrollable slice, this would have been a good course for me.

The tee at No. 8. 
Avoid the water, stay away from the trees and homes on the left.

The left side of the eighth at River Bend is lined with homes, and I swear there is one backyard that has collected a couple dozen of my golf balls over the years.

I counted nine golf balls in this back yard on my way past.

The hole is a dogleg left, too, with trees at the corner of the dogleg. So if I manage to stay out of the backyards, I'm in jail with no shot to the green. It's an uphill tee shot to the crest in the fairway, and then downhill to the green.

If you managed to stay on the fairway, you still have a tough shot
over the bunker to the green.

I guess. I mean, I don't think I've ever hit a second shot from the fairway, so I really wouldn't know. I think if I can manage to keep my tee shot in the fairway, a second shot should be up around the green, and then a chip-on and two putts should give me a bogey. That's the best I can hope for on this hole. Maybe I'll approach it with a 5-wood tee shot to try to keep it safe and play it as a par 4-and-a-half.