 Par-3 14th on the Palmer course
|
With the eyes of the world on them, the Ryder Cup players from Europe and the United States are going to have to avoid some embarrassing situations during the three-day series of matches.
Three-putting, fluffed chips and drives finding watery graves are all expected to contribute to red faces on both sides.
While the greens on the Palmer course are more suited to the Europeans - Woosnam has demanded they're kept below 10.5 on the stimpmeter - the fairways might appeal to the Americans with little run on them after heavy rain deluged the course yesterday.
Officials will decide each day whether preferred lies will be enforced to avoid 'mud balls'. Whether 'preferred' means within six inches (no nearer the hole) under European Tour rules or one club length (under US PGA Tour legislation) has yet to be confirmed.
As for the rough, it has been allowed to grow up to six inches deep and will be lush and wet, with more rain forecast through the weekend.
Woosie's banking on his players being able to hit not only long, but straight.
One expert referred to the longer grass just off most fairways as 'brutal' - so expect some high scoring on some holes and it's not inconceivable that double-bogeys might be enough to win some holes.
As is their prerogative, Woosnam and his lieutenants, Des Smyth and Paul Broadhurst, have introduced some run-off areas and hollows around some of the greens. Used to playing shots from these kind of tight lies around the world, they're hoping Europe's wedge skills will provide a significant advantage over the USA's home-spun rookies.
Experience of the course, which has staged ten Smurfit European Opens, is also vital to the home side and just as much an advantage as the partisan Irish crowd.
It starts gently enough with two par-4s, with the third a 170-yard par-3 over water and a steep-faced bunker. The fourth (568 yards, par-5) sweeps downhill to a green peppered on its boundaries by bunkers.
And if the players think the long, uphill 5th and downhill 6th are tricky - they're nothing compared with the 7th (430 yards, par-4), which has a narrow fairway flanked by water which encroaches in to the front and back of the green and is played into an inevitable stiff breeze.