OK, so we're talking about the long placement on #13 at Dolese Youth Park in Oklahoma City. (The pics that are labeled #13 are actually of #15, so don't go by them.) Here's what it looks like:
The tee shot comes out of a wooded area and then you have two choices. You can hit a low (10') tunnel shot through a 20-foot gap that's maybe 100 feet in front of you or you can throw a towering anhyzer over the trees that form the left side of the gap.
Either way, your disc will need to annie around the woods on the right of the gap to a pin that's another 40 feet out and then a hard right turn for another 60 or so feet. Basically flat for the first half of the hole, slight downhill to the pin.
The problem comes with the wind, which half the time blows south-to-north (right-to-left) against your line on the second half of its flight.
So in other words, once your disc turns the corner and starts angling right toward the pin, the wind comes and slaps it down, hard.
I've seen this deuced in calm air or when the wind's blowing from the north, but not when the wind blows from the south. How would you attack this hole?
The tee shot comes out of a wooded area and then you have two choices. You can hit a low (10') tunnel shot through a 20-foot gap that's maybe 100 feet in front of you or you can throw a towering anhyzer over the trees that form the left side of the gap.
Either way, your disc will need to annie around the woods on the right of the gap to a pin that's another 40 feet out and then a hard right turn for another 60 or so feet. Basically flat for the first half of the hole, slight downhill to the pin.
The problem comes with the wind, which half the time blows south-to-north (right-to-left) against your line on the second half of its flight.
So in other words, once your disc turns the corner and starts angling right toward the pin, the wind comes and slaps it down, hard.
I've seen this deuced in calm air or when the wind's blowing from the north, but not when the wind blows from the south. How would you attack this hole?