WAKEY WAKEY
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WAKEFIELD GOLF CLUB |
https://www.wakefieldgolfclub.co.uk/ |
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Type of course |
Parkland |
18 holes |
Par 72 |
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Course distance |
White 6653 yds |
Yellow 6271 yds |
Red 5596 yds |
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Holes |
3 x Par 3 |
12 x Par 4 |
3 x Par 5 |
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Played |
16/07/25 |
Rating 70.9 |
Slope 125 |
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Claim to Fame: is among the oldest private members clubs in Yorkshire |
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According to Google, Wakefield is a cathedral city in West
Yorkshire, located on the River Calder. Popular attractions include The
Hepworth Art Gallery, Wakefield Cathedral and Sandal Castle. Secondary mentions
are attributed to the largest high security prison in Western Europe, HMP
Prison Wakefield, Heath Common and Wakefield Trinity RL team.
A comfortable drive of just over an hour from Hull and only16
minutes off the M62, sees you pass the grazing horses on the common and a quick
read of the golf course web site reveals that in 1891 this was the original
site of the first nine-hole course. The move to its current 18 hole home in the
Woodthorpe region taking place in 1912.
As we journeyed through the outskirts of Wakefield the
Metronome mentioned this was the only golf course he had played where the Pro’
explained the speed of the greens were running at 9 on the stimpmeter!
What then is a stimpmeter you may ask? Invented in the USA by A Mr Edward S Stimpson Snr in 1935, the
Stimpmeter is a graded chute used to measure the speed of a golf course putting
green by applying a known velocity to a golf ball and measuring the distance
travelled in feet.
A more detailed explanation can be found on https://www.golfmonthly.com/features/the-game/what-is-a-stimpmeter-and-how-does-it-work-137700.
On arriving a tight bend sees you enter a two-tiered car park, which the Judge had warned would be overcrowded. As ever his recollection was blurry and there was plenty of room to be had. Today’s tour of duty saw the Judge in absentia. A prearranged visit to the Driffield Show had taken precedent. Rumour had it he was in search of the best jacket potato money could buy. A connoisseur of the humble spud, he was intent on seeking the Holy Grail of taters, something that would eclipse his favourite, Bannister Frozen Jacket Potato. Unfortunately there was no sighting of this golden tuber and he had to content himself with a tractor tour.
With time to spare we settled in for the complimentary tea and coffee, with the opportunity to purchase baps/rolls/buns/breadcakes (delete appropriately, dependent on your place of birth) of varying greasy degree. Prices, £4 for bacon, £4.50 for bacon and sausage. As ever the Doc comes up with a cunning wheeze. Buy two bacon and sausage, request a bap and bingo, three for the price of two!
He never fails to think outside the money box. Not letting anything go to waste, his partner in crime, the Big Easy, pockets the gratis sauce sachets for home consumption. Handy opts for a double egg, the Beau abstains and of the two late arrivals, the C_ns_n_nt K_d tucks into a double egg and bacon, while his Tuesday buddy, the Baker declines. For as his pseudonym suggests he had better things on offer.
The view from the practice green down the 18th and
1st was delightful and we were welcomed at the 1st by a
lady member, with a fine Irish lilt. Full explanation of the competition rules
was provided and we were off.
The 1st at 306 yards, S12, par 4, had three
bunkers running down the right-hand side of the fairway, the tee shot was off
left. The Metronome went right avoiding the bunkers, the Beau went further
right into the trees, I happily went left and Handy even further left. On
arriving at our balls Handy’s was nowhere to be seen, although on the edge of
the 18th a rectangular sump tank dug into the ground appeared to
have swallowed his ball. With ball retriever in hand he was able to find many
but not his own. The Beau, eventually escaping the tree line found a greenside
bunker. The Metronome parred although I bogeyed first and was on the card. Two
points for us, zero for the other two.
The 2nd par 3, 134 yards SI 18 is hit downhill.
Handy found the green, we didn’t. A Par for Handy a bogey for the Metronome.
The par 4 3rd a dog leg right with a blind shot over the rising hill stands at 318 yards, SI 16. Atop of the
mound stood a spotter, ensuring nobody in the advance party could be hit by an errant tee shot. Allfour drives were good. As we moved on the spotter suggested there was no excuse for four birdies and we should aim for the near left hand side of the green. No problem, I went right, the Beau found a bunker and Handy and the Metronome were short of the green. A bogey for me and Handy and we moved on.
Relatively speaking if the tee shots are satisfactory the
first three holes are easy openers, which tend to fill you with confidence.
The 4th SI 2, par 4 at 391 yards begins to test the average
golfer and Handy and the Metronome both bogey.
At the 5th a ditch runs across the front of the fairway and a bridge like the one over the Swilken Burn on the Old Course at St Andrews enables passage. St Andrews was the favourite course of a member, Alan Slater and was erected in his memory in 1988. A member for 56 years he represented Yorkshire on 122 occasions, won the English Open Amateur Strokeplay Championship at Woodhall Spa, and reached the final of the Amateur Championship in 1955 at Royal Lytham and St Annes. This the first of three par 5’s on the course which saw Handy and the Metronome par.
The sixth sees a point each for me and Handy at this 331yard,
par 4, SI 14
Holes 7 and 8 sees pars once again for Handy and the
Metronome. Not bad considering at the par 5 8th tee Handy’s drive
was similar to that of a Barnes Wallis 2nd world war invention.
The 9th sees me dig in for a bogey along with Handy.
Throughout the outer circle nine Handy, wearing a knee brace
reminiscent of a knight’s greave had limped along as his recurring knee problem
was giving him jip but when it came to scoring he had bagged 8 holes in a row The
Beau on the other hand was nowhere to be seen, he was there in spirit but sadly
not in body.
As we stopped for a drink in the halfway house Handy was
hoping his good buddy would come alive on the back nine and perhaps contribute
to the scoring thus forcing them onto the prize board. With the Beau reclining on the 10th tee
his body language didn’t indicate this was going to happen any time soon. Wakey, wakey!
As a foursome we could be described as Sir Limp a Lot and the Wakefield Trinity. Sir Limp a lot galloped along like a Kight’s Templer on a crusade. The three person Christian Godhead of the Father, (the Metronome) of all that is golf, the Son, (me) a petulant child and the Holy Spirit (the Beau) a divine being. He was certainly ethereal when it came to the scoring. The Burnley boy was just having one of those days, when no matter what you do nothing goes right and we have all been there, me more than most.
Nine down and its 17 points apiece. Nothing to write home
about but its comfortable. As for the other two pairs, not for the first time
this season the Big Easy and the Doc are hitting low twenties, the K_d and the
Baker not far behind.
The Baker is renowned in golfing circles for his culinary
delights and colleagues are always ensured of a tasty pastry as they
circumnavigate the course. Today was no different and individually wrapped
sausage rolls were distributed to the gang. Quality seasoned sausage meat mixed
with caramelised red onion, enclosed in a light flaky pastry were welcomed by
one and all. We all agreed he is one hell of a Master Baker.
Progressing the inner circle back nine, Sir Limp a Lot
continued his quest.
The par 4 10th
SI 7 at 371 yards has a dry gulch running across the fairway but it interfered with no one and off came Handy
with 2 points to my 1.
Hole 11 is the second and most difficult par 5 on the course.
SI 1 at 520 yards. Handy pars, the Metronome bogeys. No sign of the Beau but
there is still time.
The par 4 12th an innocuous downhiller with a slight dog leg left at the end is only 293 yards long, SI
17. The Beau fires off and it looks good as it rolls to the right of the green. We follow and all are good. As we reach the green one ball is missing. No prizes for guessing who it belongs to. It’s in a ditch. Unperturbed the lanky Lancastrian enters the ditch with sand wedge in hand and hits out, straight into the adjacent bunker! When your lucks out its out. A bogey for me and another par for the hobbled knight of the realm.
Hole 13 with a ditch running down the right-hand side is a
little confusing, although only 324 yards par 4, SI 15, the green appears to be
partially hidden by a number of low lying trees. The 13th green
however is uphill to the right and unfortunately for the K_d and the Baker they
both fire towards this 3rd green thereby putting pay to any chance
of scoring here. Thankfully the Doc and the Big Easy clock it before we tee off
and some frantic waving from the Doc informs us as to the direction of travel.
Par apiece for the Metronome and Handy.
Hole 14 SI 3 380 yards, still no sign of you know who, surely,
he would get on the card here. Par, par, Metronome and Handy. Let’s move on,
shall we?
Hole 15 SI 5 par 4 at 346 yards we are all on in regulation.
Handy putts first, he’s close but not close enough. Up steps the Beau, hands
shaking, knees trembling, lips wobbling. He putts, the ball rolls logo over
logo, its close but not close enough, before Handy can set himself for a sure-fire
par, the Beau skurries up to his ball and it drops into the honey pot. As he
walks away smiling, the Metronome congratulates him and the relief is palpable.
He’s back, three holes left, things can only get better. Or not, as the case
maybe.
The 16th SI 13, a rising par 3 at 173 yards. The Metronome, with a fine curving downhill putt, joins the 2’s club and pockets a sleeve of balls. Handy pars, me and the Beau do not.
The 17th is a blind drive over the brow of the
hill, I’m off right, the Beau and Handy find the fairway and the Metronome
unfortunately finds a fairway bunker belonging to the first tee. One point for
me, three for Handy.
Much to the relief of the Beau we eventually reach the 18th
383 yards SI 11 par 4. A tree lined fairway rising up to the green sitting
immediately in front of the clubhouse. Once again Handy pars but not before he
returns to the sump like pond and once again searches for his lost ball. Perhaps
he was expecting the Lady of the Lake to raise the ball above the stagnant,
algae ridden surface and hand it to him on a golden tee, sadly no, as he once
again becomes enveloped by the reeds.
On completion the card reads as follows: Handy 10, pars and 6 and bogeys. The Beau 1 bogey. Me and
the Metronome nine apiece but the Metronome’s consist of a 1 birdy, 5 pars and 3 bogeys. Not so for me and we finish on a lowly 34 points. In all honesty we did have a lot of close calls but they weren’t close enough.
The C_ns_n_nt K_d and the Baker undone at the 13th
still come away with an creditable 39 points. The Big Easy and the Doc miss out
on the prizes, scoring 43 points and finishing 7th on the
leaderboard and as for Handy Solo what an amazing effort. 38 points.
Retiring
to the veranda our gourmet players heads are once again turned by the bar menu.
The Doc always looking for a good deal, goes for a lasagne only to be
disappointed when it arrives in a dish the size of a ramakin. The K_d and The Master
Baker plump for a lightly battered almost tempura fish with traditional fries
and as the incoming players amass at the bar, the Big Easy engages the female
bartender in a deep and meaningful conversation. “What” he asks, “is the tuna,
cheddar and onion panina?”. ”Well”, she muses, “it’s a panini” pausing for
thought, “with tuna”, and as she realises where this is going, begins to
falter, “erm, with cheddar” and while raising a smile adds “and onion”. With
the detail cleared up a deep debate follows concerning the price on the menu in
comparison with that paid at the till. With the bar now six deep, the
conversation quickly moves on and the Big Easy eventually acquiesces to the
demands of an extra 50p, much to the relief of the many thirsty, sweaty, Yorkshiremen
gagging for a pint. As for me a bag of Kettle crisps and a shandy suffice and
we haven’t even mentioned the Metronome’s quirk of adding his own milk to a cup
of tea.
All bar one agreed it had been a fine day on a forgiving
course with gently rolling hills and sharp greens, set in pleasant surroundings,
to the point where Sir Limp A Lot is considering returning with the Good Lady
Trace a Vere for an 18 hole joust.











A good read
ReplyDeleteFair enough
ReplyDelete