\r\n\r\nIf you were a real artist back in the day, the more skilled you were the more you could use the slopes to your advantage. That's why Tiger was and is so good, and Faldo before him. Changing trajectory and spin rates... that is fun. Now it is all about how high and hard you can hit it.\r\n\r\nOne of the other things I love about Augusta is that it goes beyond my level of creativity.\r\n\r\nI've got a good creative mind but it was only when I went there and went round with a local caddie before the tournament that I realised what creativity was.\r\n\r\nThe 6th would be a great example of that. The green has a shelf and that day the flag was front left, miles away from that shelf. He said to me, \"If you miss it left, how do you play it?\" I said, \"Well you have to hit a dead weight shot so it just gets to the top and then creeps down.\" But you could actually hit the chip right up the back of the green and then let it feed all the way back down. Because the green is so quick and there is so much undulation, my mind couldn't initially see that.\r\n\r\nKingsbarns is another that is right there for me. Links golf as a whole does it for me because every single day it is fun and every single day it is different, even if it's the exact same pin positions and tees \u2013 because it changes so much with the weather.\r\n\r\nIf you don't have that weather variable, that's when variety is so key for a golf course to be fun. I like to see myself having to work my your way through your golf bag; that's a strong sign a course has variety.\r\n\r\nSo a mix of par 4s that you can drive but also ones where you have to hit a long iron into the green. Ones where you can take it on and it might be an eagle waiting for you but also a big score.\r\n\r\nPar 5s that you can try to reach like 13 at Augusta; they have that risk-reward element which is crucial for me. And I want par 3s where you can blow up, like 12 at Augusta or 17 at Sawgrass, or the Postage Stamp. They are short but you know there is a big score waiting to happen if you get it wrong. Mentally that's the challenge.\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\nI'm a member at Formby so I've played Formby Ladies many times. It's brilliant and has some of the best par 3s you'll ever play. They are arguably every bit as good as those on main course there, and that's saying something.\r\n\r\nI grew up learning the game on Formby Ladies; my dad used to take me quite a lot because the length of the holes was perfect, so I got to feel what an adult would get to feel playing a standard-length course.\r\n\r\nI could reach par 4s in two and use the same kind of clubs as they did, so I wasn't just hitting woods into every hole. Which is possibly a lesson for higher handicappers to heed...\r\n\r\nThe irony is that now because of advances in club technology, when I play most men's courses, if I hit driver on every hole I'm just wearing out my wedges or driving the green, so I'm not getting the most out of it. And there's no fun in taking a six-iron off every tee so I admit it, I just hit driver!\r\n
\"The Old Course is misunderstood. People think you can hit it anywhere; you can, but you won't beat me. Because I know the angles you need to approach each green.\"<\/blockquote>\r\nProbably most creativity is now around the greens. Kingsbarns has these little compartments to the greens and of course the Old Course does.\r\n\r\nThe Old Course is misunderstood like that. People think you can hit it anywhere; you can, but you won't beat me. Because I know the angles you need to approach each green.\r\n\r\nAnd it all adds up, because if you take it down the harder driving lines with the bunkers on the right, you have so much more chance to get it close, especially if the flags are in tricky spots.\r\n\r\nThere's a fun course for you \u2013 the Old. And I know it like the back of my hand because it is a course you love to learn. If you put me on any green and gave me any putt I could tell you what it will do in a second. One of my strengths was being able to work out what I needed to do \u2013 less of a strength was being able to execute it!\r\nNCG's Top 100 Fun Golf Courses in GB&I<\/h3>\r\n
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- Click here for the full list<\/a><\/li>\r\n<\/ul>\r\n
Want more?<\/h3>\r\n
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- How we compiled our Top 100 fun ranking<\/a><\/li>\r\n \t
- What do tour pros consider 'fun'? We asked them<\/a><\/li>\r\n \t
- 'Quirkiness and unfairness' \u2013 architect Frank Pont's fun essentials<\/a><\/li>\r\n \t
- What makes our fun course? Our Top 100 panel explain<\/a><\/li>\r\n<\/ul>\r\nWhat's the most fun golf course you've ever played? Let us know in the comments below or you can join the conversation on Twitter<\/a>, Facebook<\/a> and Instagram<\/a>.<\/i>\r\n