ColoradoHusk
Donor
The design of the green isn't necessarily bad. The set up from the tournament organizers made that green bad. They shouldn't have had the greens running that fast to where a ball would stop near the hole, but not stay on the slope of the green, and gather enough speed to where it would roll back down off the green.Yes, but, then you describe why that green is bad.
There is a difference between a false front and what that green is going with the ball rolling all the way from the middle after coming to a complete stop.
Maybe the whole green is designed to trick the player and they rarely have a pin location on the front of the green. Or maybe the greens on that course play much slower to make up for the slopes of the greens, and then the tournament organizers sped up the greens to levels where the slopes of the greens can't handle being played at that speed.
Greens are designed to have slope and speed of the greens in mind. The 15th hole at Augusta National has a good portion of the front of the green doesn't hold golf balls, especially the greens are playing firm and fast. There are a lot of greens in golf where certain areas of the green aren't able to have pin locations because of the severity of the slope. It doesn't mean that the green is poorly designed. It means the course greens keepers/tournament organizers have to take those areas in mind when setting pin locations.