The grandfather of American golf, C.B. Macdonald became the country’s first golf course architect (and also coined the term) when he designed the historic Chicago Golf Club.

The Chicago native picked up golf while he attended St. Andrews University. During his studies of courses in Scotland, Macdonald identified 21 different hole designs or “templates” that would test a great player’s game while allowing mediocre and poor players angles and options to score well.

These “template holes” are typically easy to identify after a little schooling, and we’ve got an entire page of stories dedicated to them. Can you identify them below? Have a little fun and share your scores with us on Twitter/X, Bluesky or Instagram.

READ ON: Learn More About Template Holes

MORE ON TEMPLATE HOLES

C.B. Macdonald’s Ideal Holes: The Double Plateau Template (Fried Egg Golf YouTube)

C.B. Macdonald’s Ideal Holes: The Biarritz Template (Fried Egg Golf YouTube)

Golf Architecture Mailbag: Most Exciting New Courses, The Lido, Are Template Holes Lazy? (Fried Egg Golf Podcast)

What to Know About Seth Raynor ft. Anthony Pioppi (Fried Egg Golf Podcast)

Yolk with Doak 18: Templates, His Routing Book, and Modern Green Speeds (Fried Egg Golf Podcast)

Bandon Deep Dives: Old Macdonald (Fried Egg Golf Podcast)