A couple of days ago, I was looking at the 1989 US Amateur program and took note of the fact that many of the tee boxes at Merion are not positioned in line with the fairways, and probably intentionally so.
Then, I noticed the bunker that sits about 20 yards over the 3rd green, in a place that makes one scratch their head over it's seemingly useless placement.
Recent topics here have discussed blind shots, split fairways, and classic restorations of late have focused on bringing back original features that have been discarded over time.
Which got me thinking...
Back when many of these courses were built, the architect in charge was generally assumed to be the only person who had a clue about how to build a golf course. Many of the early pioneers were either former professionals, or others who happened to grow up "in the game", like Tillinghast or Ross.
Generally, these men had their way with a design to a great extent, without every Tom, Dick, or Harry (like us), every developer, every club member or paying customer, generally scrutinizing and criticising the work of the architect.
Over time, this seems to have led to a general expectation and public mindset of what is sound golf architecture, and I think you'd agree that if you came upon a course that didn't have fairly homogenic features (i.e. multiple sets of tees), you'd be fairly surprised.
Playing at Yale recently, my first thought on seeing the wild 10th hole was "nobody would ever build a hole like this today". The same could be said for holes like the 17th at TOC, or the 1st or 6th green at NGLA, or the off-center tees at Merion, or the blind 11th at Reading CC, for that matter.
In examining why this would be, it occurred to me that the design of those holes is too far out of some safe "norm" that the lowest common denominator majority of the golfing public expects to find in a golf hole.
Which leads to the question; if greater public knowledge of architecture is generally agreed to be a good thing, why has the advancement of that knowledge to date instead created an expectation of what a golf course should be that seems to fundamentally stifle anything truly different, unorthodox, or wildly creative?