Andy, What you seem to be highlighting is that greatness doesn't follow any formulas.
Adam, yes, exactly. I have learned quite a bit from this site, but at the most basic level, I am still
very unclear what the smart folk even use as the criteria for what makes a course (or hole) great.
Now, Pat M will tell me that NGLA is a great course because of the complexity of the holes, the array of options, the wide playing surfaces in places etc . And everyone tends to agree.
But someone else will say that course XYZ is great, and there will often not be ANY options other than 'hit it here or else'. Is that great? I am not sure; I tend to think no, but in places it seems appropriate.
Others will then say as I read yesterday that #7 at Pebble Beach is a great par 3--is it? I have no idea, but I know if the exact same hole with the exact same dimensions were built flat swampy Florida rather than above the pacific, none of us would give it a second look other than to say 'pitch and putt hole'.
So perhaps there are no set definitions of what makes a course/hole great, as wide fairways are required to be great, and some courses with very narrow fairways are great....
Let me go back a little in time -- I believed Bethpage Black to be great LONG BEFORE all the hoopla connected to the '02 Open and all those johnny-come-lately types who now rave about what the Black is.
Matt
No need to prove your bone fides with me.
My only contention is what makes a course great, and if a course lacks those things, can it be great anyway.
As driving is such a key component of the game, can a course that offers bowling alleys for fairways truly be considered great? If so, what does that mean, Matt, for what a great course is?
If a course had dull greens that had no impact on strategy, could that course be called great?