Interesting discussion about Seminole.
That course has pretty much always been considered a very very good one and maybe a great one. The most interesting thing about that fact is no one has every really been able to pin-point exactly why it is. That, in and of itself is pretty cool for starters.
Are there any good golf course analysts who've ever maintained that Seminole's reputation as a very good or great course is over-blown? There sure have been but frankly all of them have maintained that opinion only when first seeing it or before they came to really know it (the fact is when most anyone first just looks at the course there's really nothing about it that just jumps out at you!
). I've never seen anyone say it's reputation is overblown after they've come to know the course over time.
But still, I've never seen anyone really pin-point exactly why the course is very good or great. Pat's attempting to do that here on this thread and he may have some good points. But still, I think Seminole is always going to remain somewhat of an engima as to why it's very good or great. And that's pretty cool.
One thing that's fairly undeniable about Seminole is a good golf analyst can say it's reputaion is overblown particularly after going out and shooting a good score on it but if anyone plays the course enough they will come to know that when you play it again a day, a week or a month later it can just kill you and it's sometimes hard to figure out why or what happened.
The course probably is great for a whole host of very subtle reasons but all in all the reasons why are always going to be pretty enigmatic, in my opinion.
In one of the early Coleman's I shot a 90 the first day and a 70 the next day, and to be honest I never did figure out what it was about me or the course that made that happen like that. I thought I actually hit the ball better the first day. (Actually, if I really think back and analyze why that may've happened the way it did and particuarly to the extent it did I just may be able go a long way to understanding why Seminole can do this the way it does even to some very good players--which does not include me!
). Hint---it basically happens on and around the greens and green-ends because essentially Seminole has never been a particularly penal course the way most of us think of a penal course!
One thing should be said about Seminole today compared to the way it was over 10-15 years ago. Today they have a general maintenance meld on that golf course that has completely turned the lights up on everything it is---even if it's still mysterious as to what that is.
15 years ago Seminole was basically asleep for about 20-30 years in the way it was maintained. Back then there never was that vast spectrum in scoring from any kind of player there can be today or in the last ten years even including the wind variations. That alone is very interesting and should be analyzed because basically it speaks to how good classic architecture can best show its stuff with certain maintenance applications. The reason for that began with Barry Van Gerbig who basically came in and did a bunch of things over a few years which just turned the lights up full blast on the inherent architecture of the course.
Is Seminole near the edge in basic set-up or "Ideal maintenance meld" application? It sure is! A whole slew of the winter residents from my club in Philly who belong to Seminole are beginning to filter back up north now and they say the course is just so hard to play most of the time now.
Can you get that effect, that kind of interesting spectrum on any golf course the same way and to the same degree they can and do at Seminole? I don't think so and in my opinion that's just another part of the on-going enigma and mystery of why Seminole is very good or great.