Routing is like a magic trick. For some architects who create terraformed routings, there is little to it.
Not to pick on him, ah hell, I will, the Fazio orginization, so concerned with creating holes and terraforming earth to meet the creative needs don't really do routings and are more concerned and proud of hiding cart paths than routings. This leads to the really lousy routings of his best courses. Pine Barrens at World Woods, Galloway each a very good course has a really shitty routing. Probably his organization's best routing is Victoria because a routing really had to be done. They just HAD to work with those little islands. Nothing to shout about but a commercially good routing.
The bulldozing of land leads to less of a need for routig other than to finish 9 and 18 near the clubhouse. Modern architecture mostly for this reason fails miserably more than half the time in true routing, use of the land. Not that there aren't other obstacles to true routing greatness (Now speaking in generalities, BTW) such as wetlands and animal habitats, majority use of carts, routing often isn't necessary.
Tom Doak, I would think that not every project is 50/50 as you say. It is for your organization, but convince me that more than half of the projects done yearly over the last 10 years on non-core projects especially really cared about finding the best natural holes. Also, Tom, Pebble Beach could have easily been two loops of nine by placing the clubhouse elsewhere, no?
TimW, you are on the idea with PB. Thought for all:
The holes may not be exactly the holes we have today, but maybe more great holes would have existed in another routing. This is an exercise to be done. 11, 12, 15, 6,1,2, even 3-couldn't holes as good or better as these been produced elsewhere with the clubhouse situated near the spot adjacent to 6, 8 and 13, 14? It is such a good piece of land with mild elevation changes and lots of nooks and crannies, I doubt the current routing is necessarily the best and it is a sacred cow. I for one thinks the Nicklaus #5 adds little other than ocean aesthetics, the old hole wa a beaut.
Today courses not being golf only and terraformed, routing is hardly a consideration for most courses. It cannot be "rated" less "overrated". Only a small proportion of courses really have a routing since the initiation of co-development of golf courses with housing.
In a golf only core on a good piece of land it, too can be forced trying to find too many scenic spots, incorporate too many "specimen trees"-(ARCHITECTS..... Why not put the specimens out to the side or between holes rather than build holes around them?) place the ponds, clubhouse, frame the views, pave the paths-all distractions.
How often do we really have a routing rather than a stringing or a connecting?
How often do we have a routing to appreciate or evaluate? With few exceptions, this is a totally transformed part of architecture vs. pre 1950. Uncommon is the routing that does little more than loops or sets of loops. Routing has achieved political correctness as Mr. Cirba has suggested re: paired 3's. Fazio is proud of back to back 5's however and has done it frequently. BElfair West comes quickly to mind.
Older, well-routed courses are rarely challenged by today's routings. I vote for "over-rated" regarding today's transformed constructions as they often don't really exist.