TBJ,Welcome, and please do stick around and chat. We only half as nasty and twice as crazy as we seem. However, as Patrick Mucci mentions, there are some strong opinions and heated passions that drive this board so be prepared to take much of it with intellectual curiosity, open-mindedness, and good humor. Bottom line; if you have a love for golf course architecture, you'll find compatriots here.Now, back to discussion... I find it very interesting that you mentioned the USGA would not consider Merion for future events unless they did something about their bunkering. That contention has been alluded to before, but it's the first time I've heard it stated as fact. The fact is also that most people (including most in here familiar with the situation) recognized that bunker restoration work needed to be done and was in fact ongoing with a different architect and lots of meticulous handwork, prior to Tom Fazio's involvement. Differences over approach and timing eventually led to a different contractor and architect. The resulting bunker work was done in a much quicker timeframe (less than a year for 120+ bunkers) and others can make their own judgements on the results. As to the USGA, I wonder if they haven't been a little disengenuous with Merion. Everyone knows what "USGA event" Merion is seeking; the US Open. In past years, Merion has done a lot of work to try to curry USGA favor (including the bunker work, as per your post), yet it seems their are two unchangeable realities that the USGA has only previously hinted at;1) The golf course is too short. Recently, a head USGA official (can't recall the name at the moment) stated publicly that pros would be approaching greens at Merion with wedges on over 12 holes. Whether that is overstatement or not, it seems that after years of asking Nick Price and others for their opinions of the course, the USGA has come to the "too short" conclusion, despite the addition of a number of new "championship" tees by the club in recent years.2) There is not enough space for corporate tents, et.al., nor enough space for the 30,000+ paying spectators the USGA wants each day. Best estimates are that Merion could only support about 13,000 people on the grounds.I understand and mostly support the desire of Merion to do whatever they felt they had to for another US Open given the historic nature of the club and the greatness of the golf course. I only wish the USGA had been more forthright about their intentions, or lack thereof, in a more expedient manner. It seems the club has done a lot of work in an effort to convince the USGA otherwise. Perhaps I'm wrong, and I hope I am, but it seems to me that the USGA has deemed Merion as only worthy for a US Amateur, and perhaps a Senior Open. The Amateur seems strange to me, because like the Buy.Com tour fellas, the Amateurs tend to hit the ball even further than the touring pros. If Merion is deemed too short to provide an adequate test for one group, then I don't understand the paradox.