Tom,
I don't know how anybody can conclude that I was setting anything up to insist Flynn was smarter than you or any other golf course architect. In a sense I was pointing out the opposite that these guys may have been designing greens that could not be maintained as intended over long periods of time. It beats me why some modern architects believe that I am championing some dead guy over them. It is much more an artifact of observations made and materials on hand that relate to Flynn because that is whom I am studying.
I was giving an example of a design that had, on paper, a complex outline and built that way which is now a simplified oval with significant lost green space and pin positions. I used the Flynn drawing because that is what I have and that is all. Nothing nefarious need be implied as none was intended.
There is photographic evidence and on-site evidence that there was at least a representative sample of greens that were built as drawn. Squiggly lines were not meant to add flourish and sway green committees. At least there is no evidence that supports such a notion. Sure, not all greens were built exactly as drawn (and I'm sure not all the drawings we have may be the final iterations) and others were changed shortly thereafter. But the fact is, we have 1916, 1924, 1930 and 1934 drawings of Merion East and these subsequent drawings show what was there. Same with the Cascades, Rolling Green and was once true of Shinnecock and others.
I appreciate your methods differ and are more in line with those of Ian and Mike Young. That is not at all a surprise since so much is different now and Flynn's approach seemed radically different even in his time.
You say maybe Flynn was better as you think I may be implying. I don't necessarily feel that way. I think you were far better at Atlantic City for instance. It was vastly improved by your efforts. But that is not what I'm getting at. I don't know how it got interpreted that way. I think in his era where it was hard to make changes given the equipment of the day, it was probably a preferred method (for his time) to design on paper rather than redesign on the ground.
My question remains, if Flynn built as he drew (and there is a load of evidence that he did), what can be done to restore back to that (I think the advantages for classic courses to defend themselves if done are obvious) and maintain them as such? Or are they too difficult to maintain from a cost/benefit analysis? That's all I want to know. Honest. I am not making any judgements or comparisons.