James:
I'm mystified why you suggest the supporters of KH have made a very poor fist of the case. It is obvious: they love virtually everything about the layout! Especially the routing. Golfers fall under the spell of the majestic Morcom bunkering; the green complexes; the sheer playability of the course; the property's free-draining nature; KH's ability to test the shotmaking of contemporary golfers; its walkability and surprising roominess, given it is purported to be on a smallish acreage. In regard to fairway-widths, KH is ideal: narrow enough to starve off tee-shot complacency; wide enough not to induce bouts of claustrophobia. I usually avoid aligning myself to a course's world rating to bolster an argument, but in this instance, do those with negative KH vibes forget that it is rated 20/21 in the world, and has been in the top-30 for perhaps 50 years. Just think of all the incoming entrants to the top-100 over the past 50 years placing pressure on the "golden oldies". For a pre-WW11 course to maintain its position (and actually improve), makes a nonsense of all the adverse KH mail. I just don't get it.
It is easy, circa 2006, to slam Dan Soutar for materialising
holes which commence at the bottom of a hill, then
rise to an apex, before falling away. He did so on the 1st, 6th, slightly on the 8th, ever so slightly on the 9th, marginally on the 11th, the 15th prior to Alister Mackenzie's handiwork, and the 16th. The 17th is a different presentation all together - stretching away on level ground for a decent length. With the exception of the 15th, they were all bogey 5s. One must remember that holes such as these were "in vogue", and you only have to travel 15 minutes to see evidence of what Mackenzie conjured from RM's property.
The following holes at RMGC West start low and rise: 2nd marginally; 3rd moderately; 4th substantially; 9th substantially; 10th substantially; 12th appreciably; 17th substantially. And the 18th features a dramatic driving "up and over" spectre. Now I cannot ever recall RMGC getting slammed for this routing tendency of having 8 holes appear in this form. And you can add the famous par-3 7th, too. Rather, the West Course is justifiably praised for Alsiter Mackenzie's super hole-configuration. Why should Soutar be made out to be a dill? I count myself as a fan of the old Scot.