Ben:
The green speeds at Oakmont are a whole subject in and of itself--believe me!!
First of all, Oakmont and their famous green speeds has never chased another golf course to acheive green speed! Forget about the modern fascination and misguided craze of quoting the latest high stimp number that some courses have gotten into!
In my opinion, Oakmont has not only NOT gotten into that but they have in fact been super fast for many decades before the stimpmeter was even conceived of or invented! In a word, they were far faster far longer ago than any golf course in the world!! Far faster far longer ago than apparently anyone realizes!!
Pete Dye did a very detailed historic photographic analysis of whether the greens of Oakmont really were as fast as they were reputed to be back in the 1960s (for US Opens). Pete's conclusion was that they were not as fast as reputed simply because a particular piece of green mowing equipment had not yet been invented and produced so consequently Oakmont's green speeds simply could not possibly have been as fast back then as some believed.
In my opinion, Pete's analysis, assumptions and his conclusions are wholly wrong and I think I've found not only the evidence to prove it but also the person who can prove it!!
The fact of those extraordinary speeds probably going back to the 1930s and 1940s all rests with the design and maintenance ideas of Mr Fownes (calling for super fast greens on his course alone) but more particularly with some innovative and creative green mowing and equipment rigging practices of one Emil Loeffler, Oakmont's super famous superintendent (and possibly partial co-designer).
But that's another story.
I did ask the super what the speeds were for the Penn State Amateur and what he could have had the green speeds at if the course had not gotten so much rain over the weekend but I'm just not going to mention on here what those stimp speeds were or could have been because the knowledge of that number would be downright dangerous!
The important thing to realize and understand is that no club understands what high green speeds are all about and how to manage and handle them on their own particular course better than Oakmont does! They do understand what the character of their greens means, obviously, and the idea of thoughtless "softening" is not in their mindset!
They probably also are well aware that in the area of super fast greens Oakmont could be responsible for their own "Oakmont syndrome" that would encourage other courses to get on the train of higher speeds that those other courses could not handle.
But I don't see them doing that! I've never seen them do that! But the thing to keep in mind is that they are very fast and have been that way far far longer than anyone realizes, including Pete Dye.
I played in a state amateur at Oakmont about ten years ago and can truthfully say I've seen a lot of very fast greens in my life but nothing like Oakmont's.
But the important thing to keep in mind is they know what they're doing, they know exactly how to do it, they always have and they don't advertize it for other courses.
There's a ton of uniqueness to Oakmont, their greens speeds being just one element.
Also, this whole concept of the "ideal maintenance meld" I talk about--I have not seen another American golf course that has so completely tapped into it's own "ideal maintenance meld" as comprehensively and totally as has Oakmont.
If you want to see what it is (the "ideal maintenance meld") go take a look at Oakmont when it hasn't rained in a while! It's the ultimate in "ideal maintenance meld"!
And furthermore, I don't know if Merion and Pine Valley are talking and collaborating with Oakmont somehow but they also are moving quite quickly towards their own "ideal maintenance melds"!!