JB -
No one has commented, but I can't see Sand Hills being 2 full points better either. Don't get me wrong, Sand Hills is an incredible course/experience, but Ballyneal is right there and that is a compliment to Eric and his staff and our Tom Doak.
I respectfully disagree with both you and Matt. Sand Hills is very deserved of its margin of difference over Ballyneal and while quite supportive of its younger solid effort over in Colorado, not quite ready to yield any of it magnificant brilliance to this modern-day attempt at emulation. Of course, Matt was just in Sand Hills (10+ years ago) so he's especially well equipped to offer such a fresh and timely comparison.
Sand Hills has superior scale and size and a measure of vastness not found yet in Holyoke. All of its holes are unique to each other (without some measure of the repetitiveness found at Ballyneal). It has the finest artist known to the world: Mother Nature, as its primary architect, with just a little help(mostly identification and minor shaping) from C&C. Ballyneal does indeed have the genius of one of today's greatest living architects, but I'll still go with a combo of Mother Nature and Bill Coore (and Ben)! Try to remember that only one course has evolved with only ONE handmade bunker and ONE constructed green. If flattery is the sincerest form of compliment, then yes, Ballyneal is an instant and lovely success.
Don't get me wrong. I think Ballyneal is a marvelous and very worthy effort by Doak & Co. to produce another fantastic example of what can be conceived of by man on a golf-friendly property. However, some of the features at BN don't amaze me or incite passion the way others do at Sand Hills. The constant triplexing and micro-chaotic mounding of the BN greens become redundant and borderline goofy in spots and they appear in no less than every other hole. That does effectively limit future green speeds to shy of 10-11(admitted by BN's own powers-that-be) without becoming patently unfair. Pins tucked between micro-mounds felt bothersome and artificial to myself and our playing group. Such a result is certainly not horrible, nor onerous, but it does impose some limit nonetheless. Putting on mid-August greens at Sand Hills requires an Oakmont or Augusta -like deft touch and stirs the senses, at least for me. Great putters (and I'm not even hinting at belonging to that league) savor the experience of finding a subtle break with lightening speed.
The short and yet well built par fours at BN all seem to repeat a pattern of slight dog-legging right-to-left routing and, while balanced versus the wind and the routing of the other holes, don't offer much change in shot strategy. #7 at BN, like its brethren at SH, is simply an all-world golf hole and neither can be ascribed one iota of fault or criticism. However, tell me where is there at BN a back-to-back doppelganger, diametrically strategic pair wind-reversed holes like 7-8 at Sand Hills?
Another GCA'er played with me at BN and we both hit horrible, but vastly different shots into BN's 15th (from the tips) , yet we watched how each ball was funneled (by very different routes) to rest less than 12 ft from the hole. Can someone tell me why that is considered "amazing" architecture or design? Even the punch bowls at NGLA or The Creek don't give it up that easily. Try that at any par 3 (especially a similarly distanced #13 or even the 3rd..coming from different sides) at Sand Hills and tell me that can happen?
Like trying to compare Sebonack to Shinnecock or Doonbeg to Ballybunion, this comparison just doesn't make it in my book. One has earned its accolades and stood the test of at least a decade, while the other has yet to see what its own greens will play like under real prairie-like summer conditions.
I don't say any of this to demean Ballyneal, the O'Neals,Tom Doak, or its members or staff. In fact, my hats off to them all (and especially the O'Neals) for the vision and execution that has produced something so very worthy and special. They get the concept and delivery of open prairie, dunes golf, and that can't be said for all the projects in that range.
I've had this same conversation with several very thoughtful, sensible and wise GCA'ers (inc. one member) and they all agreed that perhaps BN is not quite ready for the royal "coronation" by this treehouse, especially based on one, albeit limited, season of play.
So I'm all for exampling the wonder of Mr. Doak's work with pictures and praises, but IMHO, this ain't no contest...One is Sand Hills, the other a worthy candidate for runner-up, but thats my opinion and I'm sticking to it!
I am ready for all the GCA arrows & spears...start hurling!!!