"This does not make Shinnecock my favorite course. I prefer Crystal Downs and Dornoch mostly for aesthetic reasons, yet might well admit that SHGC is a better course."
Michael:
You know, those words of yours just might be the real key to some of the mysteriousness of Shinnecock's greatness, and why so many players of all calibers respect it so much, even think they like it but nevertheless may not want to play it with regularity.
To play Shinnecock well or really well just doesn't look to be as hard as it is. That it IS hard to play well is also not debatable---it has proven that over and over again. In that way it just may be the easiest looking really hard course on the planet. On the other hand, there's no question at all that great courses like Oakmont, Pine Valley, Merion, HVGC et al look every bit as hard as they are and probably a lot more so in some cases.
There was a wonderful old remark in the movie "The Sting" where Henry Gondorf (Newman) explained to Redford's character that the key to being a really good and successful
grifter/conman isn't just to pull off the con but to do what he called "Hold the Con" so the people conned would never know what exactly happened to them.
Shinnecock, in my opinion, is able to "hold the con" better than any great golf course in the world and this is probably why both it and its greatness has always been so mysterious to me.
But I really learned a lot about that mysteriousness this time around.
What I learned is why so many of the little things about its architecture work as they do. AND, having come to know that so much better I realize what that golf course is really doing to me and so many others is just exposing the inadequacies of me and my game in a pretty kind and gentle way compared to so many other courses and their "in your face" architecture. If a golf course can do that to golfers day in and day out it's pretty hard to get mad at it or its architecture.
That may be the true mystery of Shinnecock. Of course, in my opinion, "mystery" is one of perhaps up to three of golf architecture's greatest over-all assets. It's architecture's way of "holding the con".