The participation of all the classes of golf industry professionals, including architects, superintendents, construction team and golf pros benefit this site and are valuable assets. I would not want to compromise their contributions with layers of constraints, but rather see open dialog. Sometimes it may be best not to say anything, but honesty is supremely important from us all.
I did not read the Whitten article. In fact, I don't subscribe to any golf magazines. I only seem to buy them at airports. I guess I'm in the minority there. I don't understand why the comparison needed to be made whether or not it was disclosed that there was the potential for conflict. Human nature being what it is, where there is potential there is often a realization of that potential. Why couldn't he have simply written separate articles about the two courses and in separate editions?
Is it customary for him to compare recent designs that are so closely matched in terms of target market and intent? If not, he chose an awfully poor first step. If it is his custom, he should have recused himself to avoid any perception of conflict. The magazine should have insisted upon it independently of Whitten's decision to write the piece. It seems like a lot of checks and balances went unused. Too bad. Is the value of the article worth compromising one's integrity? It is small reward for giving up so much.
However, this is a discussion group. We need to discuss openly and honestly. I believe an architects, supers or construction professionals do not create a potential for conflict if they speak openly about their own work. Comparisons between their work and others, where they are not intimately aware of the mandates, constraints on/in the ground and budgetary are meaningless anyway.
I wouldn't think the folks at Chambers Bay would open themselves up to Whitten for his article if they knew he was comparing the course with his own in a feature article. If he did go there to interview them and conduct research, did he disclose the fact that his article was such an analysis? I just think the article crossed the line needlessly. Could it possibly have been worth it? I don't see how.