Andy,
I'll forgive you for not answering all of the questions on the first try. There sure were a lot of them!
Blackwolf Run is an interesting example. Almost everyone I know who has played the course has strongly disliked at least one hole (13 is a popular choice, and my choice, with 9 and 16 also receiving votes), but had very positive things to say about the course as a whole.
Tom,
Very interesting! I had always assumed that, while players might focus on a few exhilirating holes or shots (or a few negatively memorable holes or shots) in evaluating a course, a designer would simply try to maximize the overall quality of holes and let the great ones emerge organically, instead of conciously prioritizing the creation of great holes. But it makes perfect sense.
Can you think of a case in which the order of your priorities mattered -- e.g., where you could have avoided an indifferent or bad hole but did not because you would have had to sacrifice a great hole in the process, or where you accepted one or two weaker supporting holes to avoid one bad one?
With respect to great courses without great holes, I meant to ask about courses with a few holes that stand out
from the rest of the course. Do you really think that there are none of those? That was my reaction to Oakmont: I thought that there were many great holes, but no standout holes within the flow of the course. I finished and wanted to go right out and play again, but there wasn't any one hole or shot specifically that I wanted to play over and over again. I recognize that my reaction to Oakmont might be idiosyncratic, but isn't it possible to have a great course that commonly elicits my reaction to Oakmont?
Sean,
Regarding Carne, you said:
I would find it difficult to fault the course for its funk when the cash wasn't there to build a more modern and presumably predictable design.
Isn't that a reason why Carne might be great
architecture even if it's not a great
course? (I'm in no position to argue the merits of Carne specifically, having never been there. From what I've read, I imagine I'd love it, since I tend to fetishize both natural golf and quirk. But I don't see why the budget has any bearing on our assessment of the golf course as a golf course instead of as a feat of design.)