Sean Arble:
I'm sure there are better or other ways to control or provide F&F condtions (or the lack of it) on golf courses and on particular areas of of golf courses but that's not exactly the point of this thread, is it?
This thread is about what William Flynn was suggesting in the quotations offered on this thread. And I stand completely by my explanations of what he was suggesting and where and how and why.
Perhaps some just don't get it, don't understand it or don't agree with it. That's fine by me. I was simply explaining what he was saying and suggesting and how and why.
If somebody like Goodale wants to respond that Flynn can't write very well or I can't read very well, then that's fine too. But it doesn't change the fact that what he was suggesting is what-all I explained above.
Of course, the component pieces of the IMM have been around for years. The IMM is nothing much more than a rerun prescription of how those component parts need to be treated in combination for a particular effect in play with particular types of golf courses and their architecture.
I didn't exactly invent that prescription because to my knowledge a club like HVGC and Scott Anderson has actually been doing it for at least ten years before I ever mentioned it or thought of it.
But the fact is back then it was simply unpopular and almost wholly misunderstood. Too many golfers thought those maintenance practices on that inland course were just odd and weird and didn't look right or play right.
Today, a whole slew of courses have come around to doing now what HVGC has been doing for well over twenty years.
About 10 or more years ago I went over there and really talked to them. I even asked Anderson if I could take his maintenance practices and propose them to my own club. To me amazement he actually said NO! When I asked him why he said because to do what he'd done a membership has to do be brought around to understanding it to getting behind it and he wasn't going to let me propose it to my club until that could be accomplished at my club. At his club that process took years and was carried basically by two guys, the second one being JESII's dad. The first one was Linc Roden, a guy who spent literally decades being considered by almost everyone as way out in left field. But he hung in there and now his time has come and bigtime. To me that really is sort of poetic justice. Roden was the guy, in my opinion, who came up with the modern era prescription for F&F and maybe up to 30-40 years ago. All I did is try to add a catchy term to it about ten years ago so people could understand better how important it is to have a particular mix of maintenance practices that only serve the purpose of playing into a particular type of architecture.
Then it got coalesced one time when I went to play The National's Singles tournament and the whole prescription occured to me via playability.
The IMM is simply a term I invented to make the explanation of the entire prescription easier for clubs to understand via the maintenance and playablitly logic of it.
But if someone like you wants to keep telling me I'm not the inventor of it, that's fine with me too. I'm not claiming to be the inventor of it. All I really did is invent a term that explains it in detail and why the playability works so well for multi-optionalism. The word "meld" was purposely used to explain how important particular considered maintenance practices are to particular types of playability. How could anyone deny that had been almost completely forgotten about in post WW2 golf in America? This country virtually lost the entire ground game for about forty years for God's Sake!
I don't want to claim to be the inventor of F&F playability---all I want to be is one of the promoters of the IMM and its maintenance and playability mix which promotes a F&F playability mix of a particular ideal.