Peter
I'm not sure that's what he'd say. He would have appreciated the inscrutability of many old links courses.
And IMHO there are plenty of great courses that don't inspire upon the first play, courses like Pinehurst #2, Royal Melbourne and TOC.
And what if we were given the chance to play Augusta before the raft of changes but were told nothing of its provenance, nor were all the trappings of the place on offer? I don't know how many would have been wowed on the first play. I probably wouldn't have understood it, but maybe that's just me.
Wethered and Simpson wrote of Woking as their favorite course despite - actually, no, because - its lack of more than one hole "of true architectural merit."
So I think what CBM would have said, as a corollary to the quote, is, if you haven't played it through all conditions then you should withhold judgement one way or another.
Sean, I have to ask you: you clearly have the resources to play courses many times but it seems to me you've chosen not to, which is fine - but then you think Macd is wrong, yes? Again no wrong or right answer there...
It's one thing to declare a standard too high but seek to follow it in practice, it's another thing simply to disagree with it.
Personally, I believe in that standard and try to live by it - but I am unable to see things as easily as I think many others here, who have a far more practiced eye. (Sean, that's you!)
As a result, I can't say I've learned more about architecture this way than one would by playing a different course every or most times...would you rather play every course in Melbourne's Sandbelt once or play Royal Melbourne 10 times?
So far on that count I have gone for the latter - but that is one long run, lemme tell ya...
Mark