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Phil- Under the original design principles of less dictation through narrowness, when strong winds came up the course still would've yielded exciting and heroic play. The changes have created a course that is only acceptable in moderate conditions. Pretty inelastic for the course. and, short sighted by those who've made the ill-conceived changes.Terry's attitude is clearly a result of the macho Chicago school. It's so self absorbed that it borders on the narcissistic. I'm not picking on you Terry, just the mindset. Well, Dr. Mackenzie understood differently. Bobby Jones, too.How does the best golfer of his time, upon retiring at the height of his golfing achievements seeks out the best piece of property, to build the finest golf course in the country, only to have others change it almost from inception? Golf's cruelest irony, that's what it is.
Adam, the way I look at it, it doesn't take a architect so much as a committee gone wild to plant trees. Yeah, I know it is done to affect playing angles and narrow and all, which narrows the original architect's intended options and corridors and playing style. But, a monkey can plant the trees without one bit of architectural credentials... so even if an architect supervised the tree plantings and placement, I still think it isn't on "the architectural side of golf' in the pure sense...
I think #11 is a boring hole now. What's the point of having a pond there if the whole field is going to play 50 yards right of the pin? Symptomatic of the golf course as a whole. Even #13 is boring now.... everybody lays up.I feel there's getting less and less incentive for people to attack the golf course and that's really sad.
If trees aren't part of the architecture are they part of the maintenance?