John C:
Let me take your points one at a time.
The word "great" is thrown about too loosely in all elements tied to sport and most notably golf courses.
Keep in mind that the total number and sheer diversity of courses played by a respective individual and the portfolio contained within that total can make for a totally different perspective for one person than another. I've played Interlachen on two different occasions -- the most recent being roughly a decade or so ago.
I don't see the course as a great golf course when stacked up against the totality of other courses I have personally played in the USA. To be great one would have to be at minimum an 8 on the Doak scale.
On the flip side please keep this in mind my benchmark for greatness is quite high given the range and depth of courses I have played in the States. That doesn't mean Interlachen is some sort of dogtrack. Quite the contrary, it's very good in spots but for me it doesn't extract an urge to say it has compelling architecture of the highest order.
No doubt Interlachen should stand high in Minnesota. However, as I stated before when you move beyond the state level and throw yourself into the national heap of top tier courses that's where you find a different story -- for me at least.
John, I don't see Interlachen as being deficient simply in the "resistance to scoring" category. I don't see the sheer range and complexity of holes to be anything more than good to very good.
One other thing -- even if tradition were dropped from consideration you fail to acknowledge the sheer explosion of top tier courses that have come onto the scene in the last 25 years. Many of them are simply awesome layouts but don't have the wherewithal / desire to host USGA events or tournaments of that nature. The problem is that too many people, possibly you as well, hold dear what clubs have done in the past. Interlachen, as Doak quite correctly summarized, is no more than a 6 on his scale. It's a fine layout in a number of ways but I don't see the course sniffing my top 200 in America.
Jason:
Nice try but it doesn't fly with the likes of the courses you mentioned.
There is no connection between Interlachen and the likes of CP, NGLA and CD. They have the goods to merit their high placement for me. Not even apples and oranges.
Jason, I see clearly where you are going. It's the old, "Ward only favors 7,500 yard / 140+ slope courses" type thing. That's rubbish. I have supported plenty of courses where the total length is not present. But, keep this FIRMLY in mind, for a layout of minimal length to be rated that highly in the USA the overall design must truly be unique and of the highest order. When you give away 500 or more total yards it can become quite demanding for the shorter course to maintain interest and diversity of holes. It doesn't mean it can't happen but it proves to be a more challenging thing for the design team.
You also mentioned ...
Seminole 6,836 - par 73
Fisher's Island - 6,566
Chicago - 6707
LACC North 6900
San Francisco - 6808
Valley Club 6612
Newport
Maidstone 6403
The only courses from above that would not claim a top 100 spot from the ones I have played would be Maidstone, Valley Club and Newport. Each are fine layouts but not as solid as the others.
Let me point out -- I will start another thread in more detail -- the nature of a Banks Course in NJ that I believe is worthy of state and even national acclaim -- Forsgate / Banks Course in Jamesburg, NJ. The layout is barely 6,800 yards but its loaded with plenty of architectural goodies for any golf design junkie to overdose on.
Patrick H:
I hear what you say on changing weak par-5's intostrong par-4's. However, I am adverse to doing such a thing because the original intent of the architect was to have such holes play as such -- especially in the greens designs and the type of shots they originally were meant to entertain.
But, even if you did change the lengths of the holes in the manner you outlined I don't see the course being better architecturally for it. Would it play tougher? No doubt -- because overall par has been reduced.
Mark C:
Can't answer because I have not played White Yacht or Somerset thus far.