You know, like in baseball. “VORP” stands for “Value Over Replacement Player.”
For our purposes let's think of it as Value Over Replacement Designer: VORD. A replacement designer is not a great designer or even an "average" designer but one who's "freely available." Not a chump, but I dunno, maybe a YaBB god -- prior to Tommy's unholy deicide a few months back.
So…what are the highest VORD courses ever?
Consider: a high VORD design is one where another architect thinks, "No way I could have done that!"
Not necessarily a "great" course, it’s a course where the architect did so far better than a replacement architect as to provoke wonder and inspire.
The beauty of VORD is to judge an architect based on the variables he can control, excluding those he can't, like the site. We’re not judging the overall experience, ambiance, setting, none of that crap – not even the architecture in the totality of its end result. Just how well the architect did with what he was given.
For example, how bout St. George's? How many architects would have incorporated the ridges as uniquely and as brilliantly as Thompson?
And as an example of a great course that may not carry a high VORD, what about Sand Hills? If the architects found 130 or whatever potential holes, then couldn't a replacement made a pretty good - not necessarily “great,” but above average, maybe well above average - course? (On the other hand, they did decide to spend enough time on site to find all those holes; other designers might not have.)
Or how bout Cypress? Fantastic site, great course, but how much better than Raynor's is MacKenzie’s? Maybe Raynor or – keeping it real – a replacement architect wouldn't have done as well, but again we're talking VORD....
(Another course generally well-regarded but nevertheless sometimes damned with a low VORD is Turnberry Ailsa, especially on the routing. But as Donald Steel has pointed out, Ross worked within the prewar footprint and in fact utilized much of that routing, in order to save on costs. So maybe the VORD is higher than popularly believed)
Lastly, it should be noted that while great or really good courses on mediocre terrain likely are high VORD, that may not be not axiomatic, either. Such terrain may have just one prominent feature, which would might have been spotted, and used, by a replacement-level designer. One example might be Ross’s Linville, a very good course whose one prominent feature, a stream, might have been used, although perhaps not to the same degree, by someone less skilled.
High VORD, low VORD, no VORD – whaddya got for me?
Mark