Phil:
The courses owned by the City of Baltimore are leased to and run by the Baltimore Municipal Golf Corporation, which is a non-profit. It is very successful. I don't understand why other municipal golf systems have not made similar arrangements. But the point is that the USGA could do non-profit golf if it was set up properly.
The USGA has been offered opportunities to take over golf courses, and each time has declined. Operating golf courses is not part of the USGA's charter. Additionally it is unlikely the USGA wants to compete against municipalities, resorts and daily fee owners for all sorts of reasons. That could change, I suppose. But as long as there are a steady supply of invitations from courses to host the USGA 13 national championships, and there are, it seems unlikely.
Chris Garrett:
I see you are a newbie, and I welcome you. But I have to take you to task on your Olympic/Payne Stewart comment.
You apparently do not know that the man who set up the golf course, Tom Meeks, apologized for that hole location. He said he took a gamble- went against his experience and instincts- and made a mistake.
Yes the USGA makes the Open courses difficult- the intention is that the US Open, our national championship, should be the most difficult test the players face all year. You may disagree with that philosophy, and that's OK.
It is not the USGA's goal to "trick up" the course. When the intent is to put the course on edge, sometimes it will go over the top, as it did at Shinnecock last time around.
That hole location was not an effort to "trick up" the course. It was a mistake. It happens. We learn, and then move on. Look at what is happening now with the graduated rough and pushing gallery ropes back so really wild shots are not rewarded. When we get to Chambers Bay some of the fairways will be 80 to 100 yards wide. From what I read and hear many on this site and elsewhere in golf are very positive about these things and the general direction being taken for the US Open. Let's not continue to debate one hole location in one tournament that was a mistake and has no meaning to the evolution of the USGA and the Open!
In general:
Pinehurst, Oakmont, Augusta, and many other great courses have been continuously modified either by or in the spirit of their founder's vision all through their histories. From gutties to haskels, hickory to steel, sheep to power mowers, rain to irrigation systems, from ex-caddies taking time off from their head pro jobs to golf-a-trons "graduating" from golf "academies," the game changes and courses follow suit. Even if the USGA and R&A rolled back eqipment specs to 1990, or 80, or 70, or 30, golf would still evolve and so would courses. We would always find something to complain about, a fun (for some), though generally useless, exercise. BUt Hootie had it right, it turns out. And I for one, think Donald and Alister and Alfred would have agreed that their courses must change to meet the times, while maintaining each one unique chalenge and tone.
The classics will always remain, I hope, in the USGA's stable of proven Open venues. It would be a disservice to the game to find them lost to Open history, because of what they can teach the golfing public about the game and its lore. Even if they are not the same courses they were on the day they were opened. What course is? And, the players love them.