Robert,
I didn't say that "the new green was an improvement" and regardless of what those who played during the New York State Open believe, they were putting on a green that was barely alive. After the change to the green combined with the intense heat of the year leading up to it, the green was barely there and the hole locations for the Open were all simple ones.
The green needs to grow in before critical analysis of it can be given based upon any tournament.
Yet the bottom line remains, there was a desperate need for more day-to-day hole locations especially with the amount of play it has been getting.
Would I prefer the old green be back. Most definitely yes! But what I find the height of irony in this is not a single person has mentioned that they want the ACTUAL ORIGINAL old green back, the green pre-Rees which had a more dramatic front and greater middle-left to left contours. These were softened for the 2002 Open.
Amazing with all of the bashing that goes on toward Rees that the "good old days" for this green is actually not that old and how much they want "Rees" back!
Richard, again, it isn't anything at all to do with the Opens, but rather that the need for more hole locations could ONLY be solved by softening. The only way to "slow it down" enough to create realistic new hole locations would have been to cut it in the 8 range if not a bit slower... That, of course, was never an option.