TEPaul,
Thanks.
Actually, I was 5 when my desire to be Chief Justice was squelched.
Mike Cirba,
You've asked a question that I've been asking myself for years.
Over the years, why weren't there more attempts to duplicate the general concepts at GCGC ?
I understand the need for sandy soil or a site that drains exceptionally well, but, the low profile architecture certainly had to be efficiently produced at minimal cost.
My thoughts are that there was a disconnect from the penal school in an effort to embrace the emerging diversity of the golfing world.
Many of the bunkers at GCGC are severe pits, both in the fairway and surrounding the greens.
I think that these went out of favor as those playing golf became a more homogenized group.
One of the features that you RARELY, RARELY ever see is a deep fairway bunker with a steep fronting berm, elevated well above fairway grade.
You see them regularly at GCGC and Oakmont.
Those features tend to be full one (1) shot penalty features ...... or more.
They are simple to construct and probably very inexpensive to build.
A perfect application for debris mounds.
They provide an element of visibility, warning the golfer that a deep pit lies below. They would seem to be an ideal feature on a relatively flat location.
But, they're nowhere to be found.
Why ?
I believe that their extinction is a concession to those who objected to "unfair" features, especially as the appeal of the game broadened to a wider spectrum, including, if not specifically related to the influx of women playing the game.
While tees could be created to negate the distance factor and accomodate the lesser or new player, dramatic features couldn't be altered/reconfigured to serve multiple masters, the adept, the mediocre, the poor and the beginning golfer. Hence, their shelf life was limited and architecturally they faded into extinction.
I can't remember a modern golf course having this feature, and I don't mean a mini-replica, I mean the big, real deal, a deep, sharp faced fairway bunker with an abrupt, tall fronting berm in the DZ.
I will start another thead on that feature shortly.
So, why didn't clones of GCGC sprout up ?
I think some did.
Seawane comes to mind.
What a wonderful site, swept by winds off the water.
The concept of wide fairways and penal features seems to have faded with golf's popularity because those courses couldn't adjust themselves or dumb themselves down to accomodate the broader spectrum of golfers being introduced to the game.
Popularity brings a price.
An inferior/softer design.
Are there 10 modern day courses that have penal bunkers/features throughout the golf course ? (note, Water and OB don't count)