Getting into the holiday/silly season/golf deprivation spirit......
As many here know, I've alwasy felt that numerical rankings of golf courses (and of anythings, for that matter) are hobgoblins of simple minds, including my own, and have advocated "Michelin" type categorical rankings (3***, 2**, 1*, experienceable, fuggedaboutit) instead. Just for fun, I looked up a few facts about the Michelin restaurant ratings and found out the following:
In France, 26 restaurants are given 3***, 78 2** and 435 1*. Another several thousand are rated good enough to be rated (i.e. "experienceable"). I've eaten at one 3*** restaurant and a few more in the 2** and 1* categories, and IMHO even the 1* experiences are equivalent in Doak rating terms 9's or even 10's, and the "experienceable" ones would be "top 100" candidates if only restaurants were golf courses......
In Paris alone there are 10 3*** restauarants and the 1* restaurants include such variety as:
Benoit--a Alain Ducasse bistro
La Tour d'Argent--an old world classic
Ze Kitchen Galerie--a funky fusion place
I can see the value (to the consumer) of grouping these three in a general category of "good for their type" but trying to put them in some sort of specific order? Give me a break! Are golf courses any different? Since Matt is on this thread, let's talk Jersey. Even though I've never played them or even seen them (same for the restaurants, BTW), I'll speculate that if you substituted Hidden Creek for Benoit, Baltusrol South for La Tour d'Argent and Twisted Dune for Ze Kitchen Galerie you would get a much better idea by putting them in a broad Michelin-style catgegory than trying to rank them specifically.
Also, in terms of golf courses, once you get past the top 30 of so, aren't you really picking nits or relying on personal prejudice from a uiniverse of at least 500 courses? (Maybe even within the top 30 too?). As others have said or implied on other recent threads, so much of the ranking of experiences, whether they be of golf courses or restaurants or movies or art, is almost completely personal. Why do we spend so much time trying to "prove" otherwise?
Let's start at the top to see if any proof can be made. To those who have played Pine Valley, why exactly is it "better" (or not "better") than say Portmarnock, or Pasatiempo or Pebble or even Painswick (or whatever courses you want to use as comparitors--beginning with the letter "P" or otherwise)? I for one would like to read the arguments.
Rich