Hi Stephen!
David and Shane, thanks for posting the information on 4W and 17E. I wasn't aware of these changes.
In the name of lawyers, the East and now the West I fear are becoming disfigured. Within bounds, players -- fellow club members -- should be well aware of when and where to look and when to call a warning. Out of bounds, well, as lawyers themselves like to say, that's what insurance is for. (One can come by fully-grown trees as well if one desires that solution.)
Very well, then, as neither lawyer nor designer I am qualified only to ask questions.
Here is my first: who is certain they will do better than Mackenzie and Russell -- and for that matter, Morcom and Crockford? Who among us wishes to match wits with Alister Mackenzie or Alex Russell, for doesn't anyone who will make changes engage these two giants in a game of one-upsmanship? Doesn't anyone who agrees to make changes agree they can do better?
More questions:
- Does the question above carry significance if the course in question is regarded by a number of experts as the world's greatest? For example, as the only course in the entire world the architect Tom Doak has scored above a 10 -- on a scale of 1 to 10?
- Do the changes to 4W and 17E affect both aesthetics and playing characteristics?
- If the answer is yes, how do the changes to 17E correspond to Mackenzie's principles and the core philosophy of the design, Peter Thomson's "summing up and loss cutting"?
- For example, are players' options narrowed? Do multiple lines of play offer real benefits as well as real costs, or has the calculus of some of these lines been changed? Is the line of play being dictated?
- Looking at the mounding work that has already been done on the East and comparing it to Russell's, would a layman be able to see the differences, and whose work would a layman prefer?
Lastly, if the differences in mounding are apparent to a layman, and the layman finds Russell's vastly superior to the recent, does that provide an answer to the first question in this post?
Mark