Chambers was built after I wrote that, but is it fair to say Bandon/Pacific may have paved the way for Chambers? I happen to think Pacific is a better course than Bandon, so that's why I gave it the nod.
BTW Jay, your article said Bandon, not Pacific.
Garland, thats what happens when you take a sentence out of context. I meant the bandon dunes resort.
A Jay Flemma writing error? Come on! You have got to be kidding me! That shit just doesn't happen.......
Isn't this the kind of remark that we'd all like to have stopped by Discussion Moderators?
As for the content of this thread, I am with many of the suggestions above.
My own humble, personal, barely-informed selections and the reasons why (if nobody minds my actually discussing the topic at hand):
PUBLIC
1. Bandon Resort (B. Dunes, P. Dunes, P. Trails)
[The state of the art for public golf development.]
2. Rustic Canyon
[The Future of Golf, to steal (appropriately) from G. Shackelford.]
3. Whistling Straits
[The most ambitious public course of the specified post-Sawgrass period.]
PRIVATE
1. Sand Hills GC
[Again, the state of the art, for private golf retreats.]
2. East Lake GC
[The most consequential urban golf course/golf club of this generation, and perhaps several generations.]
3. Sebonack GC
[Location, location, location. Any course built on that property, with those neighbors, is going to be talked about, studied, copied, criticized, lionized, villified, worshipped, hated, and generally discussed, as much as any course in the last quarter-century, and it will probably still be talked and written about in the next century. Oh, and there are those two names -- Doak and Nicklaus.]
Naturally, I need to be invited -- soon -- to play at a Sebonack and Sand Hills in order to be able to back up my opinions.