Mac and Raynor got the 14th of the Old Course right in only one place that I know of - on the 17th at Lido. It has the Elysian Fields in the prime landing area (the right side of the fairway nice - the other, very undulating) and the dreaded Hell Bunker complex is perfectly placed for the 1920s, some 135-yds from the green, where you had to make the decision to either layup or go. And unlike the Old Course you couldn't play down the wrong fairway.
I'd post the sketch that appears in the Lido section of the book (it is really coming) but don't know how - beside, buy the book
National's 9th: "Big-Mac", perhaps, didn't have the balls to put Hell Bunker where it should have been, instead setting it off to the left side and short of the "proper" area
........ hey, there's no way I can diss this guy! He's been good to me and he's still hanging around out there at NGLA - just ask the guys on the grounds crew!! ...... ooooooor
there was a day when I was left in the clubhouse with my photographer late in the fall after the "season" - very scary guys. (course i'm getting older and a bit whackier these days)
Just another thought: sometimes we (you fellas) are putting the great little-touched courses of the Golden Age in the context of today's play - think how awesome they were in those days.
About a year before the great Sarazen died, I was fortunate to have been granted an interview with him. My thinking was that here was a guy who actually played Lido - what a resource. His response? "too windy and like National, lots of blind shots - hated the course" was about all I could get on that subject, so I struck out. Dr. Bill Quirin told me his records showed that Gene never scored well at the Lido - guess it was just one of those courses you don't like to discuss when you don't play it well (we all have those, I'm sure)
All he wanted to know about was The Knoll, my course, one of his hangouts when in his prime. He told me some corp. from Detroit was "duking" him to take people there.