Kalen,
Thanks for your thoughtful response. I still get the feeling you think my concern is about aesthetics. It is not. It is about the best way to create interesting, unique, and fun golf holes. While Engh's manufactured style certainly produces a manufactured look (in my opinion) it also produces a much less interesting course on which to play golf. It is all just too controlled and straightforward for my tastes. It was repetitive and boring. A slog. No interesting use of ground slope (except arguably on the greens) No interesting use of the ground game. Rough as the main hazard throughout. The strategy was not so much strategy but more a reward for a long tee shot. These aren't comments on the aesthetic, but on the golf. And while some credit him with quirk I see none whatsoever. It is all exactly as it is on the cad.
Also Kalen, you have said a few times that given a choice between manufactured and fun on the one had and minimalistic and boring on the other you would take the former. I would too if that was the actual choice, but when we are talking about really good or great courses, I don't think we ought to have to make that decision. Again Rock Creek is a good example. It does not seem to be overly manufactured, and every single shot is a thrill. Never a slog even on foot for 36.
But that being said, I disagree that we are talking about manufactured and
fun at Black Rock. Where is the intrigue? Where is the quirk? What is left to discover after 10 rounds or even 1 round?
This is really my only beef with your comments on BR. I get its not your style but don't see why you feel the need to go out of your way to slam it again and again and again. And even though you may disagree with GD and where they placed it, I would bet you agree with most of the other courses that GD has on its top 100 list, so they must be doing something right?
I'll bet I disagree with more than you would imagine. And with no disrespect meant to any individual raters, if Golf Digest is doing anything right it is despite the methodology, not because of it.
P.S. Kennecot Copper Mine, the largest in the world is only 20 minutes from my house as well.
Interesting. I thought the world's largest copper mine was in Chile. At one point there was photograph of Butte in the Guinness Book of World's Records under the heading "Richest Hill on Earth." Then the hill became what was once the largest open pit mine on Earth. Now it is just one of the largest hazardous waste sites on Earth. But maybe we could do a whole Engh course with open pit mines as his green sites? Sluice Box Fairways and Open Pit Green Sites. It he builds strip mined driving ranges at least we'll have a consistent theme.
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David,
I wonder if Engh appeals to low handicaps (I have no idea what your game is like) that have a chance to attempt some of the heroic shot options that are present on the par fives and occasionally on other holes. I can see how short hitters wouldn't care for them as much as I do because playing station to station eliminates the strategy that the long hitter can attempt. I know you mentioned that before, but the "heroic" aspect of Engh's designs is something I like that you didn't seem to care for.
I think his courses may appeal to better golfers who also happen to be long hitters (I've heard that this is Engh's game.) But I don't think we should judge golf courses by their appeal to a narrow range of golfers. Is it really a strategic course is the strategy is more about how far you can hit your tee shot than anything else? And where is the risk element on this first shot anyway? It is just blast away, and if you want blast away again. Meanwhile the other 95% of golfers slog it around. Great architecture challenges and interests a wide variety of golfers, not just those who drive it 300+.
As Kalen mentioned, I like how Engh often uses five par threes and five par fives--it seems to create additional variety when compared to courses that have as many as 12 par fours.
To my mind, variety is more a factor of the shots one is hitting, the lies, the challenges, the choices. I see very little of this type of variety at Black Rock. It is all about hitting it down the sluice box and then hitting it again.