Matt, you need to get off your soapbox about people discussing courses they have not played. I quoted and cited a widely read industry publication, and spoke only about a course I have played. As far as I can tell, everyone else has only posted based upon their own experiences. I'll take the collected knowledge and experience of those others over your tainted personal opinion any day.
Besides, aren't we largely discussing stylistic elements that are obviously were obviously once part of Engh's
repertoire and philosophic guideposts that may or may not have been? You keep claiming that Engh's style has changed, and that is great if true, but it doesn't change any of our opinions about the particular courses we have seen, does it?
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Jay, thanks for your response. It raised some questions that I hope you don't mind considering.
David, you'll have to search the threads, but it may even be the thread you pulled where I responded with Jim's answer, then he joined GCA a few weeks later. So check his threads and he'll talk about that. but it was discussed a lot and that fear put to rest for everyone except a few people who admittedly hadn't played one of Jim's courses.
Above you wrote that by posting an excerpt from a national industry publication I somehow inadvertantly misrepresented Jim Engh's position on walking, and I have no interest in doing so. Naturally, I'd like to read where Jim Engh corrected the misunderstanding. But I am not exactly sure why expect
me to search through all the old threads to find the facts that support
your claim. It is your claim. Shouldn't you support it?
And what exactly is being corrected? Does Mr. Engh actually consider "the golf cart-path experience" when he designs his courses? Or did the writer make up that terminology? Did Mr. Engh's comments only apply to his courses with tough sites? If so why? Aren't most golfers going to be riding at all of his courses?
Because based on my limited experience and knowledge, I suspect that while Mr. Engh did not mean any disrespect to walking golfers, he generally designs "with the golf cart-path experience" squarely in mind.
The other point is Lakota is the exception, not the rule. That is the most severe site except for the back 9 at Redlands. It's even tougher than Sanctuary. Pradera, Blackstone, Creek Club, and many others are far, far easier.
I am glad to hear that some of his courses are on less severe sites. As I said, I've only played Black Rock, and it is not readily walkable. Not even close. I'm no expert, but it is possible that a manageable walking course could have been designed and built there, but it would have taken some different decisions on the part the designer and developer to make that happen, possibly even forgoing the jaunt below the rocks, for example.
Regardless, I am not so sure that the issue is whether some of his courses are walkable. Some sites would be walkable for some of us regardless of whether the designer ever considered the possibility. My question is, did Jim Engh have walking in mind when he designed these courses? Or was he considering the "golf cart-path experience?" Does he consider walkers when routing? Has he ever passed up an opportunity to design and build a more inspiring golf hole for the sake of making a course walkable?
Surely some of his courses were
intended to be walking courses, either because of the market or because of the owners wishes. For example, the planned Nebraska course is supposed to be built for walkers, isn't it? And how about Harmony? I think CSU has a practice site there and the owner is a big booster, so I'd guess he insisted on a walkable course. Regardless, my questions are more about his design philosophy than any specific course or client directive.
David, I remember Ran Morrissett coming back from Colorado and being exhilerate3d that he saw something refreshing ly new, but which also had a great grasp of and twist on the classic architecture of the UK. Ran seemed to really enjoy what he saw. Here's his interview with Jim:
http://golfclubatlas.com/feature-interview/jim-engh-october-2006
I've read the interview, but I don't necessarily read it the same as you. But I don't think we should be speaking for Ran, should we? It really isn't fair to put words in his mouth. Whether he loves everything about the work or has some concerns about it, it should be Ran's decision whether in injects himself into this conversation, not ours.
One last question . . . You have mentioned that one course needs to build walking paths. Did Engh design for walking paths? If so why weren't they built?