Jamie:
Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player agree with you ... nobody but a tournament player is qualified to design a great course.
[Expletive deleted.]
Paul:
There are very few architects who don't play at all. Some rarely play because of physical issues ... advancing age, or a bad back, or something like that. I remember asking Tom Weiskopf what kind of player Jay Morrish was, and he said he had never played golf with Jay, because Jay had back trouble!
But, it's possible Jay Morrish just avoided playing with Nicklaus and Weiskopf because he knew that if he didn't play great, they would think less of him. That's an issue which we also have to be careful of, if we have a client who is a very good player ... because if the client plays golf better than you, he will conclude he knows more about golf and therefore golf architecture than you do, too. I would guess that I couldn't have worked for Ken Bakst, at Friars Head, for that reason; but that's a problem Ben Crenshaw doesn't have.
When I met and spent time with Robert Trent Jones [on three occasions between 1983 and 1988], it was clear he hadn't actually played golf in years, and I thought it started to show in his work ... courses like Treetops and Ballybunion New had very severe shot values, and it looked to me like the only golf Mr. Jones was seeing anymore was watching the pros on TV.
But, the main reason architects don't play that much is simply TIME. I am on the road 150 days a year for work, and it's hard to make golf trips on top of that. And when I'm home, and not in the office, family calls. I think I played Crystal Downs seven times this season, and that's above average for me lately. And to top it off, because I don't play as much, I'm not as good as I used to be, and it's more frustrating when I do play.
But I still love to get out there. I just counted up on a flight home a couple of days ago, and I've played something like 40 rounds of golf in all this year, all around the world.