Thank you very much Lou!
BTW...
Picasso left an estate estimated at $750 million.
Nuzzo!!!
May you do the same 100 years from now (adusted for inflation, of course).
But if you noticed, I said "a Picasso". Historically, there have been far more van Gohs who died penniless, but you get my point: you build for yourself or for the people who pay. Fortunate is he that can do both, happily.
Matt Ward,
The Dallas Morning News for its top Texas courses does that, but takes it a step further by segmenting the public market into four categories: "most expensive" (over $75), "high-priced" ($55-$75), "mid-priced" ($41-$54), and "economy" (under $41). I believe that it may have also done something similar in the past for the privates based on initiation fee, but not in the latest list.
I have argued before that the "best course" lists do not necessarily identify the best architects. Sites and budgets have a great bearing on what typically makes it. The best architects, IMO, are those who can really stretch the dollar like the guys who did Wild Horse, Mike Young, Hanse (Rustic Canyon), and a couple of our Texas boys.