I feel like Pound Ridge is emblematic of a certain type of golf course -- and golf course design/development -- that has wrongfully taken over the landscape of new courses. It's like an equation to pump into a machine and produce yourself a major-championship golf course: hire a name-brand designer, give him a blank check, charge and arm and leg for membership/daily dues ... and viola!
Turns out, more often then not, the course ends up being too hard for the average golfer, too expensive for even the high-end golfer, and overrated for the fact that media (myself included) can get swept up in the PR machine these places produce. Of course, that's not always the case. I mean, brand-name architects are hired because they are the best and most consistent (we're looking at you, Doak). But that doesn't mean every course they design is going to be a home run. And sometimes, when the owner tells them they want a major-championship track, it's the job of the architect to create something that meets those demands. So the lack of good courses being built that are affordable and accessible is one that just seems to be in a downturn, unfortunately.
Pound Ridge is a very good course, undoubtedly one of the best in the area, but is it half as good as Pebble Beach, as the price would imply? I very much doubt that. It's very hard from any set of tees, even for a low-handicapper, and when you pay $235 bucks and end up losing a $50 box of balls, it is not a pleasant experience.
But no, it doesn't make any sense for guys like Dye and Doak to start building courses out of charity that are easier and cheaper. And no, it doesn't make any sense for people to think Pound Ridge should lower their rates. It's up to the owner to decide what he wants to charge, and it's up to the public to pay that much if they think it's worth it. To write letters to the owner asking him to come down on price is a nice, homely way to try and make it happen -- but it's nobody's right to be able to afford to play a golf course. It would just be nice if affordable, good golf courses -- which ARE being built -- were being built with more frequency than over-the-top, super-high end, hope-to-have-a-major-someday tracks with starry-eyed owners whose pockets will seem shallower as the years of debt accumulation build up.