And I am aware of what courses CBM was heavily involved in and ones he was not. So, Tom D's comment about my "hopes" for CBM "apart from National and perhaps a couple of other courses" doesn't make a ton of sense to me.
Mac, If you know at which courses CBM was heavily involved, I wish you'd clue me in. Because after NGLA it all gets very fuzzy to me, at least as far as CBM's onsite, detail oriented involvement goes.
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While Macdonald's approach might give courses the variety that most courses lack, I wouldn't say that there was a "formula" or "secret sauce" to great architecture. Despite legend to the contrary, Macdonald himself did not stick to templates at his masterpiece, NGLA, and the four or five templates at NGLA all depart from the originals. The course doesn't even have all four of his "rote" par threes! Whatever his original intent, he ended up piecing together the best course he could combining and applying all sorts of concepts from all sorts of holes, and even added a few original ideas of his own. So at least NGLA is inconsistent with the "formulaic" label we so often place on CBM.
I think we need to look at the supposed templates in the context of the time, when great strategic architecture was still foreign to most in America. The templates were
exemplars of great architecture, used to teach America by showcasing the underlying concepts.
The holes or templates themselves aren't all that important, but the underlying concepts are some of the most basic building blocks of quality golf courses. Obviously, CBM didn't cover them all, but he did cover a heck of a lot of ground.
As for the post above about what CBM did or didn't do first in America, I've no interest. Obviously, CBM didn't have a patent on diagonal carries, multiple routes to the green, offset greens, the strategic use of slope in fairways, the placement of hazards to to catch the "almost good" shot, etc. But it is undeniable that he did a heck of a lot to popularize strategic golf course design, modeled (if only loosely) after the great links holes and courses.
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Tom D.
Far be it from me to tell you how to do your job, but I hope that you don't worry about whatever comparisons idiots like me might draw and just go about your business of building great golf courses.