I'm a day behind and watching the quater finals now, a mild and not windy day. So, we've seen this course in various conditions. How anyone can 'slag ' this course off, because it isn't authentic links is just being haughty in my view. Of course it isn't real links! It is built upon a gravel-sand mine!!!
But, how does it play relative to 'links style' golf? Well, I'm not an expert, and haven't even been to the old sod in GB&I. But, I watched enough of it over the years at the British. This course is playing more like a links than several of the links I've seen during the odd or infrequent soft conditions of some of the B.Os. The need to understand the ground contours, and green surround processes (call it pinball machine if you like) seems to me to be exactly what links golf is all about. Firm and fast with fescue turf, and wide surrounds, some blindness by faux dunes, and several carry or go optionally around and give up yardage placed bunkers seems like links to me. Frankly, I would love to play CB 50 times over once at Whistling Straits The creativity these excellent ams are demonstrating of shot making and alternate options of how to play holes at CB is way more entertaining than the demanding hit it here or else target golf we actually saw at WS a week ago.
That this course is designed, routed and built upon a scraggly sand mine, needing plenty of sub surface shaping, and stripping and storing the top sand before properly redistributing and shaping the playing field is a great golf course architectural effort in my opinion. This seems to me to be exactly what so many long time GCA.com participants have been pining for for years in modern golf design. The gamble to go with fescue and the extraordingary effort it is taking to grow it in, is gutsy and a very respectable job that is being done to find the right "maintenence meld". And, to have this be owned by a municipality, where you and I can play without grovelling or sucking in favors, like most USGA venues etc., is all the more admirable.
It seems to me that "slagging" this golf course is a diservice and anethma to all that GCA.com has been about over the years. I haven't enjoyed a US Am as fun to watch since Merion a few years ago. Gary Koch is doing a very good job of describing and analysing the course, IMHO.