Jim Nugent:
I don't think Jack Nicklaus is even aware of how many highly ranked courses I've worked on, and I don't think he would care.
Jack has his idea of what golf is supposed to be, and he's building courses for that idea. That's why he generally doesn't check out other people's courses. And if a bunch of raters disagree with him, what do they know about golf that he doesn't?
Melvyn:
I appreciate your point of view, but the modern world doesn't really work that way. Did Calvin Klein really design your jeans? Did William Clay Ford design your car? Probably not, but even if they wrote the name of the guy who did, it would probably be in Chinese so neither of us could read it.
But just for your benefit, I've done 29 courses, and I did the routing for pretty much all of them. I inherited a routing at Stonewall in Philadelphia from Tom Fazio's office, and changed 4-5 holes of it. My associates have contributed routing changes on a handful of courses ... Eric Iverson solved the first three holes at Rock Creek, Jim Urbina found the 16th and 17th at Old Macdonald, Chad Grave found a few holes in Mexico when we were forced to change directions, and Brian Schneider found the 7th hole on our new course in Florida, after Bill Coore found a few of the first six. [That's not intended to be a complete list, just a few I could think of off the top of my head.] In general, though, I think I did the lion's share of the work on nearly all of them, because that's the part I'm good at.
The thing is, there are other golf course architects who don't think the routing is the most important part of it -- especially the architects who were professional golfers. They think that placing the bunkers and designing the greens is where the design really happens. Many golfers would agree with that, and sometimes, depending on the nature of the site, so would I.