Matt, please be consistent in your clever analogy, is it the dark side or the force? I understand your point and I appreciate that you have not lumped me in with those you believe, correctly or not, are generalizing from insufficient information. However, I still believe a very good case can be made that Fazio's design preferences are not a result of the large number of sites he takes on but are really more philosophical in nature. To the extent you see differences in his early work, and I assume you mean his early solo work and not the jobs he did with his Uncle, it is entirely possible that his thought processes evolved to where he believes that appearance is the most important part of the exercise and that strategy and other playing characteristics take a back seat. Surely there is no lack of attention to detail in any of his designs, particularly the finishing touches in construction so it is odd that the only place he "cuts corners" to accomodate his workload is in the planning stages and there his planning regarding drainage and the like is first class. Suprising that the shortcuts would only take place in areas that relate to philosophy of design. I think he has in many cases become a modern "template" designer. The differences is that his templates are not as interesting as some of his predecessors and because he has the equipment and budget to move a lot of dirt, he doesn't have to do as much to adapt them to existing terrain further reducing interest. That said, don't mistake my view; he builds a lot of really nice golf courses. I am disappointed that I rarely see him stretch to build something that goes to the next level. Perhaps that wouldn"t fit the business plan.