I was going to post this on the Shinnecock thread, but I think there is chance it might be back on track despite the efforts of Mike C and TEP to derail it.
Geoff Childs, it was good to speak with you today. Your prediction was right on the money and your timing was incredibly accurate. I mean we're talking here timing in a matter of hours. You predicted Shinnecock and I predicted Oakmont. You're good, my friend, but I've always known that!
Mike
Are you referring to this bizarre post? Who knows what Geoff told TEP, and whatever he said, why TEP felt compelled to post it here is strange. Normal people don't do that. I'm sure if Geoff wanted to get involved he would post something himself, and by the way Geoff can get pretty passionate about the subject, I wouldn't consider him an innocent bystander.
TEP has always had a screw loose, but I think he is getting worse. Now he has become paranoid about our motivations, as if there is some kind of coordinated effort. I could care less about which clubs are associated with TEP (& Wayne). Myopia? TEP spent sometime with the historian, big deal. I spent good amount of time with the historians at Oyster Harbors and Congress Lake, am I now associated with those clubs? Hell no. Perhaps you could start a separate thread where they all could be listed, entitled: 'Clubs Associated with TEP & Wayne, tread lightly.'
I'm sure when the Flynn book comes out it will be very informative, but beyond that why should anyone give more than a passing interest to what TEP has to say about golf architecture history? You can learn everything TEP knows by picking up Cornish & Whitten, and as far as I know Wayne still dedicated to Flynn and hopefully doesn't share the same paranoia as TEP, though he does send me some strange emails periodically.
And the idea that a historian owes it to a club to share all his findings before publishing is stupid. Only someone who has never spent hours upon hours researching and writing would come up with such idiotic statement. These are not state secrets or embarrassing personal information; this is golf course architecture. Golf architecture history is an interesting subject for a few wack jobs, beyond that nobody cares.