Sean Arble...
Your comments on the 8th at Sebonack make no sense. If you play the course it is obvious what the pond is there for...all courses need some sort of irrigation. And who cares if it is a request of the cheque signer? If it doesn't fit, it doesn't fit. By your logic, we give all golf courses a pass for the awful routing through neighborhoods, because the cheque signer requested a course to sell real estate? I fundamentally disagree with that outlook 100%.
In fact, Tom Doak has said many times he doesn't evaluate/judge architects...he evaluates courses. And it is for this fundamental reason that I am discussing this topic that you brought up/alluded to. We don't know what was the architects idea, the owners idea, or environmental restrictions...or whatever...on almost any course. You've stated in the past that you try to judge how good a job the architect has done given the land he was given to work with. I can respect this, but I can't fathom how you can put all the moving pieces, that I just mentioned, together and/or even know what are the applicable pieces in each instance. In fact, per your previous comments it is likely that you can't either. But in the end, all that stuff doesn't matter...the course is what the course is...regardless of whose idea it was for each and every feature. The pond at 8 at Sebonack doesn't fit. Plain and simple.
And in reading Tom's response, it would appear that he agrees to at least an extent. And anyone who knows me, knows that I am not bagging on Tom at all for his work at Sebonack. In fact, I think it is 2.5 holes from being one of the greatest courses in the world. And even with those holes, it is still amazingly good.
But perhaps, these ideas/thoughts build to a larger point of...why would someone employ anyone of Ian's Top 10 items on this list? Owners wants them? Saftey? Environmental restrictions? And, of course, poor design by the architect could always be a potential reason as well.