I couldn't help myself from looking in on the "Fabulous World" Episode tonight dealing with Trump's visit to his Aberdeen project. The hardest thing was determining which of his comments was the most stunning. Perhaps there was some unfavorable editing, but several comments left me dumbstruck. A sampling of these were:
1) Build a Hole With a Wide Fairway - "Let's build one like that." During the discussion of widening one of the holes, Trump didn't make a single mention of why that may have merit in terms of playability, different options / angles, etc. Instead, the extent of his reasoning for doing this was because he noticed that Pine Valley had some wide fairways during his flyover. Somewhere in his mind, I think he wants to to be able to say "this must be the greatest course in the world, we have one hole with a wide fairway like Pine Valley." Even when they interviewed the associate architect, he didn't mention any architectural basis for such a change, just that (paraphrasing) "Mr. Trump wants it done on a grand scale."
2) Discussion of Filling in a Portion of Lake - "You want to make it smaller?" During his walkthrough, part of his team discussed the possibility of filling in a portion of a lake on the 10th hole to "change the angle." I think Donald's brain filtered out any discussion of strategic impact or design considerations - he fizzled out upon hearing "smaller." Clearly this guy is obsessed with the notion that "Water = Great," so bigger water = greatest in the world. He even gave some great advice to his architect that "if you can do something good with the 10th hole, that should be a signature hole." Yes, Donald, nothing captures the essence of the "greatest links / dunes course in the world" than a hole built around a lake. Seems like strategy is a mere afterthought to Trump.
3) "Bandon Dunes is a little toy compared to this" - No commentary needed - just enjoy that nugget.
4) Removal of Stone Wall Formation - "You shouldn't even have to ask me if that should be removed." In walking the course, there was a formation of stones running across one of the fairways. I'm not sure if this formation was created during the clearing of the land or if it existed when he bought the property. But it was apparent Donald had absolutely no interest in something as natural as a rock formation spoiling his perfect course. This comment wasn't too head-shaking, but the way he berated his staff over it was appalling. Someone on his staff was unfortunate enough to suggest that these types of formations could add charm to a course, and asked if Donald wanted to keep it or bury it.
Good thing he never visited Pete Dye Golf Club's 14th hole - Donald may have had a heart attack.
Like I said, maybe not the most egregious choice by Donald, but it led to this final nugget:
5) "They're all very aesthetic people or they wouldn't be working for me." From seeing his interactions with his crew, I think the main criterion for a Trump Employee is the ability to set aside your dignity to tolerate Donald's arrogance.
I'd love to hear some Architects' impressions of Donald's "input" during the walkthrough. Please feel free to tell me if I'm missing something, but it seems like Donald's obsession with "look" doesn't bode well for the project.