You've never seen a transformation as you saw on the face of Kevin Lynch as we traversed the first three holes...he pronounced then and there that he love Dev Emmet for now and forever.
The transformation Ron described was due to a few things. I actively avoid reading anything about a new course I’m playing, so I have zero expectations or preconceptions (at least as much as possible). However, I slipped up a little right before tee time and looked at the scorecard. I said to Ron – “6,400 yards? Good lord, all I need is a “target golf” course where I’ll be hitting irons through narrow, tree-lined holes all day.” Obviously, I was pleasantly surprised. But the look on my face went far beyond a realization that the course was more open than I suspected.
Just to clarify, my declaration of love wasn’t for Dev Emmet (I don't want to be accused by Matt of making too broad statements based on my small sample size
), but I had certainly seen enough of the course by then to know it was a special place. Perhaps after Bethpage Green, I may be able to expand my statement to Emmet a little more, but Phil Young will need to be there to guide me between the Emmet & Tillie influences.
Still, I've played enough courses to know the difference between a course I'm "seeing" and a course I'm "feeling." The ones that deeply touch my "golf soul" are rare, and Leatherstocking was one of them. After the round, I try to rationally analyze what details make me feel that way. However, I'm fine with accepting that I may not be able to articulate that "feeling" in an objective manner to others. All I know is that I stood on the 3rd tee, looked around and literally “breathed in” the course, which led to goosebumps.
I don’t need to see 300 courses around the country to know that’s special. And its relative ranking in some subjective exercise becomes even less relevant.
JNC’s analysis of the course covers many of the “objective” points I could think of. When people talk about courses, I often hear them talk about strategy, shot values, contouring and all the other “characteristics” that we use in our attempt to assign a “value.” I often ask the same follow up question, “Did it inspire you?” For me, the answer at Leatherstocking was a resounding “yes.”
(Ron Mon – I promise I’ll get the above up on the BuffaloGolfer website. I’ve been struggling with my inability to describe the course in objective terms for a written review. In writing the above, I realized that may be the true measure of how good the experience was).