Jeff
There is a big difference in fair or is that we today translate it to mean ‘easy’.
Nothing wrong with giving high handicappers options but not at the cost of making it all easy, ops sorry fair. Wide fairways give options for beginners while letting the average golfer get on with his game. It is about design, it’s also a responsibility to maintain the game of golf in good order and that my friend I believe is based upon maintaining the challenge and testing the golfer irrespective of his skill level.
I feel this is one reason why it is important to understand individual designs and their MO. The cost of Green Fees are not cheap, so surely it must be important that the clubs/courses name their designer(s). I care not if JN is the head of the company, I would like to know who was actually was responsible for the design - that I am being asked to spend good money to play over. That seems fair, it would also be honest while perhaps a JN company, the designer gets the credit for a good or poor design – I believe golfer are entitled to know.
As for producing courses with a high maintenance footprint, that is and should very much be dead in the water these days. Gone are the boom years between WW2 and the year 2000, we expect value for money, courses more in touch with the game and certainly with the surrounding countryside. We need to re think this policy of strip the land then reshape and reforming it in the eye of the designer, producing an unsustainable course with maintenance nightmare.
So we need to know who the designers are that are rising to the challenge, not the good Old Guys who had at times more money than sense producing what some appear to be Palace Gardens costing a fortune to maintain.
If I was in the market to have my own course, the last thing I would do is lumber myself with a name that is not going to get involved but send down one of his many designers to do the job, sorry that too 19800ish, my budget is no longer designed to accommodate the pretty but only the practical.
The financial markets have changed the way many business are run, they had to change, so golf design has to change and I believe it’s a good thing. We need to get back to basics relearn the great ideas of the past, re-introduce penal into the game while looking for sustainable sites fit for the purpose of golf. Until then we are getting exactly what we deserve, expensive rounds, expensive Fees and high maintenance costs. So come on name names, list the designers, it has to be part of the way forward if the Names no longer design.
In fact one has to ask the question, well that is if one is really interested in the game of golf and certainly GCA – are the big design houses and the Names well past their sell by date, not having learnt from the changing environment.
Melvyn