Jim
Thanks for your comment. As for the difference, perhaps we should look and consider why we call it the Golden Age of GCA (well the second Golden Age IMHO as the first was the mid to late 19th Century).
Since the war we have heard a new expression when defining courses, that being Championship Course(s), every owner or developer wants a course that attract the stars for obvious reasons of selling their brand of product be it Membership or properties. Courses have been pushed or require that tag which makes them that little bit more attractive, certainly in a financial sense. Perhaps to the point that the actual heart of the courses is not ideally suitable for purpose – I am referring to courses that have by design long walks between Greens and Tees, Island Greens, massive bunker complexes all around the Greens.
We have I believe inherited the expensive ‘we can do what we want as we have the money and technology to do it’ mentality rather than look to the game and the importance of not just good design but good working practices. Modern courses are over furnished, lost sight of the Natural in favour of good engineering irrespective of whether it is viable on some of our inland courses. Because we have the technology we should build it is not the way to design golf courses, but fine for stadiums and their likes. So yes quality has suffered by moving the game without understanding the technology of the course itself, thus design is in conflict with the building methods due to a different direction which IMHO is attracting poor, no bad practices both by owners, designers and players.
Perhaps this is the reason why many who venture to courses like Machrie, Dornoch, Machrihanish, Askernish, Moray and even Cruden are in awe of these simple but enjoyable and thrilling courses.
Jim I think modern design on the whole has become boring for the most part but do accept that there are more than a few good exceptions. However the remainder are over expensive, over engineered and cost a fortune to build and worst still maintain, hence my attitude to courses built over the last 80 years. Looking at the last 15/20 years, IHMO we are still travelling in the wrong direction, yet many are talking of another Golden Age, Golden Age in design and build costs, perhaps, better than the 60’s/70’s yes perhaps but still not as yet matching the first two Golden Age.
Melvyn