Guys,
I think Ron regrets posting the link to the article before even reading it. I also write for the site, but I think why Ron posted the link was because Chris (just one of our writers) was actually starting to think about design and he jumped the gun with excitement before reading it. Chris (the Mouth) usually writes about events happening on tours, fantasy, and belly putter vs not, etc., but has typically not thought too much about the design aspects.
When I read the article (before seeing anything on GCA.com), my first thought was "Good thing he didn't take his first foray into the subject on GCA.com - he would have been taken to task pretty hard."
Before I saw this thread, I actually sent an e-mail to Ron that said:
"I'm glad to see he's taking an interest in the subject, but this could be a "teachable moment" for him to hear about Doak / C&C and letting the land dictate the routing. I'm not sure how to balance expanding his knowledge of people like Doak / C&C vs. not wanting to discourage his initial efforts with too harsh a criticism."
Some of the reactions I saw here didn't seem to contemplate that balance.
I think we all could use a reminder that we didn't all "get it" immediately and probably had some wrong-headed ideas about design at first. But we had an interest, which was the most important thing.
If you want to read an Article by the same writer that I think would indicate a "convert" to the subject, I have copied it below:
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2012 – Seeing The Subtle Things
Posted on January 1, 2012 by mouth
You can learn a lot about yourself from a tree you didn’t event notice.
It happened to me this past summer when I was golfing with Mo Golf and Scrambler during our Bethpage Binge in July. We stood atop a Par 3 tee deck somewhere in the beautiful golf abyss that is Bethpage Black. I was debating which iron to hit and where to aim when Scrambler exclaimed…
“That’s a perfectly placed tree.”
He was referring to a tree that subtly guarded the left side of the green. The tree forced people to have to hit more agressive lines into the green. The tree had a purpose, and as I learned during that trip – many trees on golf courses don’t have a purpose.
I wasn’t blown away with the fact that the tree had been planted in a perfect spot. I was more caught up with the fact I’d barely noticed it. I stepped to the tee, was about to grab a club, swing and march on. Scrambler was studying the hole’s angles. Mo Golf was photographing it. They were experiencing the course – I was merely playing it.
In many ways, that golf hole and its tree are a metaphor for my life. I wake up with a To Do list every day. I’m always focused on getting to the next workout, the next day of work, the next project… rarely do I stop to study the trees.
This year, that’s my resolution. I want to notice more subtleties on the golf course. I want to get angry at an ill-advised tree on a golf course. I want to notice how a creek impacts the club a player can hit. I want to see the tiny shifts in the slope of a green. I want to understand even more about the game I love to play.
Reading that sounded like someone who is on their way to converting.