David,
Well, its all a mixed bag and to be fair, I haven't read Low in a while and he was really a bit earlier. I will take your word for it that CBM espoused unfair stuff, as per your examples. I am certainly familiar with the quotes you make.
There are examples in other GA writing, such as the recent discussion of Colt on putting greens (putts shouldn't run away like the swine possessed by the devil) and many from Ross, Mac, etc. Most wrote that blindness was to be avoided, if possible. Even Maxwell's greens, which can certainly de-green a putt weren't that way when designed for green speeds of the day.
IMHO, the GA, maybe starting in the 20's when those guys books came out generally didn't design too many shots that would careen off a green or fw. There were a lot of courses built, and the thoughts became more standardised between the bigs of that decade. Some even scoffed at Raynor and his template holes and geometric look. In other words, I believe that the thoughts of Ross etc. varied somewhat from CBM quotes that you cite.
As I mentioned, I think it is a long slow process from nature to architected courses that fit how the game was played rather than let it be random. As I also mentioned, I personally think it accelerated when JN got in the biz along with other pros and the emphasis turned so much to designing for tournaments that never come to most courses. So, we aren't that far apart, really.
I really couldn't make out your last thoughts, but I think I have a great understanding of what those guys were thinking. When I read many of their quotes, it sounds to me like the same arguments we hear on this forum! I know many read things more in black and white, but I don't believe that a single quote can sum up what they were trying to do.
You gave some excellent examples of CBM and his tough shots. I guess I could give some of Ross and his crowned greens, but wait, we know from Rich Mandell that he didn't really build them that way. Old pics show them pretty concave and accepting. I only know of two Ross reverse slope greens, hardly an center bunkering, and really, any bunkers that look a whole lot different than modern bunkers. Ditto for MacKenzie.
If anyone can, go show me where these guys did a lot of holes that careened good shots a long way off center?
Niall,
Well, David called them loaded questions, and truthfully, maybe they were. But they were pretty realistic examples of how a gca fleshes out a design after routing. And, as usual, no one really answers the practical questions! Mostly, the amateur architects here love to spout off theory and rant and rage, but never really get pinned down with any real life practicalities! Of course, I expected that, having tried similar excersises in my dozen years here on golfclubatlas.........
As to your Low quote about leaving an out, I would agree, and agree that is a nod to fairness and practicality! Really, what purpose does a 2 or 3 shot penalty serve in golf? If one shot is enough to determine a hole or match (and also make recovery possible in match play) would you specifically design a bunker to be non recoverable? Its form follows function and someone will still have to tell me what the function of designing a fw that you cannot hit, a hole you cannot par, etc.
As I said, one way to play a hole is fair. Two ways is strategic. No ways is just goofy!
Cheers.