William:
If you had a site with the same topo as Augusta National, but no Rae's Creek to make it obvious, I don't think many golf course architects would call it a great site. And that's because it's not a great site, apart from the creek and all the 100-year-old vegetation. It's hillier than you'd like, and the soils are not on anyone's wish list. So, to suppose that "any golf course architect" would be able to create a masterpiece there is ridiculous; in fact, hardly anyone would have.
But if your question is whether anyone could build a course as exciting for championship play, year in and year out, of course it's possible. It's not just the course that makes Augusta National seem so exciting; it's the gravitas of The Masters. If you could somehow give that same gravitas to other events, and played a tournament every year, you could easily see that courses like Riviera and Shinnecock Hills are equally good for championship play -- and that there's no reason a new course couldn't achieve the same status.
Tournament courses are always overrated. All it takes is one two-shot swing at a dramatic moment for a golf hole to seem like a great hole, and that can happen on any hole in the world, at any time.
Tom.
Thanks for your insights...
I always feel when I'm there that the slope/elevation change is so unique, that it inherently has made the architecture, from a championship players standpoint, a masterpiece.
Of course the soil of choice would be sand, but the topography may not be an owners choice as it is steeper, but I'm surprised you think it is too hilly.
I guess it may be ridiculous to suppose a certain site in "anyone's" hands will be a masterpiece, but I do believe that "certain sites" are more important, with due respect, to being a masterpiece than whose hands are doing the painting. Of course, it has cost Augusta a fortune to have done what they have, but is such a site better in someways in providing great architecture, eg. the elevation change.
I hear what you are saying that the tournament has raised the status of the perception of great architecture at Augusta as well as it could or has at other courses.
I also wonder at the same time, that is it the concept of a second shot course in a beautiful setting, that makes for such great playing/spectating/picnicing?
Thanks