While I started playing this game in July 1955, I never heard of or went to GCA until about 10 years ago, so never saw this thread until today...and just finished reading all of it.
For better or worse (and like most things in life, probably a little of both) I am a classic belt notcher. As a true Type A, I love having and completing lists, and of course, lists can only be completed step by step (or course by course). Why do we try to complete a Top 100 list (or in my case every World and USA Top 100 list published by a reputable sourse)?...for the very same reason that thousands and thousands of folks run marathons, of and hundreds of folks have climbed Mt. Everest. Because they are there and as JFK once said...because it is hard!
Yes I have been fortunate in having access...but I did not start with it...I grew up playing munis in Queens NY. That is one of the truly wonderful things about the game...despite it fairly blue blood history, access (especially today) is not limited to blue bloods. And yes I have had a few of those 54 hole days (including one in mid-December in the northern hemisphere!) when I had one day and three courses left. But I sense that I learned a lot in the process and played enough second and third tier courses to find a whole bunch of "hidden gems" including unknown tracks such as Royal Dornoch and North Berwick in 1981 (at least hidden to folks like me from the USA at that time).
But to me the most important thing about this game is the people one meets along the way. The second most important thing is the places one gets to visit along the way. And the people who play this game all have different reasons for playing it. IMO those reasons are not right or wrong...so long as they do not step on someone else's foot in the process (as was pointed out earlier tin this thread). So as a belt notchers, I am not going to sit here and criticize those non notchers who clog up their favorite courses by playing those courses so frequently
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One last point...I have created my own bucket lists and completed many of them, for example:
---every course to EVER host a Men's, Women's, Men's Senior or Women's Senior Major
---every course to EVER host one of the Five Cups (Walker, Curtis, Ryder, Presidents, Solheim)
---every course to EVER host one of the USGA's 15 current National Championships.
If you think playing the US Girl's Junior or US Boys' Junior course from say 1950-1980 brings one to a whole bunch of "Top 100" courses, I suggest you go back and look at the courses that did host such events back then. Real fun to me was playing Cedar Crest in South Dallas on November 6 2016...at 7am. Not in best section of Dallas, Cedar Crest hosted the 1927 PGA Championship (won by some guy named Hagen) and was designed by A. W. Tillinghast when it was Cedar Crest Country Club.. The club closed in 1929 and was purchased by the city of Dallas in 1946, and remains a muni (or at least was in 2016). I loved the course...and it was so much fun seeing its "superb bones" still clearly visible such as on its long par 4 10th hole. So belt-notching bucket lists is not necessarily just playing the Cypress Points, Winged Foots, et al of the world. I found (and still find) that seeing and playing a great variety of tracks really makes one understand the game more and better. But that does not matter except to me. We all have our own personal "objective functions" and as the old expression goes :"WHATEVER WORKS".