Tom
You really will have to excuse my ignorance, for I've never been to any of those coursews, but how do the greens there compare to Dunfermline and Duff House Royal, both of which date from the early to mid 1920's ?
Niall
Niall:
You've got the wrong MacKenzie. It was his brother Charles who was very concerned about getting nice letters of recommendation from the client, and it was Charles' construction company that built many of Alister's work in the UK in the early 1920's. There is scant evidence that Alister ever cared to tone down his greens because of criticism.
I've always thought that the nature of MacKenzie's greens had a lot to do with which of his associates was actually on site to build them. None of his courses in Australia had very severe greens, but then again nearly all of those greens were built by Morcom and Russell after MacKenzie left, and neither of them ever saw Sitwell Park or Pasatiempo. Crystal Downs' greens are severe [and that was another of MacKenzie's last courses], but then everything Perry Maxwell built had severe greens. All the California courses have some fairly severe greens, especially Pasatiempo and that is the one MacKenzie was around the most ... but it's also the hilliest. Augusta is the one course that doesn't fit this pattern very well, unless you ascribe the severity of those greens to MacKenzie himself, or to Bobby Jones.
In fact, the severity of his greens from course to course probably had most to do with which were hilly sites. I've never been to Sitwell Park, but from the photo thread it seems that it's quite hilly generally, and not just by the one ridge where MacKenzie located those severe greens. Pasatiempo and Augusta National are very hilly, and Crystal Downs is pretty up and down, and so are their respective greens.