Tom,
Thanks for the fascinating insight. If it is OK to chime in with a question, I would be interested to know the answer to the following.
You have talked a lot over the years about collaboration in shaping but not as much about collaboration in routing. Do you see routing as a collaborative process? Do you ever let associates have a crack at drawing a routing for a site? Do you see collaboration on routing as a formal process or an ad hoc process?
thanks.
David:
The routing process is different from one project to the next. It's also the most fun part of the project for me, and probably the thing I am best at, and if I do want to get others' input I have to hold myself back from getting ahead of them and just routing the whole course on the map as soon as it comes in.
There have been courses where I did the entire routing on paper in one shot - Sebonack and St. Andrews Beach are the best known of those.
There have been others which took lots of field visits and lots of re-thinking. Usually when I go into the field to sort out the routing I will take along one associate and maybe one or two interns for the ride, and at times they have offered suggestions that went into the final plan; but probably not as often as they make good suggestions for bunkers or greens. Jim Urbina helped a lot with the routings for Pacific Dunes and Ballyneal. Bruce Hepner had a bunch of ideas for Cape Kidnappers after the client wasn't satisfied with my first effort. Eric Iverson suggested the first three holes at Rock Creek, and the 14th-15th at Dismal River. Michael Clayton famously turned around the 7th at Barnbougle after we didn't like a hole playing crosswind to the north there. And I think I mentioned elsewhere that Brian Schneider suggested the 7th at Streamsong, after I'd discarded that green site earlier in the process.
Also, sometimes clients make us better by asking us to keep working on it. Mike Keiser is very good at that; he sent me back to the drawing board for a better version of Pacific Dunes, he asked if it was possible to finish up on the ocean at Barnbougle instead of playing outward along the beach on #10, and I probably wouldn't have made the leap to build the 7th and 8th at Old Macdonald if he hadn't been concerned about the halfway house view. He didn't find any of those holes himself, but he did suspect there was a better solution still at hand. That's one of the hardest things about routing a course, you never know if you've really got the best possible solution; unlike a crossword, they don't print the answer in the paper the next day.
For a couple of years, I tried to give my associates more chance to participate in routing the courses by giving them the blank topos when they would come into the office, but I have to admit that I wasn't very good at looking at their ideas on paper -- I'd see one or two holes that turned me off, or led to a dead end, and I'd just dismiss the rest of them. Plus, the guys that work for me have pretty good faith in my ability to route a golf course. Some of them just felt like it was a waste of time to try and find something I wouldn't.
I have been thinking about conversations here recently on how to route a golf course, and I'm happy to report that I am going to do something about it. I told four of my interns while we were in Florida that they are going to help me prepare a book or a CD that shows all of our best projects and how the routing decisions were made -- so that I can teach them, and in the process we'll try to teach everyone else. That will obviously be a lot more detailed than a single post on Golf Club Atlas.