Bill, thanks for asking. First, to consider CPC anything less than great is to pick a knit. I have never had a better day on a golf course. Thrilling and exhilarating. Who am I to have been so fortunate.
I so enjoy reflecting on my time there and the golf course itself. Nonethless among the courses I've played or seen, IMHO it is a not insignificant notch below Shinnecock Hills, The Old Course and Augusta National Golf Club. I would also give a slight nod to Pebble Beach Golf Links, Crystal Downs, Sand Hills and National Golf Links of America. At this point I should reserve the right to be wrong!
Given CPC's place in my limited pecking order and the fact that I've yet to visit England, Ireland and Australia (and haven't played Muirfield) I'm reluctant to include it on a world's greatest list. Then again, there's always Pine Valley.
I think to be considered among the "world's greatest" a course must be elastic enough to be enjoyable and playable for the mid-to-high handicapper, yet challenge the world's best. The Old Course, Augusta National, Crystal Downs and Sand Hills are exemplary in that regard. Perhaps Shinny is too tough and NLGA too easy (fortunately we'll soon see!). Pebble Beach is a little tougher to peg. I can't wait to visit Merion during this year's U. S. Open and suspect that it might make this group as well.
CPC can be had by a low handicapper (Messrs. Gracely and Duran come to mind), much less a professional. Its par fives struggle to even be considered half par holes for the better player. I did not find much challenge on the greens, other than my lack of talent.
Hope my comments are insightful. Again, really just picking a knit with the Preds and Wild knotted at zero in the first period.
Mike