On the plus side, the setting is so special that the golfer wants to stay out on the course til dark. Forget the X's and O's, what higher praise is there?!
On the down side, I can't help but think that a few of the architects that we have done Feature Interviews with could build a better course if they were given the same property as Mackenzie Ross. Specifically, I question the routing and the merit of the inland holes 1, 2, 12-14, and 18.
Not that any of those six holes are bad (and 13 has one of the best green complexes out there) but why even build holes 1 and 2? Let the course start on 3. Why go inland after the 10th? Afterall, the property out by 11 green, 12-14 is not but so interesting. Why route holes 5, 6, 7, 8 through valleys without mixing it up? Given the routing, who can't help but feel disappointment as one leaves the 11th tee and the shoreline? Pebble's routing is far more appealing, at least to me.
Like Rich says, the course's honesty is reminiscent of Birkdale. For some, that's praise. For others, they'll take RSG and a course like Rye where for instance, the 4th is routed along the crest of the dune, the 6th plays diagonally over it, and the 13th calls for a completely blind approach (often from long distance) over a sand dune. That kind of variety is a mark of a great architect/routing and I'm not sure Turnberry is blessed with either.
Still, the setting with the gleaming white lighthouse and hotel is one of a kind spectacular...
Cheers,