Tom:
Sure, I think Wisconsin's version of Pine Valley is worth doing. But whether it's "worth doing," vs. whether it can successful, is the skeptic's argument that I think RJ and I are making.
That's probably a bit afield for a website aimed at focusing on architecture, and not the financial risk/success of golf course projects. But the two sort of go hand-in-hand, no? Maybe it's the (former) journalist in me, but I have a hard time accepting the notion that the "best" of anything can be successful no matter any other considerations.
And at least for me, one of the reasons for the skepticism is that Wisconsin has seen quite a bit of this. If Mr. Keiser plans to go slowly, and build out only one course initially, how does that differ -- for the consumer -- from Erin Hills (building more and more -- and quite nice -- accommodations by the day, and with the added cache of being a US Open course, something the Rome WI project presumably will lack)? You can argue -- well, the Rome WI course will be superior to Erin Hills (and it may very well be), but that argument will hold sway with a very small slice of the golfing public (disproportionately represented here at GCA...
)
Lawsonia may not be the model, either, but it will certainly be the competition -- an architecturally significant course in rural Wisconsin. And even Lawsonia appeals to a fairly narrow slice of the Wisconsin golfing public -- the folks I'd like to hang out with (and have), but not most of the folks you find on Madison's or Milwaukee's muni's.
Add in the 20+ years of success that Kohler has had with his four courses, and I just wonder....
Perhaps there's an argument that -- like Apple -- Mr. Keiser is creating demand for a product none of us really realized we wanted until it was available (and one can argue -- I would -- that Kohler has spent the past 20 years doing that here with his courses). The Bandon courses are selling, essentially, the top-level UK links experience (with better showers
) on home soil. Sand Hills and Dismal seem to be selling the equivalent of golf on Mars -- a place so remote, and so good and unique, you have to experience it once (or perhaps more, if that's your thing). Cabot -- looks great, I just don't know if I'll ever get there in my lifetime, when getting to Scotland seems a lot easier.
Rome, WI? I'm willing to suspend some of my skepticism....but not all of it.
(RJ -- Wisconsin has 72 counties; only 13 have a lower per capita income than Adams County. Local use of the course I'd, charitably, suspect to be nominal.)