It's actually 640 yards according to Google Earth, or a bit over 700 if you follow the path.
I have never heard David Elvins say that Bill Coore "cheated" for having 20 holes at Lost Farm; maybe I missed it. I do think that takes away a little bit from that golf course, because they couldn't decide what the routing was, but I don't think it disqualifies the course from consideration or negates all the fine work that was done there.
And if you wanted, you could make the rule that all courses have to start and finish near the clubhouse -- after all, most do -- in order to eliminate Sand Hills from consideration as great. But its fans are happy to call Ben's porch the clubhouse for the purposes of debate.
Where I really have a problem is Bart's statement that "it's okay to suggest that there are some IDEAL characteristics of a golf course." Sure, it's okay to suggest that, but just because something is an ideal for David doesn't make it an ideal for anyone else. I would suggest that golfers who make lists of "ideals" are not judging courses on their merits*; they are dumbing down the process by just going down their own mental checklist, and at the same time, asserting that THEIR checklist must be adhered to.
* And yes, I know that Alister MacKenzie once made a list of 13 ideals for golf course architecture; but he wrote years later that he wished he'd never done so, because some people got so locked into his "rules" that they could not accept better plans that were in conflict with one of the rules [such as having two loops of nine holes].
Tom, I cannot judge (nor ever will I be able to judge) whether a routing is the best possible use of the land given the restrictions that the architect faced when making the routing. How could I ever know everything that an architect had to take into consideration when he made his choices for the routing? Only he/she (or members of his/her team) could know all that went into those decisions. I, and most others, simply have to judge by what we see is the final product. Even you can't know all the things that went into the routing decisions of the courses built 80 years ago, but you can comment on how the routing works or doesn't. All of those of us on the outside can simply see if the routing produces a course that makes for a great final result. We are all judging the final result against our preferences/biases/ and standards (some personal and some consensus). Those personal and consensus notions shape our thinking about what makes an IDEAL routing (variety, smooth transitions, thoughts about pacing, starting and ending points, etc).
In all honesty, if two courses had 18 identical holes with identical strategies and land forms, identical pacing, identical length, identical walks between holes... if one of those courses finished close to where it started and one finished 680 yards away, which would you say had the better routing?
That's all I was trying to say.
Sorry that you have a problem with these thoughts.
Bart
Bart,
I am enjoying this thread and the variety of contributions.
In nature, all things are never completely equal, so your premise is hypothetically sound yet impossible in practice.
Suppose that we folllowed the (now new) rule that some hold hard, we would have missed some great holes. We would have compromised great, for an arbitrary reason. That's dumbing this down to me...dilution.
Try this exercise for me:
The vast majority of Universities do not express open displays of faith. Notre Dame does. Does that make Notre Dame inferior?
The vast majority Universities don't have Chapels in each dorm and Mass each day. Notre Dame does. Does that make Notre Dame inferior?
The vast majority Universities don't have Religious living in dorms. Notre Dame does. Does that make Notre Dame inferior?
The vast majority of Universities don't really expect athletes to work academically. Notre Dame does. Does that make Notre Dame inferior?
The vast majority of Universities less rules on conduct outside the classroom than Notre Dame does. Does that make Notre Dame inferior?
Notre Dame is not a secular place, all would agree it is different than the norm. Yet, it has the #1 undergrad business school in the nation.
All things being equal, should Notre Dame do what the vast majority does? (I vote no)
Does Notre Dame apologise for what it is? (No, they don't)
Are there people who disagree with Notre Dame for it's Mission and they manner it is delivered? (Yes, I believe there are)
Does Notre Dame change due to people who object to the way they do it? (Thankfully, no)
A golf course has 9 or 18 holes. Like a class, or a major, each hole has a beginning and an end. Your score is your grade.
At Dismal River, Tom had a unique (maybe once in a lifetime) opportunity and choice. Find and embrace the best 18 holes (maybe the best 18 hole set anywhere), or compromise and conform to what arbitrarily fit that which everyone else does, and probably have 18 lesser holes. He chose the best 18 holes, and I fully supported him. As good as the holes are, how could we not? For me, it never makes sense to have less than the best routing. Tom also did this true to his own values including making his course very walkable.
My own son chose Notre Dame (from a list of what most would call the finest schools in the nation) for he believed Notre Dame fit what he wanted, and Notre Dame was that for him because of what it is.
If some believe a routing should or must start and finish, that's ok. In itself, that will require a compromise from excellence.
I often wonder how many good courses would be great, or great otherworldly, if they didn't compromise for something completely arbitrary.