Patrick, here is how the Trump LA website read in February 2011:
"Who designed the Trump National Los Angeles Golf Course?
This golf course is the world’s first and only Donald J. Trump Signature Design."
Plus, in an article on that same website, Trump then said, “It’s a Donald J. Trump design, you know.”
So whatever Pete Dye did, Trump used to claim HE, the Donald, was the sole architect. What happened? Had Trump somehow forgotten who designed the course? Did something jog his memory after 2011 and remind him that Pete Dye actually should get credit?
I haven't played the course. I base my sense of it on what I've commonly read here on GCA.com. Here are some examples, from past threads that involved TNLA:
0. Since Gib made a somewhat approving post about TNLA in this thread, let me lead with what he wrote in 2010: "the golf course is little more than an expensive amusement that has no chance to stand the test of time on its own merits." i.e. a few years ago Gib pretty well said that Trump LA meets the basic question of this thread.
From other GCA posters:
1. "I can only opine on the first nine at Trump National on CA coast. It is on a piece of land that never should have been used for golf. And the design is boring back and forth on narrow terraces with outrageous contrived water features (not the Pacific). I feigned injury and happily left after 9."
2. "All in all, I feel the best club in the bag for those holes is a ball retriever." (Talking about holes #1 and #17.)
3. "IMO, the green complexes are not at all compatible with the clubs that are being hit into the various holes."
4. "Trump National in Palos Verdes is awful"
5. "Trump was a disaster as Pacific Trails and the Fazioing and waterfall certainly would not improve a back and forth mess."
6. "The land was really not suited for golf. The course resembles the terrace farming used in Italy.
The playing corridors are not wide enough and each hole has a concrete curbed cart path that runs the entire length of one side of the hole (usually the higher side) and is often in play.
The first hole has an incredibly annoying fake water feature that drowns out the Pacific Ocean.
Recovery shots are impossible if the fairway is missed by more than a few yards in places.
In addition to the stupid water feature four or five unnatural lakes were added to the property and are really out of place.
The course is unwalkable.
With the exception of the 1st hole all of the holes run either north or south which makes for a very boring routing.
Most of the holes play relatively straight.
The green complexes are pretty redundant, most of the greens are turned at around a 45 degree angle in order to make straight holes seem less straight.
Trump did have people come in and do some additional work on some green complexes to put more variety and interest in them but Dye's original green complexes were pretty boring.
The green contours are unnatural and often don't tie in to the surrounding land.
The course feels very unnatural and contrived."
7. "I've grown up watching Ocean Trails be built, then fall into the ocean, then Trump turn what was an ok course into "Disneyland" golf. The course is 90% show and very little substance. If you're in Palos Verdes, the best course is Palos Verdes Country Club, and the best course for value is actually the Terrenea par 3."
8. "I played Trump's course in LA...it is exactly what his hair is to his face"
9. Then there's the post by none other than Pat Mucci, who some years ago wrote, "You can have the most beautiful vistas in the world, but, if the core values of the architecture are inferior, the golf course will fail in a comparitive environment and under the weight of its own inadequacies. Wasn't there a thread accompanied by pictures of Trump Los Angeles, where people stated that the views were breathtaking but the golf course mediocre at best?"
i.e. you, Pat, raised the same questions about this course.
Trump Scotland: my sense is that Trump made a course that looks like a links, but plays like a parkland course. He used two types of grass -- so he could open earlier as I understand it -- and now faces the daunting task of phasing out the rye. The course does not play F&F, but the opposite, of S&S. And it will apparently take years to create true links conditions, if they ever are able to do so.
Why I think Trump doesn't quite get golf: he built a parklands type course in a dunes/links setting. He claims he wants the best courses, but does not hire the best architects. He designs (his claim) a course he says is better than Pebble, that many on this site think is a lot worse than Rancho.
Much of his business is built around image -- the Trump brand, the beauty contests, his fascination with mass media -- and I think that carries over into many of his golf ventures. It may well pay off financially -- he may do great with real estate sales, hotels etc -- but image does not make great golf courses.
Trump the ramrod: he is happy to use eminent domain to force landowners to forfeit their property. He has destroyed others' views, to punish them and try to force them off their land.
He often throws vast money at projects --at least by his accounting -- unilaterally declares his courses the best in the world, even while they in reality lag far behind. Here's an interview that is pretty typical:
"Q: You own courses all over the world. What makes your golf clubs the "best"?
A: I have the best liocations. bedminster should be in the top 10. My Florida course is the best in Florida and Trump National LA is better than Pebble Beach.
Q: That's a big claim. You really believe Trump National LA is a better course than the famed Pebble Beach?
A: That's what people say until they play my course. I have 3000 acres and 2.5 miles on the ocean. That's the ocean, not the bay. Every single hole fronts the ocean. I love Pebble, too, but even people who love Pebble say Trump LA is superior. What Pebble has is history and some day Trump LA will have history, though I might not be around to see it. Trump LA is far better than Bandon Dunes in Oregon. It's unfair to compare a course in Los Angeles, a great metropolitan area, to one in a wasteland far away from civilisation."
To me that brief interview reveals a great deal about what Trump values: views, waterfront acreage, every hole fronting the ocean, great metro areas vs the wastelands of civilization. It's partly bluster, but I think Trump buys his own b.s.
He gets the job done, business-wise no question. He knows how to buy and sell. But he's so focused on image, he doesn't understand well what makes a great golf course. At least IMO.
Again quoting from a post Gib made in 2010 about Trump LA: "part of the allure to me is the sheer amusement at Trumps level of grandiose buffoonery." And..."Look at it this way Dick: The more knuckleheads who buy into Trump's hallucinations, the less crowded it will be at Bandon and Pebble Beach.
Note: I think he's a quick learner. His Scotland course has gotten the highest ratings -- by far -- of any Trump course. Maybe that's why he hired Gil to renovate Doral -- and is why it won't surprise me to see him work in the future with more of the architects favored on this website.