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Darren_Kilfara

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Reflections on The Confidential Guide (and GolfClubAtlas)
« on: November 17, 2015, 11:18:01 AM »
After writing the below article for The American magazine, a publication for American expats living in the UK - I've served for several years as its Golf Correspondent - I decided to check if my GCA membership had lapsed. Much to my surprise, it hasn't, so I thought I'd share this draft with you on the off-chance some of you might appreciate it or empathise with it (or spot errors in it before it is actually published). It's been a while!

Cheers,
Darren

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Confidential Guide to My Golfing Life

Without question, the most important golf book of my adult life (excluding my own!) has been Tom Doak’s The Confidential Guide to Golf Courses. I recently learned that Doak’s groundbreaking one-volume work – long out of print and now a valuable collector’s item – is now being updated, expanded and republished as a five-volume series, a revelation which makes me at once giddy, scared and wistful.

The concept behind Doak’s Guide, first published to a general audience in 1996, is as simple as it was revolutionary: take one of the world’s best golf course architects and let him talk freely and pointedly about the best – and worst – designs in the world. Doak is ridiculously well-travelled, and the original Guide rates more than 1,000 courses on five continents on a 1-10 scale with two quirks: the average golf course in the world merits a “3” instead of a “5”, giving him more scope to differentiate between superlative courses; and a special rating of “0” is reserved for courses “so contrived and unnatural, wasting ridiculous sums of money in their construction, that they may poison your mind and probably shouldn’t have been built in the first place.”

That quotation reflects the Guide’s origins as an unvarnished dossier for 40 of his friends who were always asking him where to play golf. Doak isn’t impressed by fancy clubhouses, manicured greens, historical tradition or big-name reputations: he simply assesses the quality of each design and how one might go about engaging the architecture. Doak’s reasons for liking golf courses – foremost among them being memorable natural terrain and holes built to use it productively, not artificially – almost perfectly match mine. (No wonder he’s probably my favorite architect working today.) And his informal and utterly readable tone turned a potential coffee table snoozer into a font of knowledge worth perusing and poring over again and again.

Other golf books from my youth perhaps shaped my life more than the Guide; anthologies by Dan Jenkins and Herbert Warren Wind inspired me to write about golf, while Wind and Michael Bamberger’s To the Linksland first prompted me to consider living in Scotland. But ever since my first adolescent trip to the Monterey Peninsula, I’ve always craved exposure to great golf course architecture. I mean, I chose which university I’d attend largely because in trying out for the Harvard golf team I’d probably get to play the team’s home course – a certain Ryder Cup and US Open venue in Brookline, Massachusetts – at least once or twice. And here, in the Guide, I now discovered the intimate secrets of golf’s most wondrous treasures.

Consumption of the Guide went hand in hand with the discussion forum at GolfClubAtlas.com, a website teeming with architectural savants and strong opinions in copious measure. I used GolfClubAtlas to scratch the itches with which the Guide covered me, learning more about what made architecture good and discovering more and more places I wanted to play. When I moved to London, I befriended several fellow connoisseurs and crisscrossed the country in their company, each new trip more memorable than the last: Pennard [Guide rating: 6] and Royal Porthcawl [7] in Wales; Burnham and Berrow [5] and Saunton East [6] in the west of England; Ganton [8] and Woodhall Spa [8] in the north; Swinley Forest [8] and many others southwest of London. In 2001 I travelled to a GolfClubAtlas rendezvous at the Bandon Dunes resort in Oregon and played my first Tom Doak course, Pacific Dunes (a perfect 10 in my book). Doak himself joined me and more than a dozen GCAers on a pilgrimage to Painswick in Gloucestershire, a bastion of quirky architecture which instantly became legendary on GolfClubAtlas after another American expat posted photos of it. An Australian GCAer even helped arrange my golfing tour of the Melbourne Sand Belt in 2003: Royal Melbourne West [10], Kingston Heath [8], Commonwealth [8], Victoria [7]....

A turning point arrived in 2004. Another GCAer organized a game for me at Pine Valley, widely considered the best course in the world, during a forthcoming work-related training trip to New York. But two nights before my flight, another company made me a job offer I couldn’t really refuse. Should I immediately tell my employer the truth, and possibly forfeit the ultimate golf course experience? I did, and I did: integrity cost me a date with architectural destiny. Possibly for the first time, I chose not to be ruled by my strongest golfing passion.

The scales before my eyes began to fall. I now lived on Scotland’s “Golf Coast”, belonged to two golf clubs – nearby Dunbar and distant Machrihanish – with wonderful links courses, and played competitive golf everywhere from Royal Dornoch to Silloth-on-Solway. The Guide and GolfClubAtlas now instilled jealousy of faraway fantasies, spoiling my contentment with the abundant riches on my doorstep. Was I really a student of golf course architecture, or merely a bedpost notcher addicted to the thrill of new conquests? My answer to that question – probably a bit of both – didn’t feel right enough.

So I drifted away from GolfClubAtlas, and I stopped studying the Guide, and ultimately I’m probably happier for it. I’m already blessed beyond belief at the golfing life I’ve managed to live, far beyond what I ever dreamed growing up in suburban Atlanta. I’ll probably never play Pine Valley or Sand Hills or Barnbougle Dunes or Cape Kidnappers…but that’s OK. The publication of a new five-volume Guide – now featuring ratings from three new contributors, including GolfClubAtlas founder Ran Morrissett, in addition to Doak himself – frightens me, much as a reformed alcoholic might wish to avoid new editions of The World Atlas of Wine. But as with most of life, I’ve found that the secret to golfing happiness involves moderation in all things, including moderation. Now, I wonder: has Doak properly revised his overly hasty rating of Dunaverty Golf Club in Argyll from a “2” to at least a “4” or “5”? I jolly well hope so.

The first two volumes of the updated Confidential Guide to Golf Courses can be purchased via www.renaissancegolf.com/books/.

---------------------------
Darren Kilfara formerly worked for
Golf Digest magazine and is the author of A Golfer’s Education, a memoir of his junior year abroad as a student-golfer at the University of St. Andrews. His latest book, a novel called Do You Want Total War?, is also now available online at Amazon and elsewhere.
---------------------------

Niall C

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Re: Reflections on The Confidential Guide (and GolfClubAtlas)
« Reply #1 on: November 17, 2015, 11:48:24 AM »
 ;D


Niall

Jonathan Mallard

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Re: Reflections on The Confidential Guide (and GolfClubAtlas)
« Reply #2 on: November 17, 2015, 12:49:51 PM »
"Just when I thought I was out...     




They pull me back in!"

Dan Kelly

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Re: Reflections on The Confidential Guide (and GolfClubAtlas)
« Reply #3 on: November 17, 2015, 01:00:50 PM »
...(or spot errors in it before it is actually published).


Darren --


Strongly suggest changing "reformed alcoholic" to "recovering alcoholic."


Dan
"There's no money in doing less." -- Joe Hancock, 11/25/2010
"Rankings are silly and subjective..." -- Tom Doak, 3/12/2016

Bill_McBride

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Re: Reflections on The Confidential Guide (and GolfClubAtlas)
« Reply #4 on: November 17, 2015, 01:06:44 PM »
Darren, welcome back!

MCirba

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Re: Reflections on The Confidential Guide (and GolfClubAtlas)
« Reply #5 on: November 17, 2015, 01:11:12 PM »
Hey Darren,

You can check out any time you like, but...  ;)

Good to hear from you.
"Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent" - Calvin Coolidge

https://cobbscreek.org/

Jason Way

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Re: Reflections on The Confidential Guide (and GolfClubAtlas)
« Reply #6 on: November 17, 2015, 01:27:26 PM »
As a friend of mine once said, "A little internal conflict is a good thing." 


Thanks for sharing your article, and your experiences with going down the rabbit hole, and then popping back out. 
"Golf is a science, the study of a lifetime, in which you can exhaust yourself but never your subject." - David Forgan

Tom_Doak

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Re: Reflections on The Confidential Guide (and GolfClubAtlas)
« Reply #7 on: November 17, 2015, 01:47:55 PM »
Darren:


Nice to hear from you after so many years -- and thanks for the strong review of the book!


I do not think there will be many recovering alcoholics who are tempted by the "World Atlas of Wine," or Robert Parker's actual book on the same subject.  That's geared more toward the guy with disposable income, than toward the out and out alcoholic. 


And ... ick ... I suppose my book is, too.  But if you have a copy of Volume 1, with the 300-odd courses in Great Britain & Ireland, you probably don't need more than that.




BCrosby

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Re: Reflections on The Confidential Guide (and GolfClubAtlas)
« Reply #8 on: November 17, 2015, 02:29:16 PM »
Darren -


Delighted to see your post. It has been far, far too long.


Terrific review of Tom's new book.


Please provide a link to your articles.


Bob

George Pazin

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Re: Reflections on The Confidential Guide (and GolfClubAtlas)
« Reply #9 on: November 17, 2015, 02:58:16 PM »
Darren -


Delighted to see your post. It has been far, far too long.


Terrific review of Tom's new book.

Bob


+1
Big drivers and hot balls are the product of golf course design that rewards the hit one far then hit one high strategy.  Shinny showed everyone how to take care of this whole technology dilemma. - Pat Brockwell, 6/24/04

Ronald Montesano

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Re: Reflections on The Confidential Guide (and GolfClubAtlas)
« Reply #10 on: November 17, 2015, 03:22:41 PM »
Nearly fifteen years ago, when BuffaloGolfer was merely Buff-Golf:


November 2001[/b][/font]
[/size]Now, I’m not a jealous guy on a day-to-day basis, but this Darren Kilfara forces me to confess something deep within my soul:  I planned to do what he did.  Back in 1992, I was a graduate student at the University of Buffalo, with no career seemingly in site.  I decided to apply to the University of St. Andrews, to pursue a Masters of Philology in Spanish.  At least that would be my excuse.  Once over the pond, I would work as a caddie and play the Old Course as often as possible.  Stateside romance was my conqueror, however, and the plan became a dream.
[/size]Now, bless her soul, when my wife and I finally made it to Europe for our honeymoon, she scheduled a three-day stop in Scotland before reaching France and Spain.  I awoke early the first day, inquired as to the possibility of a single playing the Old course, and was politely sent down the road, past the Himalayas, to test the New.  A bit bummed, as it would be my only round in Scotland, I quickly came to my senses, and realized that I was to play a round of golf in St. A, and that the chosen links was irrelevant.  After beginning with a series of pars, I settled under the wind into a closing sequence of bogeys and doubles, proving once again that the novice is at peril when he most expects it.  I returned to our hostel, and greeted my wife with a kiss, thanking her for the most wonderful Father’s Day present a guy could dream up.  When she inquired as to the nature of my round, I unfortunately brought up the fact that I had played the New, not the Old, course.  Even she knew that, as good as the New might be, it was not the reason that most came to this town.  “You jerk, you did this so you could get in two rounds” gently evolved into “Well, then, you’ll have to play again tomorrow.” We went out for fish and chips, and walked the town.
[/size]The next morning, I awakened at 3:30, and was sure that I had overslept.  The sun was shining through our window, and so, after another hour or so of tossing and turning, I grabbed my bag, headed out down the road, and reached the first tee.  Determined this time to wait until noon, if necessary, to get on as a single, I watched as Barney Miller’s Hal Linden, in the first group of the day, played off the first tee of the Old course in a black turtleneck sweater.  No sooner had I turned away, than did the starter call my name.  “Get on the tee, laddie,” and I did not pause to wonder why or how . . . THE THIRD GROUP OF THE DAY!!!!
[/size]How I spanked that drive into the fairway, I’ll never know.  I followed it up with three shanks to the right of the first green, and ultimately did not finish.  An “x” on the first hole at the Old course; how humiliating.  This was not how Golf In The Kingdom started.  The next fourteen holes went by in a blur of hollows, pot bunkers, swails, moguls, and double greens.  Shell-shocked I was, and I did not retrieve my senses until we stood on the sixteenth tee.  With a four-iron in my hand, I purposely aimed at the OB fence right, swung, and struck a shot destined for the then-practice field.  “Ohh,” cried my partners, and dismay overtook them.  I knew better, though, and surely did the draw that I had intended take effect, and the ball curved gently back to the fairway.  For the first time that day, the caddies exchanged a knowing glance about me.  Surely this was a reward in itself.  That I approached through the green and made bogey, were of no consequence; I had controlled the play of a hole, for the first time all day.  That, too, was a triumph.  As I stood on the seventeenth tee, the Road Hole awaited, with the grand hotel looming large on my right.  I sighted properly over the sheds, and struck a drive just inside them, that came down in the left rough.  With seven iron in my hand, I aimed toward the front of the green, swung, and liked what I saw.  My ball had bounded down, to finish some six paces shy of the infamous putting surface.  The Road bunker yawned to my left, but the hole, thankfully, was cut to the right. Knowing that I could not stop a pitch on the plateau where it sat, I selected a putter, and knocked an approach putt to with in ten feet of the declivity.  I made myself a promise as I settled in over the fourth stroke that I would not look up until I heard the ball clatter against the sleeve of the hole.  I played and waited, then looked up in exasperation, just in time to see the ball tumble home.  A par on the Road Hole!  "Achh, you'll be wanting to take thot one home with ya, laddie," remarked one of the loopers.
[/size]Did I float to the 18th tee?  You bet, and busted a drive across Granny Clark's Wynde, to within fifty yards of the green.  Monstrous!  Rejecting the pitch for the putt, I hit a half-putter toward, down, then up, the Valley of Sin, onto the home green.  Two putts later, with what seemed like all of Scotland watching, I had my second consecutive par, and a memorable finish.  Did I want to shoot in the 70s?  Sure.  Did I deserve to?  No.  Was I fortunate to take away those memories?  Oh, laddie!
Coming in 2024
~Elmira Country Club
~Soaring Eagles
~Bonavista
~Indian Hills
~Maybe some more!!

Dave McCollum

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Re: Reflections on The Confidential Guide (and GolfClubAtlas)
« Reply #11 on: November 17, 2015, 03:27:58 PM »
Darren—

I didn’t discover gcatlas.com until a few years after you departed, naturally, planning a golf pilgrimage to Scotland.  Rather at the twilight of my playing days than the beginning.  Most of my interest began reading classics by Wind, Darwin, Finegan, with a smattering later works such as Bamberger’s and others.  Sadly, I used this site for its course tours and opinion pieces and had no inkling there was a vast collection of golf nutcases over in the discussion group until after I returned.  I did indeed anchor my trip with a tee time on TOC, but spent 12 days, starting in Cruden Bay, circling around the East and West coasts playing the local courses beforehand.  As much as I love Tom’s Guides, I’m glad I didn’t have one and just played whatever I’d read about in the old books or stumbled on.

Good review and a golfing perspective that seems to mirror my own from geezer land.  Thought I’d just join the other Harvard golfer in welcoming you back, however briefly.  I just read some of your work (including old Crimson pieces), your cga interview, and will get your book.

Dave

Peter Pallotta

Re: Reflections on The Confidential Guide (and GolfClubAtlas)
« Reply #12 on: November 17, 2015, 03:50:15 PM »
Thanks, Darren - very well written.

Your experience is akin to a man realizing that he hasn't thought of his high school sweetheart in 30 years -- inevitable with the passage of time and the gaining of new loves, but a little sad and poignant nonetheless. With each passing year, it seems, there are less and less "firsts" and more and more "last times". 

The last times can be rich and deep in meaning, but those first times sure are exciting!

Peter   
« Last Edit: November 17, 2015, 03:57:28 PM by Peter Pallotta »

Darren_Kilfara

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Re: Reflections on The Confidential Guide (and GolfClubAtlas)
« Reply #13 on: November 17, 2015, 06:35:14 PM »
Gents,

Thanks so much to all of you for the lovely feedback. At the suggestions of Messrs. Kelly and Doak, I'll change that sentence in the final paragraph to read, "...much as a recovering alcoholic might fear a new pub opening next door to his flat."

Re: Bob's question, there's not a great link to my articles - the homepage of The American is www.theamerican.co.uk, but everything there seems to be posted in a somewhat scattershot manner. (For example, my post-Masters article about Jordan Spieth is still linked on the site's homepage - sans proper formatting, like the italics I'd included - whereas you can only find my more recent critique of the PGA Tour's wraparound season buried on pp. 72-73 within the online version of the actual magazine.) I may need to start a new blog just to properly organize and display my writing output! FWIW, I started writing this column in the aftermath of having just missed out on a job in the R&A's Communications team in St. Andrews - the tiebreaker being that the other finalist was currently working in the golf industry, whereas I wasn't. That was four or five years ago; I'm not expecting this little gig will lead to bigger things, but I've been enjoying writing about golf again all the same.

Anyway, this has been a pretty amazing trip down memory lane for me. And no matter how often (or not) I wind up posting again - in truth, I kinda feel like Leo McGarry in The West Wing just after sipping from a bottle of Johnnie Walker Blue - if any of you are ever out in East Lothian, please do look me up. I'd be very happy to give you a game at Dunbar!

Cheers,
Darren
« Last Edit: November 17, 2015, 06:47:39 PM by Darren_Kilfara »

Paul Gray

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Re: Reflections on The Confidential Guide (and GolfClubAtlas)
« Reply #14 on: November 17, 2015, 06:42:40 PM »
Darren:


Nice to hear from you after so many years -- and thanks for the strong review of the book!


I do not think there will be many recovering alcoholics who are tempted by the "World Atlas of Wine," or Robert Parker's actual book on the same subject.  That's geared more toward the guy with disposable income, than toward the out and out alcoholic. 


And ... ick ... I suppose my book is, too.  But if you have a copy of Volume 1, with the 300-odd courses in Great Britain & Ireland, you probably don't need more than that.

You'd be surprised.

And the term is indeed 'recovering alcoholic.'  ;)
In the places where golf cuts through pretension and elitism, it thrives and will continue to thrive because the simple virtues of the game and its attendant culture are allowed to be most apparent. - Tim Gavrich

Tom_Doak

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Re: Reflections on The Confidential Guide (and GolfClubAtlas)
« Reply #15 on: November 17, 2015, 07:22:50 PM »

I do not think there will be many recovering alcoholics who are tempted by the "World Atlas of Wine,"

You'd be surprised.

And the term is indeed 'recovering alcoholic.'  ;)


Paul:


Oh, I know there are plenty of alcoholics with disposable income; I might have met a few in my day.  I just don't think they're going to fall off the wagon by reading about drinking.  And I might well be surprised.

Rob Collins

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Re: Reflections on The Confidential Guide (and GolfClubAtlas)
« Reply #16 on: November 17, 2015, 08:31:06 PM »
Great post! I think you do really nice job of encapsulating and presenting the ideas, motivations, and interests of many of us in the GCA community.  His book and this community have had and will continue to have a profound effect on the way architecture is perceived and practiced.
Rob Collins

www.kingcollinsgolf.com
@kingcollinsgolf on Twitter
@kingcollinsgolf on Instagram

Paul_Turner

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Re: Reflections on The Confidential Guide (and GolfClubAtlas)
« Reply #17 on: November 18, 2015, 11:50:28 AM »
Darren


Good to see you here again Darren.  Brings back some fond memories...


Request an edit on the Painswick credit though! ;)
http://www.golfclubatlas.com/forum/index.php/topic,11842.0.html


(Ain't no-one ever gonna beat that thread for shock value!)
« Last Edit: November 18, 2015, 12:38:35 PM by Paul_Turner »
can't get to heaven with a three chord song

Darren_Kilfara

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Re: Reflections on The Confidential Guide (and GolfClubAtlas)
« Reply #18 on: November 19, 2015, 05:31:03 AM »
Paul - oh my...in my head I was sure that Rich Goodale started the original Painswick thread. I most sincerely apologise and will get that fixed in the published article!  :-[

Matt MacIver

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Re: Reflections on The Confidential Guide (and GolfClubAtlas)
« Reply #19 on: November 19, 2015, 07:17:27 AM »
I thought the average Doak course was a 4 rating, not 3...?

Rich Goodale

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Re: Reflections on The Confidential Guide (and GolfClubAtlas)
« Reply #20 on: November 19, 2015, 08:19:33 AM »
Good article, Darren.

I can confirm that it was Paul who alerted all of the small band of brothers that was GCA at the turn of the Millenuium to the charms of Painswick.  All I did was cheer him on after being gobsmacked by his photography, go down to the Cotswolds to play the course and then organize the gathering in 2004 that is now called BUDA II (even though it wasn't called "BUDA" then).  IMO it was the best BUDA ever, at least so far........

Rich
Life is good.

Any afterlife is unlikely and/or dodgy.

Jean-Paul Parodi

Tim_Weiman

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Re: Reflections on The Confidential Guide (and GolfClubAtlas)
« Reply #21 on: November 19, 2015, 02:42:25 PM »
Darren,


Great post. Quite hard to top. Yes, TD's Guide is quite special.
Tim Weiman