The article on Gamble Sands that follows John's (by Brian Hewitt) seems to serve to complete the picture/profile and to make explicit the reasons for DMK's 're-emergence' (to accept the narrative being espoused). The qualities noted include: wide and firm fairways; driveable Par 4s; greens with no buried elephants; design challenges from the tee that are visible, and design surprises (not visible) that are not unfair. And, while all that seems just fine, it really is striking how established this 'new normal' has become, and how deeply this design approach aligns with the modern rankings/ratings, and how much respect/influence is assigned to the main client/developer in this regard. It is also striking that even DMK himself embraces this very framework to, by implication, criticize his own work, i.e. work that does not neatly fit into this prescribed/narrow definition of quality. Maybe I'm missing something and/or reading too much into all this, but (as my 'conservative times' thread touched on) the power of the "collective" has never seemed to me to be stronger than right now. (Well, maybe in the post WWII years the consensus opinion was equally established and powerful -- but of course we call those the Dark Ages...)
Peter