I know that, when I was a 90s shooter, I was also an immature young person and golfer. As I evolved in both life and golf, I came to understand that such bounces at best, resulted in an enviable outcome; at worst, they should be laughed at, and the next shot should be played
Congratulations on being the exception that proves the rule.
On a more serious note, everyone on gca knows that it is dangerous to generalize. Having said that, I'd still agree with Peter - in my experience, MHs and HHs are more apt to blame themselves, whereas LHs are more apt to blame the course/design/architect. It surely doesn't always prove true, nor does the fact that LHs can still produce a lower score mean they get the architecture better; they are, by definition, better golfers, so one would expect they would handle challenges better.
That wasn't the question, however.
Maybe the better question is, does it even matter, this question about who evaluates a course more fairly, LHs, MHs, or HHs? Is it even possible to generalize accurately about that? If it is, wouldn't that mean the logical extension is that we should value Tiger's, Rory's, Phil's, Ernie's and Jordan's opinion far more than Tom Doak, Jeff Brauer, Gil Hanse, Dan Mahaffey, Ian Andrew, Mike Nuzzo, etc?
For you older, more experienced golfers out there, are your thoughts worth less now than 10-15-20 years ago, when you were a better player, at least as defined by score?
I personally don't even look at what a reviewer shoots, I look at clues within his post as to how he views the game. If he preaches a desire for fairness, any sort of formula (boxing the compass on par 3s, balancing short par 4s and long par 4s, etc), then I'm likely to value his opinion less. Conversely, if it's a poster I know and whose principles I tend to agree with, then I value it more.
And, I'd argue, that's what discussion groups on golf course architecture is all about: we all share opinions, we all evaluate others' opinions on our own.
I just tire reading the first comment upon someone shooting a higher score being, did you play the right tees? If that is ever the first question anyone is prompted to ask me personally, just do us both a favor and assume I did and respond to my thoughts, or just ignore my thoughts and go read your own personal bias confirmation posts by someone else...
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On a side note, I've been considering starting a thread for a long time now, asking if people really understand how they - and others - play golf. It's my own personal pet peeve, based on the dismissals of the ideas of someone who shoots in the 90s or whatever. I truly believe posters on here forget that shooting a 95 versus a 75 isn't as big a difference as it appears. It's a little more than 1 shot per hole - an extra putt after a less than stellar chip or bunker shot, missing a few extra greens or fairways a round, or just a couple more penalty shots because your shot was 20 yards offline instead of 15. Someone shooting a 95 isn't someone shooting a 130; the former is a high handicapper, the latter is a beginner. Saying one would like ground game options doesn't mean someone hits 50 yard wormburners all day long. You don't shoot 95 doing that.
Of course, as someone on here likes to note, that's just my opinion, your mileage may vary...
Happy New Year.
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Terrific post, Peter P! Only a LH would classify himself in the same class as an S & B.