Erin Hills proved to be a very entertaining venue. Hard for anyone to say it didn't provide excitement and entertaining golf. It just wasn't what we have come to expect with a typical U.S. Open. It was a shootout and not a survival test. The course was as advertised, some kind of hybrid. It looks like links and has links like features but doesn't really play like a true links design. All in all I thought is was pretty darn good and I need to get back out there to play it again (hopefully when it is firm and fast with some wind).
+1
that said
Which "typical" US Open are you referring to?
2009 Bethpage? rainslopfest
2010 Pebble? dead bumpy greens
2011 Congressional? scoring record on soft/wet course
2013 Merion? a boutique Open where the par 4 tees looked like par 3 tees littered with divots
2014 Pinehurst? hardly typical and an example of no imagination/variety around the greens but rather a putter
2015 ? Chambers Bay-no words to describe
It rained quite a bit 3 of the 7 days/nights at EH
Those expecting links conditions were disappointed-it's a prarie/kettle moraine course-not a links-though when the weather cooperates it can be fiery a la 2011 Amateur
The top 3 in the world couldn't keep it in the wide fairways.
Would narrowed fairways have produced a better test?
or just more irons off tees and higher scores.
Sadly, nearly all classic courses have become boutique venues under our watch (incredibly disappointing) and we'll see more long beasts constructed and rota courses retired.
How championship relevant is Inwood now? (one of my favorites)
or Siwanoy (a fine course)
Myopia (awesome)
or many other obsolete major venues...
Don't get me wrong-I like EH a lot,and I like that they let them hit drivers, but I'd like it more if today's golf on EH could've been played simillarly(with regulated equipment) at 6900 yards on 15% narrower fairways on about 20% less acreage.(like baseball)
and Koepka would've still been hitting it 300+ because he's a beast.
and everybody would walk less.