Peter, I don't think anything you said was accurate.
AND I do not think you have been to the Loop, Sand Valley, Mammoth Dunes, or Erin Hills. Why are you even responding?
Ryan:
I've seen all four courses, and I think at least half of what Peter wrote was accurate. I started to highlight it all [
in green, no less], but that would just get me in trouble.
I don't know how many acres to assign to Sand Valley or Mammoth Dunes, but I'm sure it's less than Peter says. That said, my review of Sand Valley was that you could fit a whole other course in between its holes, and I don't think that's much of an exaggeration. Whether that is "wasted" land is a matter of opinion.
While you think that Peter's lack of experience on the property should disqualify him from commenting on the courses in question, I think it's just the opposite.
The truth is that we've had two threads about these same courses, and a lot of the people who have commented are compromised. Many posters here are the target customer for these courses, and they love them to a fault. Others are young people getting paid to build them, or are hoping to, so their [your] perspective is compromised. Ian and I, and probably others, have been pretty quiet because we don't want to be accused of bashing another architect based on one visit where not all the holes were even finished; and, sadly, it comes off as "bashing" if you do anything but bodysurf the tidal wave of gushing p.r. b.s. that goes with the opening of all these new courses nowadays.
Yes, you've spent two years working on Sand Valley, and from all accounts you've done some very good work. I don't know what % of your time was spent on the subtle contouring of greens, what % on the fairways, what % on the leading edges of the bunkers, and what % on the sand-scaping of another 25-50 acres at the margins of the course, which you keep leaving out of your total acreage. Personally, it's the last bit that bothers me the most, but someday the 75 acres of turf model has got to get dialed back, too. It's possible to build a great course with quite a bit less than that, although it may not be possible to win a lot of awards and rankings that way.
[You might have noticed that The Loop doesn't have a lot of that stuff happening -- there is a lot of turf because it's reversible, but the native stuff is really native, which is why I don't employ as many interns as I used to.]
The irony is, the best and most efficient golf work I've seen all year is the par-3 course you guys have been building right next to the 18th green at Mammoth Dunes. I would love to see someone build an 18-hole course that was that efficient, instead of another 350-acre course for Sand Valley III. Actually, I would love to do that myself ... but I don't think they're going to let me, because it might change the conversation.
Unfortunately, I've stepped in on this a bit too late to try and slow down your argument, and the preceding post seems to indicate that Peter will take some time off. I hope he enjoys that time off, but eventually comes back to deliver more critiques of the way things are going -- because an outside perspective is sometimes more useful than all of the suck-ups on the inside.
You've got real talent, Ryan, but as far as contributions to my own education here are concerned, you are way behind Peter, and it's not fair to drive him away to try and catch up.