Bill Daniels, who founded GOLFChicago magazine in 1997, has submitted a thought-provoking In My Opinion piece. Here is the link:
https://golfclubatlas.com/tigers-plans-for-chicago-course-misses-mark/As GCA has discussed, Chicago is one of America's big cities that has recently evaluated its open spaces and created new priorities. In the case of Jackson Park and South Shore Golf Course, the powers that be considered several options. At one end was a high end, ~$60,000,000 gut job centering around a Tiger Woods Design 18 hole course as an anchor for big events. On the other side of the spectrum was Tom Doak’s proposed sub-6500 yard course, complete with a much more modest price tag.
What typically happens in this country during prosperous times did and the bigger, more ornate path was chosen. That made some people very happy and some not. Bill is a dissenter. Tiger Woods's involvement with the south side of Chicago might prove off-the-charts magical (let's hope so!) but that's not the point of Bill's essay. He is interested in determining what type course will best serve the locals. Tiger could build a 6,200 yard course, for instance.
Does anyone see a resemblance to well-meaning nations/cities bidding for the Olympic games when the victors often find themselves in debt with White Elephants after the event clears town? Tiger’s championship layout might be on television periodically but will it truly touch a lot of lives in greater Chicago? Time will tell. If the course truly costs $30m and the infra-structure another $30m
, can it be afforded? Importantly for the locals, bifurcated fees have been recommended (which I think is an outstanding idea), less than $50 for locals and north of $200 for out-of-towners (I think).
Basically, the proposal is for South Shore and Jackson Park to become one big budget course. Bill questions if that is what the game really needs. Such courses demand more of everything that stifles golf - cost, space, and time. As a counterpoint, Bill extols the virtues of a smaller scale venue. Courses that are tighter knit and measure 1,000 yards shorter than what is being proposed are more economic on all counts and deliver the greatest amount of fun to the greatest number of golfers.
Bill and I question the on-going stigma attached to sub-6500 yard courses in this country. Afterall, the Brits have long appreciated the joys of the Pulboroughs, Liphooks, Wokings and Swinleys and they do so on foot as opposed to Americans who traverse the bloated acreage sitting on their rumps in carts. Among the hundreds of calls and conversations I have each year, the group of courses that generate (to paraphrase Colt) the least negative critiques is the collection of sub 6500 yarders throughout England. Americans in particular relish their exposure to these design gems scattered outside London.
America needs to embrace this model at some point and maybe another city will show the way if more people express their sentiments as Bill has. Until then, good luck to the City of the Big Shoulders and let's hope they end up doing what proves to be best for their particular situation.