Kyle,
I have been the one defending a top GREAT course in the country. Every major publication agrees with me along with the dozens of people who have privately reached out in total shock anyone would say things like "bethpage is terrible" and "bethpage is bastardized" .. I am not the one who has crossed the line.
I have been challenged that the course is NOT great and over rated by the golf world with:
I want wider fairways becase the course is too hard.
I want wider fairways because sometimes I hit errrant tee shots and thats not fair.
I want a half par hole because, well, its cool.
I want to remove all the rough because I don't like hitting out of rough, especially rough thats long and challenging.
I don't like narrow dog legs because it forces me to hit a variety of shots off the tee, I just want to grip it and rip it and be assured of fairway.
Bethpage is not a top 1000 course, well okay okay its not a top 500 course.
I dont understand why anyone would compare Bethpage to PV when PV has virtually no rough.
and you really believe I am the one not being taken seriously?
You are being so soundly criticized at by the GCA.COM community for many reasons, Nick.
For starters, you began this thread with personal attacks, and you are lucky Ran didn't throw you off the site. He probably did not not because while your "argument" favoring penal rough surely made Ran throw up in his mouth, enough knowledgable posters made the case that penal rough is boring; a course without a multitude of strategic options throughout the round can never be great, a great course has a great set of greens, etc., etc. So I'm sure Ran is pleased that the community so effectively shot down your thesis.
We probably ALL agree that Bethpage is a great course for the USGA whose goal seems to be to defend par and determine the best golfer over a 4 day period. That does NOT make it a great golf course. I find it funny that you equate Pine Valley with BPB, because PV is such an excellent example of a truly great course that does not rely on penal rough to be a really tough test of golf. The fairways at PV are SO much wider than BPB, and it's all about angles, being on the proper side of the fairway, and avoiding the really bad shot.
You are pissing people off with your incredibly poor reading comprehension and/or your willful twisting of people's words. For example, I never once complain when I play BPB. I said in my post that I know what I'm signing up for when I pay my green fees. I actually relish the challenge of testing my game under conditions that are similar to what the pros experience in US Opens and I'm a good enough player to get around the course. Yet you twisted that statement and said I whined because my ball was 5 yards off the fairway. I never ONCE talked about fairness. I simply said hacking out of thick rough is boring. It forces a player to play safe and robs him of the opportunity to try and pull of a heroic shot. You've twisted about twenty other statements on this thread. That makes you either a liar or a fool.
Here's the thing you don't really grasp, Nick. The posters on this site really know their stuff. Their collective knowledge never ceases to amaze me. It is clear that most have studied many architects, played a wide variety of courses, and their thinking about what constitutes a truly great golf course has evolved over time. I recognize the opinions of an architecturally uneducated golfer like you because I was once one myself. Thankfully, I took the time to really study the subject before I made 50 posts defending a position that I would soon learn was completely wrong...
Having been on GCA.COM for about 15 years, I truly believe that the site has elevated the collective knowledge of the golfing community about what constitutes truly good golf course architecture. Sure, we run into occasional neanderthal thinking thats says "you need penal rough to test good golfers because of equipment advances." But in that sense, Nick, you are providing a valuable service by being the guy who makes that argument. It is good practice when we hear that at our clubs.