Poster X goes on and on about value for the money and tier-3 courses and 'greatness being over-rated' -- but he's played the Old Course and Dornoch and just about all the other greats in GB&I
Poster Y suggests a visitor play and appreciate Pacific Grove and Half Moon Bay -- but he's been a welcomed guest at all of America's great & classic courses, and has long been a member of Olympic, which for me is the best U.S. Open venue ever
Poster Z travels yearly to the most far-flung bits of the British Isles to play unknown and ridiculously unkempt 9 holers -- but he lives on Long Island, for an outsider the very epicentre of North American golf, and has played the most exclusive clubs in the country
And of course our Beloved Leader is the epitome of slumming, and even dresses the part!
See what I'm asking?
Is truly appreciating the "good" primarily a function of having had your fill of the "greats"? Is slumming with the merely "good" a luxury that many of us have not yet earned?
And if so, what does that say about how we experience and rate golf course architecture? Is it, in truth, more about what we feel we're *lacking* than it is about what we actually *need* in a golf course?
Just like we don't even think about eating a great meal when we've just finished having a huge dinner, is it only when that sense of lack has been satisfied that we begin to feel/know it wasn't all that important in the first place?
But/and, if it "wasn't all that important in the first place", why are we as a collective so obsessed about great courses, and the question of what makes a great course, and what great course is just about to open, and with playing the great courses?
P.S. - and if Tom D comes on here and says that good/great is 'all a matter of opinion anyway', it will settle the question for me once and for all and actually prove my point!
I'd bet a lot of money that this notion he's been pawning off on us about "opinions" hadn't even occurred to him until at least decade *after* he'd written his famous first book