Tom, Just curious...why do you feel the panel needs "more great players, especially..."? I would think the most important two criteria would be (1) what have you seen?, and (2) how much time do you have to devote to seeing more? What does being a "great player" have to do with it?
Ted:
This is the first GOLF Magazine list where Jack Nicklaus doesn't have any say in what a great course is, or Greg Norman. You don't think guys like that bring any perspective to the table? I do. There are more than a dozen architects on the panel; those guys are architects, too. We've got Michael Clayton on the panel, why is he more informed than Jack? And wouldn't you want to hear what Tiger Woods thought?
Lukas Michel's small interview in the issue also made the case well. Where he does go and play for events, he plays the course 5-6 times, and studies it pretty intently to try and figure out best tactics. Most of the people on the panel just do not think that hard about their votes.
It was accepted wisdom until not long ago that a course's ability to hold up for great players had some relevance to whether it was a great course. How much that should be factored in was a source of debate and argument, but in the new regime it has been pretty much eliminated altogether, unless you are comfortable that Ran and I are giving it due consideration. [And I'm not comfortable in saying that, so I don't know why you would be.]
Sure, it can go way too far the other way, to where you have an entire panel of low handicappers who can't see the forest for the trees [*cough* GOLF DIGEST *cough*]. But that doesn't mean you have to grab the pendulum and hold it over on the other side.
Of course, it is hard to implement my recommendation, because the fact is that players like Norman and Nicklaus and Woods and Koepka HAVE NOT gone to many of these courses, or did so decades ago. [When we were at Sebonack, Nicklaus mentioned having gone to Pine Valley on his honeymoon in 1959 . . .] Even so, their being on the panel would lend it credibility, more than most of the names on the list.