In 1947, two of the most prominent clubs in the United States were Plum Hollow and St. Louis CC. This is proven by the USGA selecting SLCC for the Open and the PGA selecting Plum for the PGA Championship. These two clubs are linked by two more historical facts:
1. They both have fallen off the national radar screen (Plum much more so than SL CC).
2. They both had Sam Snead lose a tournament at their club in an amazing way.
We all know that in the '47 Open, Snead missed a 2' putt on 18 and lost to Lew Worsham. If Snead had won the Open, he would have had a career Grand Slam.
In the '57 Western Open at Plum (The last tournament the club hosted) Snead took a 10 on the 4th hole and lost by one stroke to Doug Ford.
Although Oakland Hills is a better course than Plum, I do not believe it is better than SL CC. Yet Hogan won at Oakland and called it "The Monster." I wonder if the winner of events create a courses national reputation? SL CC had Guilford win the '21 AM instead of Chick Evans, who won before and after and Bobby Jones who would win a bunch a couple years after. In 1960, SLCC was the course where Beaman upset Nicklaus preventing Jack from winning three in a row. Would SLCC be a top 20 if everything was identical but its winners were Jones, Snead and Nicklaus instead of Guilford, Worsham and Beaman? In the same light, would Plum be a top 100 if the '47 PGA had been won by Hogan and the '57 Western by Snead instead of Ferrier and Ford?
Is part of the national view of a course defined by its winners? If yes, how much?