Mike is a good guy who has long been keenly interested in golf architecture. This career move is of no surprise to those who know him, and had been practically telegraphed for sometime.
Tommy Fazio Jr. is a nice guy who will stand to gain a good deal from a professional association with Mike Davis. He's currently focused on re-working his own design on the New Course at Trump Bedminster, now that the New is being combined with the Old Course for a composite routing for the 2022 PGA Championship.
Yes, I think Joel Stewart is partly right when insinuating that this new combination will reflect a targeted marketing approach for future USGA tournaments.That said, I doubt this team will oust the Hanse/Wagner or Coore/Crenshaw from their current leadership slots. When a premier private club desires to restore their course in order to attract a USGA event, those teams are a proven, safe entity with a near perfect track record of delivering excellence to the audience in Far Hills. Only the limits of availability or price will deter those decision-makers.
Lastly, while Mike might well retain considerable influence at the Golf House, he also has a good amount of personal integrity and won't likely sully himself trying to oversell a venue that hardly deserves an event.I imagine the new Fazio-Davis pairing will fare well overseas, as well as smaller, domestic courses of decent quality where owners might pick famous names over the more experienced. It's often human nature to choose celebrity when available.
Bruce Katona,
No, I can't afford you!
Jeff Warne,
Mike was not really responsible for the Shinny debacles. Yes, he was the USGA official who wore that blame and stood in front of the public bus, yet the truth lies elsewhere. Look closer (or PM me) for those truly responsible.