This discussion in the last several posts is among the best and most important I have read on GCA in some time.
The Golf Magazine Top 100 list--and the discussion here--brings up what I think is the most dangerous thing on this chatroom--the danger of "group think." We have a tendency toward that in many instances: Knowing we are right and dismissing other opinions.
I happen to agree personally with the general thinking on here--the need for more fun in golf and course design, the dislike of "manufactured" architecture, the bias toward the original style of architecture, etc. But I think that sometimes we overdo it--and I see some of that in the Top 100 list. When 17 courses are added and 17 dropped, without a really good discussion of new, changed criteria, something is wrong.
How does Spyglass go from 50-something to out of the Top 100 without anything new happening there? What changed?
Similarly, I have played Wolf Point in Texas, I found it very well done and charming, and I wish the new owner great success. But to say it is the best course in Texas--in fact the only one on the list--is just plain silly. The course shows a simplicity in style that is fascinating. But to say that it can come from nowhere to Top 100 is not realistic. It's like a totally new list is being created with a totally new set of criteria, and there is no recognition to what was being done in the past.
Ran has done a great job at Golf Magazine, and I am of course totally appreciative of what he has created in GCA. But I'd caution him against moving too fast, recognizing only one set of criteria, and being too sure that other viewpoints than his do not have areas of credibility that need to be recognized. I thought his Guardians of the Game list was creative, but I worried that it wasn't clear enough that it was based on only his set of personal criteria, with which I agreed on some points and disagreed on others. But it was certainly his right to use any criteria he wanted, so long as he identified them clearly. With the magazine list the need for full disclosure is even more important.
My first reaction to this new Top 100 list was appreciation and agreement, but my second reaction is some dismay at what I think is overly dogmatic thinking. As someone wrote above, the best criteria may simply be to play whatever you find most compelling based on your own set of criteria. There is no universal standard of criteria that is absolutely right and others that are equally clearly and totally wrong. Let's keep our minds open.