This thread is not meant to figure out which design team is the best. I do not wish to pit them against each other. I just wonder where they are similar and where they design differently.
My response from a couple of days ago:
The problem with these threads is that the conclusions are superficial. I don't think my philosophy of, say, bunkering is anything near set in stone, so you would draw different conclusions from going to Memorial Park or Stonewall North or Barnbougle, and none of them would be "right" for my thoughts as a whole. Basically they vary from project to project and year to year, and they're constantly being influenced by all kinds of random events.
I have known Bill and Ben since 1981 and Gil since 1987, although we communicate infrequently. [I probably talk to Bill the most often, but even that is only a handful of times a year. I talked with Ben and with Gil about design philosophy much more, 30+ years ago, and Ben's influence on all three of us is probably the main reason our styles are relatively similar. But, we have all gone on to see different things and do different things.
I would say that probably the most different thing about us is the subset of clients to whom we appeal:
a) Bill and Ben appeal most to the old-school golf guys, and [more than Gil or me] to real estate developers because of Ben's name;
b) I appeal most to entrepreneurs who are not scared off by my overblown controversial reputation;
c) Gil appeals most to more corporate clients and to the directors of major golf organizations, whom he has gotten to know very well over the years.
Ultimately, that affects the kinds of courses our clients hire us to build.
I do think you are right that Bill and Ben visualize a draw more than I do and that influences what kinds of holes appeal to our eyes. I have not seen enough of Gil's courses to know if he favors one over the other.
I think that I am more influenced by the courses I've seen in the UK than Bill or Gil are, though we all admire them. I agree with whoever said that Gil is less of a minimalist; I'm not sure he ever said he wanted to be.
I know that Bill tends to solve his problems with fill and I tend to solve mine with cut, which is either a result of what sort of soils we worked in early in our careers, or just the way we visualize things. That is probably the biggest difference in our work but it does not translate easily for laymen who are trying to analyze our greens and our bunkering and don't really visualize how they are built. Streamsong was great fun for me and Bill and Ben and our crews, because we would often go peek at what the other guys were doing on a green site we had looked at ourselves, and more often than not the reaction would be "Wow, that's not what I was thinking they would do."
Last but not least, Bill is quite a bit older than me and I'm four years older than Gil, which probably shapes our thinking at least a little, but shapes people's personal reactions to us much more. One reason I've always been seen as the rebel is because I was so young relative to where I was in my career.