One of the reasons CommonGround is a good study subject is because it is somewhat less "mine" than my other courses.
Three of my associates then [Eric, Jim and Don] had close ties in Colorado, and the first two lived in town, so I figured the project was important to them the same way that High Pointe had been important to me. In fact, I tried to convince the Colorado Golf Association in our interview just to hire the three of them, but the CGA insisted that I be involved, and ultimately I was glad they did because it's been so rewarding to see everything they have done in the community around the place.
So, once Don and I got the routing together, I gave each of those guys three holes to design by themselves, and then I took the rest and worked with each of them on three of the remainder. Eric ran the job, so ultimately he had some leeway to edit and tie things together. I don't remember if I ever identified publicly which of them worked on which holes . . . it would be funny to have people here try to guess [as long as someone who knows the answers doesn't spill the beans].
This was not really that much different than how I've worked on other projects; most people outside of our little group don't really understand the level of collaboration that occurs on a great course, no matter how much I mention it. For Ballyneal, Bruce Hepner and Brian Schneider and Kye Goalby were the three main guys, but Eric and Brian Slawnik were also responsible for a couple of greens.