As someone whose played The Covey and is a fan I've gotten a kick out of the architecture world today. There's been comical outrage from some about it. I haven't played Tree Farm or Old Barnwell so I can't compare them but I'll say that The Covey is one of the best things I've ever played. It's hard and had it's way with me but it's a fantastic golf course that should be seen before people make douchy jokes
Hi Sam,
I thought I'd include your initial comment here. It must be nice to have another premium design by Chet Williams in your region. I like the way the course looks in the few photographs I've seen. I love mature oak woodlands, partly due to my upbringing in northern California.
The stated definition of a Doak 7 golf course is: "An excellent course, worth checking out if you get anywhere within 100 miles. You can expect to find soundly designed, interesting holes, good course conditioning and a pretty setting, if not necessarily anything unique to the world of golf."This comment is tangentially related to the topic at hand, but I thought it was worthwhile to share the extraordinary agreement between the Golf Magazine and Golf Digest Top 100 courses in the U.S.
I compared Golf Digest's 2023 top 100 list to Golf Magazine's 2024/2025 top 100 list.
For context, there are about 16,000 courses in the U.S., according to the National Golf Foundation.
-- Each list has the same top 8 courses.
-- 17 of GD's top 20 are in GM's top 20.
-- 29 of GD's top 40 are in GM's top 40.
-- 47 of GD's top 60 are in GM's top 60.
-- 61 of GD's top 80 are in GM's top 80.
-- 74 of GD's top 100 are in GM's top 100.
Not only that, but Golf Magazine's new list includes the Lido, CapRock Ranch and Old Barnwell, which could all conceivably make Golf Digest's next top 100 list.
So out of 16,000 golf courses, these two lists with very different evaluation criteria agree on about three-quarters of the top 100 courses. How do you explain that? Why is there such an extraordinary agreement? It could be groupthink, but my ongoing inner debate about subjectivity versus objectivity is piqued by this result. I'm willing to concede that "there is no objectivity, only intersubjective agreement built around agreed-upon frameworks for analysis." But the level of agreement here is astonishing.
I guess this is my way of reminding everybody how uniform and refined the evaluation of courses has become.