Bill,
Frankly, I don't want to discuss this with you any longer either. This will be my last effort on this thread. You only focus on the negative aspects of my critique and completely ignore my stance on the enjoyable and challenging playability of their courses. You also fail to discern the difference in my appreciation of Macdonald in contrast to his protoges Raynor and Banks. Fine, if that helps you to consider my position as narrow and one-sided thus supporting your better perspective, have at it. Likewise, you think my preference for Flynn must be a component for my disagreements with the design style of Raynor and Banks. You ignore my preference for Thomas, MacKenzie, Colt, and a host of others. My bias isn't nearly as Flynn-centric as you make it out to be.
I'll turn this around and observe that you haven't once acknowledged a single negative aspect of the Raynor and Banks design style. You have defended their style without a single criticism, why is that? Is everything about their style perfectly suited to your sensitivities? You could not agree that template designs dictate routings without considering alternative processes. You ignore a very radical and predictable design style (with predictable bunker lies) yet expect everyone to be as in love with the style as you are and bitterly disagree when someone is not. To me, when someone has complete acceptance of a design style without any reservation, there is something misjudged or not fully considered.
Pat,
I know your regard for Macdonald and I guess there is a transference of that regard to Raynor and Banks with little consideration that their designs are closely linked to their mentor and while narrowly compartmentalized and bereft of artistic evolution. I don't think this is arguable nor do I think this is a slight to the playability and shot enjoyment. It is a critique of the aesthetics and quite possibly the maintenance requirements. I'm not saying their templates are exact replicas, but they sure are close enough given they don't start with blank white canvases but rather different sites with unique topography.
Would the highly engineered look of Raynor work better at Cypress Point or the naturalism employed by MacKenzie? Would you rather see linear lines, flat bunkers, geometric shapes and template designs on that spectacular site or do you embrace the work of MacKenzie as suited to that site? Raynor would have been the architect of record had he not died. This is an important point and one that is applicable to other less spectacular seaside sites but equally spectacular sites such as above the Hudson, in Ardmore or other locations.
There is nothing completely natural about Cypress Point or Shinnecock Hills but they are meant to blend in with their surrounds with more harmony than other architects, particularly Raynor and Banks. I find it difficult to believe that this has not be acknowledged by the most vociferous Raynor and Banks defenders on this website. Their silence speaks volumes. Again, their courses are a delight to play but they are severe in style and it doesn't always work. Macdonald's work is, to me, generally far more interesting than his derivative designers although there are some exceptions.
You bring up cumbersome crossovers as a knock against Wilson and Flynn. I think they are brilliant solutions that are not at all cumbersome but result in an enhanced experience with little demand on the golfer. The walk from 1 green to 2 tee at Lehigh is downhill. The walk from 13 green to 14 tee at Merion is a slight rise (and it does pass a bar). The walk from 2 green to 3 tee at Merion is also downhill and not long. To call these cumbersome is a bit of a stretch. As you know, the change in routing progression from the 2nd hole to the current 3rd (bypassing the current 6th) gives you the wonderful 3 Act Play that is a part of Merion's greatness. So that crossover that you call cumbersome is in fact essential.
OK, here's a picture, although not from the perfect angle, but close enough. Can you please explain why the picture I used was deceptive and this one more appropriate to demonstrate the natural look of the greensite? I'll even stretch a point and say the flat sand bottom is a representation of the Hudson River below and the green the Palisades beyond. How's that?