I'm gonna try to answer this, Mike, seriously at least to begin with.
I've argued many times that events of historic import occuring at a golf course effect one's play of the golf course, and ought to be considered. I'm not going to restate this argument again, it's on here many times from the last two days and many times prior.
I'd also agree that what GD calls "architectural significance" does matter also - a lot. Courses that changed the fabric of golf course design or that exhibit classic design features which survived the march of time ought to get credit for such as well.
My feeling is that very few people can adequately assess either of these things, or at least they can't assess them as readily as all the other criteria, such as shot values, etc.... Those are opinions, these two require substantive knowledge and study, more than the vast majority of golfers have time to do.
In a perfect world, all these ratings and rankings would be done by a small panel of people, all of whom have made this study and continue in it, with a cross-representation of public course and private club players covering a wide-range of skill levels. NO magazine does this currently. You and I both know a lot of people who'd be perfect in this role, however...
So we have what we have... and I'd say GD does their take on course assessments just fine. I am quite OK that they don't trust the raters to do these last two assessments, because for every one who might have the substantive knowledge, there are likely 10 who have no interest in obtaining such.
And given I feel it does matter... it's great by me if the editors take this on. Oh, it might skew the results in some places in ways we don't like, but to me it's better than the alternative of having all the raters try and assess this.
I mean no offense, btw, to my GD rater brethren. I freely admit I'd have a very hard time assessing tournament history and architectural significance for all the courses I get to - hey, I do work for a living.
Maybe this helps, maybe not. Please believe I'm not enamored with how the results came out - some of the ommissions are shocking to me, particularly in the public list.
But I believe the methodology and process is very correct.
I also believe that lots of people look at golf courses lots of different ways, so if they're different than me, well... as Tom Paul says, it's a big beautiful world of golf.
TH