Mark
We played a lot in Spain and Peurto de Hierro and El Saler were the standouts - a long way ahead of the rest.
There were a lot of courses built in the tourist boom of the seventies and not much from that era, anywhere in the world,seems to command much respect these days.
Las Brisas is a perfect example of a course you could find anywhere in America - and in America no one would even think of it.
The great courses seem to reflect the personality and character of the countries they are built in, whether it is France- (Morfontaine,Chantilly) - England- (Sunningdale,Walton Heath,) - Scotland - (Gleneagles Muirfield,Carnoustie,St Andrews) Australia -(Royal Melb NSW),New Zealand (Paraparaumu)- and to try to translate one countries character to another is often a failure - Las Brisas, (Florida )The Australian (Florida) The Oxfordshire
- and most of the new courses in Asia.
The old Asian courses like Singapore Island and Royal Selangor were not great courses but they were uniquely Asian.
The nature of the business and the reverence the rest of the world had for the famed American designers of the sixties,seventies and eighties meant 'overseas' courses simply became copies of the courses being done in America.
It seems a lot of that happened in Spain in the seventies.
El Saler is terrific - even in bad condition it is the first place to play in Spain.