Brad Klein
I always enjoy reading your discourses, and this one was no different. I was even agreeing with it as I read it, and lo and behold, you brought up my name in disagreement. This is due probably because my post was on a superficial level while yours was considerable more thoughtful. I wasn't necessarily speaking of those that write critical essays, as you have mentioned, but more of those that criticize without reason.
My comment was directed at those that often negatively criticize a course/hole because that is easier to do than analyze the reason why that particular course/hole didn't meet up to the standards of the critic. Some architects get a pass with the same design "problem".
I am in agreement with TEP on the "big tent" philosophy. There are all kinds of courses enjoyed by all kinds of players, and, imho, that is what golf is all about.
Certainly there are magnificent golf course designs that usually are a result of unique golf course sites. Sometime, a really nice course is designed on an average piece of land, and those are the ones that really show off a designer's ability. I know a couple of the courses that I am most proud of working on, are ones that GCA readers would probably not think very highly of, but I know what awful sites they were in the beginning, and I know all the hurdles that had to be cleared to even get a course, much less one, of which, hosts a Champion's Tour Major. That is OK with me. I know what is involved in designing special courses, and I am learning more everyday.
My point is that there are critics that base their opinions on something less than the knowledge of what it took to get a course/hole designed and constructed. It is just easier to be critical than to have an original thought about how it "could" be done before the fact. That is what design is...envisioning. I never shy away from hearing "constructive criticism" as Mr. Mucci points out. There is often so much more that the critic never knows of when he only sees the finished product, and I welcome the opportunity to explain the why and why nots of the design. But often the critic's opinion is solely based on what someone has written about what they are supposed to think. There have even been some "seminars" that I believe you have been part of, that teach a person what is good and not good about a course/hole. I wasn't at any of these, but correct me if I am wrong in that assessment. So, I ask, who's opinion are they going to spouse when they leave the seminar, right or wrong. Their own, that they have determined after considerable study on their own, or the seminar leader's opinion of what is good and isn't? I have opinions also, and they are based on many years of study and practice. Because I have seen most everything that can be seen in sites, construction etc. I try to be most respectful to other architects and their work, because I often do not know all they had to encounter, but I know they encountered plenty of hurdles. While I might not agree with their set of principles in design, I do know this is a business, and compromise is often necessary. I, as all the other critics of golf architecture, wish it weren't so.