This summer I went back in time to two courses that I had not seen in years.
Atlantic City CC - When I first played back in high school it was with one of my golf teammates dad who was a member. Back it that era it was owned by Leo Frasier and the clubhouse was a museum piece. It was a place that would have been loved by many here, old clubhouse, low key, benevolent dictator as an owner, links like golf along the marsh area overlooking what was then a depressed Atlantic City. I played it back in an era, where I was not so focused on architecture, however it was clearly a step below some of the other courses that I had played in high school (Merion, Whitemarsh....)
Today, 20+ years later, it is run by a casino as a daily fee facility. They have done a very nice job of maintaining the facility and clubhouse, however it obviously loses some of its feel from the Frasier era. On the plus side, it is a much better course now with the Doak renovation. Incredibly fun on the back nine, and while my friend Mike Cirba may not love the Doak Par 3 17th, I like it.
Round Hill CC - Greenwich, CT - Reality is the club has not changed much. It was always and will continue to be the old line club of Greenwich long before the mansions were occupied (and now possible unoccupied) by the NY hedge fund guys. They need not apply to Round Hill. 15+ years ago, I remember not really liking the course. This was just as I was entering my GCA stage, but I was entering from the RTJ perspective of Cornell, Montauk and Fox Hill. Back then, I thought it was cool that all three courses looked and played similar in three different environments!
Now, I like Round Hill for sure, but would not put it ahead on in-town rival Tamarack. Round Hill has the Travis greens, which to me are the best in the business. However, I thought their recent renovation came up short in some of the tree work that could have been done. I can make the same argument about Tamarack, but there, the tree work issues were visual not playing corridors.
In a nutshell, it was fun to see a course from two separate time frames grow up, change and make modifications along with my perspective over the same time line.
Any similar experiences out there?