Matt W: Winged Foot West is in your top ten but Oakland Hills struggles to make your top fifty? Other than the fact that the college kids haven't been to Winged Foot lately, can you dissect the differences between the two for us?
Head start: both are parkland. Both have great sets of greens. Oakland Hills has a little more topography and a bit wider variety of holes. Neither one has much in the way of finesse holes. OK, continue ...
I think it's a very good parkland course, overrated a bit because of its championship heritage like all the other Open venues [except Pebble, Shinnecock, and Pinehurst #2].
As for shotmaking, the "masse" shot Chi Chi Rodriguez hit into the last green at the Senior Open was one of the most awesome shots I've seen in the last twenty years, but he didn't win so it is quickly forgotten.
Tom,
Having played both several times, I'll take a crack at this. A few givens: OH has more elevation change and as you say, a little more topography. Both have great greens (but I'll make the case that WFW are significantly better) and are 100 percent parkland.
I would argue that WFW does indeed have a few finesse holes. #'s 6 and 7 and 10 are all strong examples(11 & 15 lesser ones). 6 and 7 have small greens with considerable cant that force a player to make a discernable choice on every shot. The short three par 7 and it's medium cousin 10 are both susceptible to fickle winds and don't cede any easy birdies save for a lucky, or perfectly played shot. Only 17 at OH really has the same effect. The short par 4 6th at WFW is devilish, absolutely positional from the tee and unrivaled by any of the shorter 4's at OH.
Overall, WFW has much smaller greens that OH, and plays much tighter off the tee. Granted, with both courses set up for majors, they mutally share miserable rough and blooming tree blockage of missed shots, but WFW's green size and bowled cants really serve to punish the errant tee ball with greater severity. OH's greens are no slouch, but their size just leaves more room for some slight error (not much, but maybe more pinning room as well). I like both courses closing trio's, but it remains difficult for me to find too much else about OH to love(maybe 14 & 5).
In "open-style" set-up, WFW still plays a bit tougher. It's narrowness and fairway turns make the pro think twice about trying to cut many corners. The last group of long hitting collegiate youth didn't have to think twice much at OH. Maybe that will be the same case at WFW this summer, but I think not.
I think OH is indeed a solid, tough test that requires the better player to have a multitude of skills with some shot-shaping abilities. Bit it is a less-than-inspiring course that doesn't earn it lofty rankings, especially realtive to the complete tests that Shinnecock, Pebble, and WFW have.
While happy to play it if I would find myself in Detroit, I'd much rather get to the airport or a car and head north for truly better, and certainly more fun, golf.