Upon further investigation, the inputting of the state lists into my all-inclusive spreadsheet of lists, the latest Golf Digest state-by-state rankings has left me even more perplexed than ever.
Besides the vast movement of some excellent course downwards, which, undoubtedly, has bothered me, there is something more that has been exposed.
It can't just be the drop of 'tradition' as a category, because the phenomenon I am about to expose has existed on past lists.
By no means is this analysis complete, as I have only checked on five states, but they are states I am very familiar with.
My analysis begins with the phenomenon that Olympia Fields South was not on the 2003 list, but, miraculously pops up at #7 in the state in 2005.
There has been chatter about restoring the course, but nothing significant was changed there in recent memory, and, certainly, not between 2003 and 2005, that would cause a course to pop at least 18 spots (not in top 25 in 2003 to #7 in 2005).
Fact: for some reason, OFCC-S 'disappeared' off the list in 2003.
Where did it go?
Was this a 'one-time' deal?
Did something happen to the course to make it 'drop'?
Did it not have enough ratings over the previous ten years to warrant a spot?
So I did a bit of investigating and found, at least examples of this 'disappearing' act on the state-by-state lists.
Perhaps someone can help explain how this happens?
GOLF DIGEST - STATE LISTS
first "X" GD
lists 1995 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005
Illinois
Olympia Fields South 17 15 10 left off 7
North Shore first ten 7 12 17 13 left off 19
Michigan
CC of Detroit first fourteen 7 10 14 12 13 left off
Massachusetts
New Seabury Resort (Blue) first ten 5 7 5 7 4 left off
Essex CC 15 15 left off 12
Hyannisport CC 9 9 left off 9 9
Ohio
Brookside - Canton 10 10 left off 10
Wedgewood 24 left off 23 19
Sharon first one 13 14 11 11 left off left off
Wisconsin
Lawsonia - Links 10 10 6 left off
University Ridge 7 9 5 left off 5