Tommy,
Please calm down. I would hate to be the one to give you a heart attack.......but sometimes I wonder - Ran calls this a discussion group, not a "defend your sacred opinion" group. So, until he changes the name, I may, from time to time, post conversation starters about - gasp - golf course architecture theory. I will leave it to others to post a "Tom Doak is the greatest and can do no wrong" thread, even if I think he pretty damn good. However, there is merit in speculating - rather than immediately dismissing without thought, as you are prone to do - on a few things.
To answer some questions, I have read Thomas' book cover to cover several times, and overall feel its the best of the Golden Age Books. I employ many, many, of his design thoughts in my work.
If you read some of my other posts on this and other threads, I too advocate fw width variety. Hey, requiring an accurate tee shot once in a while is a strategy, but I agree it would be boring every time out. But, I believe a wide fw every time out might be pretty boring, too.
First, if we can open up angles of play with greens angled at 10 degrees and 40 yard wide fairways, isn't that just a strategic design as a hole with a green angled at 20 degrees and a 60 yard wide fairway? Wouldn't that be just as fun while reducing fw mowing, costs, etc?
Second, how much effort do we expend for both angles of play that get used by, say 3% of the golfers (probably more like 0.0003%, but that is another story). Unless a hole is exceptionally well designed, golfers figure out the best route over time, and the outer portions of fws tend to get underused. Who can afford all that fw for no one but a stubby purist electrician from SoCal would use?
Third, how do wide fairways open up the ground game? Most of the ground balls I see go pretty straight.
Actually, I know what you are saying (also in one of my subsequent posts was that I don't need a lecture on the theoretical advantages, because I understand them.
Good thing I didn't get a parrot for Xmas, cause I got my share of them here! The post wasn't really about your particular opinion and thoughts. It was about whether millions of golfers actually using designs could be right over a dozen guys in the Golden Age who all came up with the theory, probably copying from each others books? (And yes, I know the wide fw theory goes back to TOC, but there are many GBI courses without ultra wide fw inbetweend designs of TOC and the Golden Age.
In short, is it so bad the majority ruled?
I think we all agree fairways have narrowed over the years. I just wondered if they reduced in width because the practical won out, or the theory never came into full flower as much as the old guys expected. Or maybe golfers found the trade off of the wide fw making the course too easy wasn't worth the strategic advantage.
I would like to know what people consider wide fairways, just to be sure we aren't arguing needlessly. Here's my take
Narrow - Less than 30 Yards
Medium Narrow - 35 Yards
Medium - 40 Yards
Medium Wide - 45 Yards
Wide - 50 Yards plus
I have seen some narrow courses in CA, mostly, I presume from land values (San Dimas comes to mind) and we know the NE and other areas have narrowed their corridors through tree planting to the 30 and less width on many courses. So, if you and I both agree that 40 or so yards is wide enough for fw, then we may just be arguing semantics again.
Since its New Years, can we agree wide fairways are a waste on par 3 holes?
Happy New Years, and may the Stars beat the Sharks while the Ducks get grounded!