What did Crane seem most interested in with his mathematical formula for rating golf courses and holes?
Well, he created a laundry list of weighted values for analyzing the holes themselves---by that he apparently meant the strengths and weaknesses of their actual architecture, and then another category for what he called "upkeep"?
Why would a guy like Behr be bothered by that?
Good question.
In their writing following the publishing of Crane's new mathematical formula for rating golf courses in May of 1924 in Golf Illustrated, Behr, Mackenzie, Hunter, Macdonald et al began writing about how various holes, particularly in GB had "soul" or some kind of "spirit", or variety and diversity which was just not something that could be reduced to mathematical analysis to determine its quality.
And what did those guys say they thought "quality" or soul or spirit of a hole or course really was?
They all pretty much said it was some aura about those holes and courses, particularly TOC, that made them somehow unable to be defined, and certainly not mathematically or scientifically definable, and that made those who knew them and played them, love them. What is that about really? Can it be anything more than what we say on here as architecture "passing the test of time", and sometimes even for virtually unexplainable reasons?
So, along comes Crane and starts to insinuate that even if they've always said they loved some of these old holes and courses they really don't---that they simply don't want to admit that perhaps some of their complaints actually mean those holes and courses just aren't very good, that they need to be fixed and changed, and that his mathematical formula for analyzing quality and weakness of holes and courses can determine exactly why and how.
And to that the likes of Behr, Mackenzie, Hunter and Macdonald et al obviously took some serious exception and umbrage---perhaps assuming that Crane was in fact beginning to mess with some of those perceived mysteries about golf architecture that makes people come to love or appreciate it and not want to change it. (Do you notice how proud those guys were that TOC had essentially never undergone any real architectural change)?
But although all the foregoing makes a lot of sense to me about why these guys started to get set off with Crane, I think the thing that made particularly Behr just explode was this notion of Crane's that the thing to do with GOLF and ARCHITECTURE was to do everything possible to remove LUCK from it.
I think that alone is what really got Behr going. Is that penal architecture? Well, we should talk more about that. Maybe it is and maybe it isn't.
But what is LUCK in golf and architecture and what did it really mean to both camps?
I don't think there's any question what it meant to Crane because he didn't hesitate to say so in pretty specific terms when he began to say in his first article on this mathematical rating system that his purpose was to eliminate LUCK in golf as best as he could and as completely as he could. He basically said it was that unnecessary random happenstance that a good player who hit basically good shots should not be subjected to in golf and by architecture if it was to his detriment, particularly compared to some happenstances that poor players who hit worse shots may benefit from in some comparatively disproportionate way regarding architecture---they should, in fact, be more proportionately and appropriately penalized and punished for their lack of skill. This is essentially what Crane AND Taylor referred to as “graduated penalty”.
But what about Behr, Mackenzie, Hunter, Macdonald et al---what did they think about this idea of Crane’s of trying to eliminate LUCK in golf and architecture or what it meant? What did LUCK in golf and architecture mean to them? What did this notion of Crane's and Taylor's and apparently others of trying to mathematically and scientifically "graduate penalty" mean to them? Did they percieve that as dangerous to golf and architecture somehow?
It may’ve meant to them a dire and dangerous threat to the very preservation of the perception of random naturalness in golf and golf architecture, even if man-made. It may’ve meant to them a real threat to the preservation of that mystery in golf wrought by that very undefined and virtually ineffable randomness in Nature that made people love various holes and courses even if they couldn’t exactly explain why. LUCK!? Was it a vastly different treatment and approach to LUCK in golf and architecture that really heated up this subject and debate?
Behr defined that mystery, among other things, as that which contributed to variety, diversity, the freedom the golfer should feel, the maintenance of the fact that every round could be a new challenge and a new journey, a new discovery somehow. Does it sound like LUCK might take a fairly serious part in those descriptions? I'd say so.
Crane, on the other hand, obviously felt that kind of thing should be somehow eliminated so any golfer could better isolate and highlight his physical skill against his human opponent.
Behr then went so far as to actually try to define or even redefine the way golf, architecture, the golfer et al should look at the entire subject of what penalty was supposed to be in golf. Even the title of one of his articles that apparently was inspired by Crane’s thinking is “The Nature and Use of Penalty”.
And then along about 1926 Crane took his mathematical formula on the road and actually rated and ranked some of the best GB courses at which time TOC came in real low. This clearly incensed the likes of Charles Ambrose and a number of GBers. And Behr. Mackenzie, Hunter, Macdonald got on that bandwagon and took Crane to task.
But it most definitely appears that this had a lot more to do with just some dumb mathematical rating system, at least it appears it did to Max Behr. Was LUCK part of that mathematical rating system of Crane's? I don't know but he mentioned eliminating LUCK enough in his first published article on his rating system, that's for sure.
But Tom MacWood, you never will understand much of this unless and until you become familiar with Behr’s article “Golf Architecture (An Interesting Reply to the Penal School of Golf).