Pat,
The only objection I take to your posts is that you seem to be characterizing my position as relying solely on aesthetics. In my post I said that the "real test is how a course makes you feel. Yes, a large part of this is strategy and shot values, but the land is apparently more important to me." If I didn't think that strategy, shot values, and/or "playability" were an integral part of what makes a great golf course, I would spend my time in national parks or take George up on his offer.
I was speaking to greatness. Now I think Friar's Head has superior strategic options than the Bridge, but if Friar's Head had shaping like the Bridge, I believe it would lose its essence. It would still be a great test of ball striking, but that aspect of nature that makes you feel your mortality and at the same time your connection to all things natural would be lost.
And you see, my comment had nothing to do with playing the course. My comment was that one course has the ingredients to maximize its potential; the other does not. If they both have perfect "playability", then the one will be one for the ages and the other simply contemporary. If I hear Mr. Ward's analogy to rating a restaurant without eating the food one more time I'm going to scream. I had the food, I skipped the desert.
My intention is not to bash Matt. His observation is quite right if someone is commenting on how a course reacts to shots, but to say someone can't make a reasonable assessment of the strategy of a course, to say nothing of its naturalness, without playing it is ridiculous. Maybe you will be surprised at some of results of your shots after you play them, but if you couldn't tell a bit of the strategy of a course until you played it, how could anyone enjoy, or shoot a good score, the first time they played a course? Don't we make decisions based on what we see; and don't most of these decisions turn out to be right; and isn't it those few miscalculations that give us so much frustration, and ultimately joy, once they're overcome?
Walking Friar's Head gave me chills of excitement. I imagine it was the strategic options I was confronted with as I imagined how I would golf my ball over a course so integrated into the land. This is what I mean when I say "how a golf course makes you feel". I expect it to live up to this expectation. I'll let you.
Now, as to the holes down on the plain; why do you think they might turn out to be some of the most interesting? My hunch on this is that because the land had already been disturbed, C&C felt free to: a) make it look as natural as possible while using man made contours to accentuate strategy and b) to insert manmade hazards, also to optimize strategy. They also, chose to place 2 of their 3 shotters there and part of 14 (also a long hole) there as well (pretty smart).
Which brings me to the routing. After giving the property a good walk, I would argue that this is an extremely difficult property to route. I can envision plenty of other routings that would have done irreparable harm to the interest in the course. The course does not feel schizophrenic at all. You weave in and out of the dunes, down on to the plain, back into the dunes. Perhaps I'm reading something into it, but it seems that they deliberately routed the course to make the views have to compete with the course.
When you emerge from the trail on to the 15th tee, you are struck by the view (amazing; beautiful), then bam!, the exposed sand of the dunes creeping down toward the fairway below, slowly giving way to sprouts of grass before seamlessly becoming fairway. You really don't look at Long Island Sound again. The views that other courses would tout as their big gun can't compete with what the golfer will golf his ball over.
Well, you might have guessed, I'm pretty high on the course. What did you think of the ninth hole? It was one of my favorites.