TEPaul: Here is a course which has hosted 2 US Opens in the last 15 years...the most recent only six years ago. What "design elements need dusting off"? I had never heard about Shinnecock being in less than excellent condition. Has it been overwatered, over-fertilized ("Birkdalized"), and narrowed in these six years. Is it a noticeably different golf course today, or is it cosmetically different?
Mike: Are you trying to infer Shinnecock hasd bumpy greens, and there's not enough sand in the bunkers? Don't tell me the members are hitting the "firewater bottles" in the bunkers again!
Was Shinnecock's course in sub-par condition for the 95 US Open? I watched the 3rd and 4th rounds tapes not 10 months ago and it looked fine to me. The course should have been at the top of its game then... it was their second National Open in ten years. What can they possibly do to make it number one if it couldn't succeed when it had the international spotlight, and surely unlimited funds and manpower?
An interesting note... someone I know played the US Open that year (95) and said the greens were ridiculously fast. The guy is no journeyman pro.
By your definition Pebble gets a "special exemption" in the conditioning equation... which I believe is a trivial part of the equation as most courses at this level are well conditioned.
Does Bethpage Black get special consideration? St. Andrews Old? Yale?
Did Merion drop like a lead balloon after it lost much of the grass on its greens years ago? No, it got special consideration. Shouldn't the architecture of all courses should get special consideration? If the architecture is great, and the course is in "membership condition" instead of "championship condition", that should be taken into account. You're rating the architecture... not the conditioning...or?
How much more will you give a course which is rated in "championship" vs. "membership" condition?