The Scottish project referred to was at Archerfield. It didn't happen because John Ashworth got hooked up with a financial partner who hung him out to dry. He took control of the land and then stopped returning our calls as well. They did build 36 holes there ... it just opened ... but from the looks of it I'm glad I wasn't involved, because the new owner appears not to care much about good golf architecture.
But that wasn't really a great piece of land to begin with, just a field in the right place and the right climate. And it would have been really cool to work with John on it. It might have been something special, but no guarantee.
The same goes for Old Head ... I might have been able to do something cool, but no guarantee, and probably not considering the client and the contractor involved. In fact, if I had started the job I would likely have been run out of it when they ran out of money partway through, so it's probably a good thing I didn't.
I have worked on plans for three or four courses which I thought could be really special, but wound up losing those jobs to someone else. Olde Kinderhook. Karsten Creek. Erin GC in Wisconsin, which Hurdzan and Fry are supposed to do someday. I've heard good things about the courses that were built on those, but I thought they should have been slam-dunk candidates for the top 100 courses in America, and they aren't today.
Luckily I am less likely to take "no" for an answer these days. Barnbougle, St. Andrews Beach and Ballyneal might all have been in this "what if" category if I hadn't offered to defer a lot of my fees to help make them happen. [I have a lot more stake in Barnbougle than Greg Ramsay does.] Ben Crenshaw did the same thing to help Sand Hills get off the ground. Hopefully it works out as well for me financially, but regardless, it was worth it to see some great golf courses get built.