P.S. Please assess for me the standing of RC versus the likes of Talking Stick / North and Black Creek if you have played all of them. Look forward to your answer.
Matt,
A fair question that begged to be asked. Thank you for doing so. Sorry not to respond sooner but I actually PLAYED golf yesterday for the first time in a few weeks and am still reeling from my 51 on the front side at Belle Meade CC. Rees Jones has sure toughtened the joint up.
I cannot "assess a golf course's standing." I can assign it a highly subjective score based upon consistent criteria.
In a nutshell, TSN and RC have width as a fundamental characteristic with seamless transition between fairway and green. Either the line of charm is more obvious at TSN, or it doess't really exist at RC, IMHO. In other words, angles seem important for scoring at TSN, but not necessarily at RC. I also give a slight deduct for the shaved green surrounds at RC. I like their camouflaging effect on the greens, but from a playability standpoint find them to be gimmicky.
By comparison, Black Creek's architecture is extremely high profile with Raynor's concepts adapted faithfully and successfully from a playability standpoint, save the drop-shot redan 11th, which is a good hole nonethless. I supposed one could make a deduction for the impact of housing on a "walk in the park" test, but as a real estate lender, I fully appreciate a man's need to make a little return on investment. (By comparison, I'm not bothered at all by the houses well away from the 4th at RC, nor am I bothered by the range. I do not, however, like the proximity of the clubhouse / pavement left of the 18th green.)
That said, in reviewing my notes, I have TSN, BC and RC in the same ballpark. Given ten rounds, I'd go 3/5/2 among the three. That's the best method of factoring in subjectivity in my book, which is very much a part of any rating system IMHO.
As for Wild Horse, it's a notch above the other three. Or is is a scosh, a wee bit, a tad, a dab, a hair etc.? I like its routing with holes draped over the landscape. There's enough width, not just for width's sake and its occasional center-line bunkering is a legitimate strategic element, not merely a gimmick of window dressing. It blows the other three away from a walk in the park standpoint and I must admit I'm BIASED in that regard.
I don't know that I'd rank it 19th, but I'm not about to argue that it doesn't belong there.
Mike