That is the appelation Tom Doak just used;
"I agree with David Elvins; I think some architects are starting to pander to the Golf Club Atlas crowd. I'm sure you'll disagree, but I'm not going to debate you on it."
In the opinions of some around golf and architecture, is there a "Golf Club Atlas crowd"? There sure is!
I've seen people all over the place who feel that way. I've seen it at Royal Port Rush, at PVGC, definitely at Merion, and so many other places I've gone. Ran certainly sees it wherever he goes. We've talked about this a lot over the years and it's not always rosy. While at Sand Hills in June a couple of guys walked up to our table at dinner and acted like they'd just walked up to the group from some famous but weird traveling circus act.
I'd like to think that most have some modicum of respect for the people and passion on this website's discussion group but I'm not so sure. I sure can tell you that to a man they all think most of us are weird as hell in many ways and they don't mind saying so. Everyone tells me that about myself, sometimes in jest, simply because I'm the one who posts and writes so much, or too much, and that I've been doing that so long--right from the very beginning of this website's existence.
There's not an architect I know that hasn't joked about this website---Bill Coore, Gil Hanse, Ron Prichard, Rees Jones, Tom Fazio, Stephen Kay, Ron Whitten, Ron Silva, Ron Forse, Jim Nagel, Jim Wagner etc. People in the USGA, the R&A, golf administrators all over the place, newspaper reporters, golf writers, golf course owners and golfers from clubs all over the world. Even some pizza-man in Boston once mentioned it on a delivery!
Is this a good thing? Maybe it is in the sense this website's discussion group has gotten plenty of attention (even if it's sometimes somewhat negative attention) in some ways and in some areas it wants to get attention. As Oscar Wilde once said, it's probably better to be talked about negatively than not to be talked about at all.
But it seems Tom Doak who just may be the most important regular contributor we have on here, may be saying something the usual contributors need to hear and heed.
Are some, perhaps many or most of the regular contributors on here too myopic, too doctrinaire, too critical of what the realities are in golf and golf architecture and perhaps always have been? Personally, I think so.
We obviously need to tone down the inconsequential arguing on here, and I'm probably one of the worst at that. But not as bad as Pat is and has become. He's definitely the king on here for debating anything and everything--a concept, a philosophy, even a word or phrase used by anyone and everyone. While intelligent discussion and debate is a good thing even I can't read some of this stuff anymore--even answers to some of the questions I probably create myself.
But Tom Doak said he thinks some architects are now starting to PANDER to the Golf Club Atlas crowd. That's interesting! I wonder exactly what he means by that. Does he think they're beginning to actually create things in architecture that they think this site admires and proposes? Or are they beginning to pay pandering lip-service to this site because they think it shows some new or renaissance direction of burgeoning popularity?
I hope Tom Doak says more about what he means. I think this website needs to hear it, and probably heed it. Because it probably scratches the surface of a bigger issue---eg where does this site, and maybe others to come like it, go from here? Are we going to get stale and unnecessarily opinionated and doctrinaire and just fade into the evolutionary trash heap of fads and cycles in golf architecture?
I believe in the "Big World" theory with golf architecture---eg there is and should be something for everyone in all this. Difference, even if unappealing to some, is a good thing, perhaps even the essence of golf and architecture.
The thing I really would like to see end on here is this relatively frequent phrase--'he or she or they just don't get it."
Get what? Golfers get out of golf and architecture what they want to get out of it. The best of the old architects and the best of those today surely understood that. Does that mean opinions of golfers who don't appear to buy into the theme or philosophy on here can't be changed to some degree? Of course not.
Perhaps the same should be said about us---"The Golf Club Atlas crowd".