Tom, I think most if not all pro tournaments are played on championship courses.
Jim
We're discussing Tilly's opinion not what someone on this site said about the course in 2006. They play pro tournaments at St.Andrews, I'm still not clear why you don't believe it was a championship course in Tilly's day. IMO a drivable par-4 is not a weakness in a championship course..in fact the more rick/reward opportunities the better (I say good for Jock Hutchison, that eagle helped him to finish at 296 and may have won him the tournament...I think that was the same tournament that Bobby Jones got so frustrated he walked off the course...he later became enchanted by the Old course and modeled ANGC after it).
I see no evidence that Tilly said he knew the course well.
Tom, here is the quote attributed to Tilly in the 1st post in this thread:
"but we assert (and we know the old course well) that as a collection of holes it has too many weaknesses to be regarded as truly championship. "
I didn't say TOC is not a championship course. I'm searching around for possible reasons Tilly said that. Sounds to me like he thought it wasn't hard enough or long enough. Paraphrasing, he said it was great for the old guttie ball, but had not changed to reflect the new golfing technologies. He gave that as a reason British golfers aren't as good as American.
This thread asked why, given Tilly's opinion, we consider TOC among the finest championship courses today. Opinions today seem pretty relevant to me. And those same opinions -- TOC only is hard when the weather is bad -- may have been part of what Tilly was talking about.
I agree a drivable par 4 is not a bad thing. But when there are 5 or so?
Is it true that TOC depends on bad weather to be competitive? If so, can such a course truly be considered of championship caliber?