Craig E:
Just curious -- do you see the courses that made the OK listing -- after the top three as being the clear success stories. Were there any glaring omissions?
John S:
I personally am a big fan of The Bay State. The private layouts you have mentioned are listed by Golfweek but Digest simply ignores them and with that comes a mega loss of credibility in the minds of many -- myself included.
John, I can say the same for a number of Jersey private layouts that were ignored by Digest (e.g. Essex County, Forsgate, to name just two).
However ...
Keep this in mind -- Tom Fazio and Jim Engh may not be the cup of tea for the narrow-focused GCA classic type preferred person who inhabits this site. I have to ask you -- have you played a representative sampling of the courses these gents have designed?
I can certainly say I have and candidly some of their finest work is not even listed among the best of their efforts -- see TF's work at Glenwild in Park City, UT as just one example. On the Engh side I really enjoy Pradera in Parker, CO even though it has a few bowled shape greens that are bit a redundant but there's plenty of solid holes too.
Too often people see things in the relative narrow context of their own backyard. Quality golf design is not the home of just one area alone -- e.g., the I-95 corridor between DC thru Boston. With that said -- I have to say that too many times people who come to the Northeast only concentrate on the elites -- Winged Foot, Shinnecock, PV, Merion and fail to comprehend how solid the next tier of courses truly is.
What you may not realize is that the best public layouts you see now being designed in some of the lesser populated areas are very good indeed (see Greg Norman's Red Sky Ranch in Wolcott, CO as just one example) and a number of them can seriously contend for such an elite placement.
Tom D:
I don't disagree with you on Atlantic or The Bridge specifically (which has never been rated among the top 100) are rated too high to start with. To be clear -- my issue with Maidstone doesn't have an ounce of argument in regards to the maintenance element you outlined. I thoroughly enjoy the dunes holes but the sheer totality and consistency needed for such a high rating is lacking in my book. One other thing - I do enjoy courses that aren't long or favor high slopes and CR's and would like to see others included -- Golfweek clearly does this better than Digest and that's a big plus for those seeking a much more broader recognition of such layouts.
Frankly, if you put any number of top tier layouts in other states in close proximity to Shinnecock, NGLA and Sebonack the resulting spillover could very well be just as positive.
John K:
I see no issue with new courses cracking the listings - unfortunately there are people who thing golf cannot be serious if it's located in the mountain time zone, to name just one spot that comes quickly to mind. I will put Black Mesa, just outside of Santa Fe, against any number of other courses that have opened in the last 5-6 years.
Unfortunately, there are a number of people who pay more homage to where they live than in doing some sort of justice to what kind of passion they have for quality golf -- no matter where it is located. I can fully understand how folks from the western areas may believe there is a deep-seated bias from the Northeast area of the USA. Again, plenty of these folks -- on both sides of the discussion -- sometimes fail to play a bit more layouts than just the very elite few.