TE - thanks.
Just reading various posts over the months here, it struck me that so many of them involve playability and/or maintenance in one way or another, e.g. classic courses that aren't being maintained in an ideal way; or new courses that are suffering from turf issues, including in terms of the adverse affects on playability; or the agronomy (and business) issues involved in transitioning to fast and firm conditions; or Patrick Mucci's "golf design in an era of water restrictions" thread; or most recently the USGA-greens thread, and Mike Young's post about how much a super can affect how well ANY green 'works'. The architect-superintendent relationship seemed clear to me; but I was worried it was a dumb question because I simply didn't know if what I was asking about happened all the time, or never.
By the way: I would never have thought that as early as 1916, architects (or at least one, Ross) saw so clearly the important role of the superintendent in the course's (and the design's) overall success. I probably mentioned this to you before: the more I read about that era, the more I realize how very little I know....or at least how careful I should be about drawing the big conclusions and theories I'm so fond of trying to draw.
Mike(s) - thanks.
Is there a 'common thread' that you found in terms of the times you DID get a chance to bring in your choice of supers? Is it, for example, a specific kind of owner, or a certain kind of course (e.g. residential vs resort etc)?
Peter