Jason T:
Well said.
Yes, preferences are indeed individualistic and people are free to like what they like. I agree -- even though a few people, who have continued with their tired predictable barking, and have failed to really grasp what this thread is about. Thanks for your keen understanding.
You also make a fine point concerning wide fairways and the nature of decisions that should be made when standing on the tee. "(i)nterest off the tee ... while making the course playable" is a well said comment.
Be curious to know if you have courses that you really like that would fall just outside of your personal comfort zone (see your definition of "high quality")?
If you could name a few of them I'd be interested to see what they are and how they stack up against other courses that are on your short list of solid greatness as per your own definition.
Thanks ...
Andy:
In the example you provided -- a design that overly accentuates the negative dimension for failure to execute -- doesn't really equate to a sound design. Quality design -- tries to incorporate elements of different options for the player to consider and to provide rewards -- in degree to which the player executes successfully.
I agree with you -- a design that overly concentrates its task in one particular manner with little real differentiation in terms of overall shot values soon becomes a one trick pony show and will quickly lose interest for most players.
Tommy W:
Enjoyed your post and your thoughts ... "The discussions I find distasteful are the ones that tend to discount the bulk of some architect’s work: Fazio, Rees Jones, Nicklaus to name a few. They are similar to discussions I have with religious folks who can’t think outside their own little box. I have been consigned to hell more than once. Fortunately they do not attend my church (at least anymore)."
Delightful comments indeed !
You also are quite on target on the elements of the Doak / Engh situation and what each brings to the table.
Thanks for sharing ...
Garland B said, "Well pardner, any course rewards fine play."
Let me enlighten you since you seem a bit confused in your thinking ... I have played courses where fine play is not rewarded proportionally to the level of skill / execution demonstrated. On the flip side I have also played course where poor play is not penalized in the same manner. You make it sound axiomatic that such situations are part and parcel of all golf courses. Let me break this news flash to you in the event you've been in the dark closet for too long ... there are a horde of courses I have played where the basic fundamental premise of golf is not central to the design. In sum - such courses are flawed IMHO.
What I said with this thread is that the style / presentation / form of golf courses is quite elastic and if someone really has an "open" mind can easily appreciate such differences even though they may still have individualist preferences.
B Crosby said ...
"Being dogmatic means that you can't imagine anything that would ever change your preferences.The gap between those two statements is as wide as the ocean. I don't know of anyone that posts on GCA that holds the latter view."
Bob, c'mon let's be a bit forthcoming shall we. If you really have read the posts of a number of people -- both regular contributors and those who are a bit more infrequent, you will see the desire to sell a particular style of golf course as the one true way to golf design bliss. These same people -- as Tommy W pointed out so correctly have no inhibition to bash anything coming from the likes of Rees Jones, Tom Fazio and Jack Nicklaus, to name just three, as being golf course contributions that are way off the charts. I have tried in my response to such posts to try to get people to back away from the "I've played 8-10 TF courses and now I will broad brush all my comments to his entire portfolio," when specific courses of distinction are brought into the picture. Unfortunately, there are people, as Tommy W so accurately stated, who prefer to target certain people for sainthood and others as the poster child for all that is wrong with design.
Eric T:
The reason why others have not attacked Tommy W for his comments / especially for his liking of the 11th green at Black Rock -- is that quite a few of those posters from years past are no longer active on GCA. Trust me -- certain people did bash Black Rock in general terms and a few of those honed in specifically on the 11th green. I'd be happy, when time allows, to pull from the past archives the comments that were made. Those arguing such a position really saw very little of quality from Engh's hands. Keep in mind these informed souls had only played 1 or 2 different Engh courses when making such sweeping statements.
What I meant originally is that I could play either a Tom Doak or Jim Engh layout -- the ones that are among their best in their respective portfolios and never feel shortchanged in any manner whatsoever. Clearly, they each demonstrate qualities that arrive at a final outcome through different interpretations. Both are rather fun and for me invigorating.
Terry Lavin:
In regards to Black Mesa -- long live your own ignorance.
George P:
In speaking about zombies -- geeze, I wonder where the first George Romeo movie on zombies was located. Does the name Pittsburgh ring a bell.
People can have preferences -- the issue is do they capacity to recognize greatness when it falls beyond their narrow ban of what constitutes grwat golf design. Some can -- many on this site don't. Like I said before -- some people are set for life with steak and potato meals -- nothing wrong with that but because of their self-imposed limits they will not allow the possibility that Thai, Indian, Lebanese or any other food can be that good, if not better, as well.