So what were those specific architectural differences or even differences in architectural philosophy between Crane on the one hand and Ambrose, Behr, Mackenzie, Jones on the other?
Were the specifics only with what most of us understand to be the differences in penal vs strategic architecture? I for one don't think so, or not in all the ways some of us assume penal and strategic architecture to be.
We can see from some of those drawings for architectural changes on TOC that some of Crane's suggestions actually look, to some of us, more like strategic architecture than the course was. Or should I say Crane's suggested changes look to some of us less like penal architecture than the course was?
After-all Crane did recommend the removal of numerous apparently randomly placed bunkers and that would seem to be less penal in nature, if for no other reason it would seem to give all golfers more room to play to and through.
In my opinion, the two largest and most significant differences of opinion on architecture between Crane on the one hand and the others on the other hand was with the issue of trying to minimize luck in golf and architecture (although that will always be a difficult issue to pin down and expose specific differences in architecture) and also the issue of rough in golf and architecture and the effective meaning of it in play.
I believe the latter----rough----is what Crane recommended if for no other reason than to create "progressive penalty"---eg the worse one missed a shot the more they should be penalized. This concept is one that the likes of Behr, Mackenzie, Jones et al did not believe in and they said so.
I think the latter is basically proven when Crane mentioned in one of his articles that TOC was one of the few courses that made no distinction and basically had no distinction between fairway and rough and apparently for that reason, perhaps amongst others, the course did not have enough of what Crane called "control", an element he favored in golf and architecture.
It is probably Crane's ideas on more "control" in golf through such architectural elements as rough that led the likes of Behr, Mackenzie and Jones to label Crane a supporter of "penal" architecture. I guess that would be logical because in their minds he was recommending the bracketing of fairways with rough to create "progressive penalty" for missed shots. That kind of thing certainly would (and has
) created more shot dictation and perhaps less options with width and more one-dimensional golf and less multi-optional strategies.
It seems fairly safe to say that those who considered themselves real "strategic" architecture proponents back then were only concerned with hazard features that penalized golfers for shots that were "nearly perfect but not quite perfect". For the rest of golfers, those particular "strategic" architecture proponents felt their missed shots were their own penalty due to their own lack of shot making quality as well as with simply being enough out of positon for the challenge of what came next. This is apparently the sole reason those particular "strategic" architecture proponents had come to believe that golf architecture should not really make use of rough! This is not conjecture on my part---they actually said this.