Bill McBride,
I thought that Pasa's greens were running around 10', give or take a foot. One of the assistant pros said they are typically maintained between 9.5' - 11.5'; probably toward the lower end of that range on KPVI day due to aeration two or three weeks earlier. Admitedly, I hadn't played much golf and my touch was that of a blacksmith, but the greens felt pretty fast to me.
Steve Burrows,
Compromises are made all the time and the results are not necessarily bad. Ethics do not have to be involved in such decisions as you had suggested in your first post, but not in the second.
Ian Larson,
I trust that after letting things simmer a few hours you found at least a small bit of rationale to the comments and questions I addressed to you. I knew precisely the points the "hillarious" Steve Burrows and you were trying to make. It is not uncommon on this site to make personal aspersions against people whose view of the world differs from our own. Asserting that a man's ethics are suspect because he doesn't share one's stylistic preferences is simply wrong and counterproductive to the objectives of this site (I think).
With all due respect to you for your outstanding credentials, there are people similarly qualified who may beg to differ on this issue, not so much with the physical possibility of maintaining this "look", but with the practical and financial aspects- the cost/benefit analysis if you will- of doing so. By the way, I personally prefer the shaggy/ragged/rustic/natural look.
No doubt that given sufficient funds, there are ways of maintaining most any architectural style. And if I was the COO or head of a cost center, the larger the budget, the greater the amount of responsibilty, prestige, and compensation that I would enjoy. Unfortunately, for most courses- perhaps not Riviera- costs are a factor and design must necessarily be compromised not only to construction budgets, but also to ongoing maintenance allotments. Of course, being that you're in the business, you already know all this in spades.
Your last comments: "Using a Fazio / Marzolf combo over a Hanse / Shackelford combo is unethical. And its unethical for something larger than an owner, architect or memberships agendas. Its all about the the golf course and its creators vision. Hopefully some other purist out there can agree with me." should be disturbing to those who seek to be fair minded. I am not sure that I understand what the two middle sentences actually mean, but the implications are that something dastardly was perpetrated by an owner and an architect on the righteous. Can't we articulate our preferences with clarity and conviction without making others into heavies?
In the case of Riviera, I suspect that the seemingly unpopular owner has his price. The club has many well-heeled members, and, fortunately, anything that Mrssrs. Fazio and Marzolf have done to this wonderful course can be undone (check that, it is in California, so maybe not!). Perhaps a man of your ability and conviction can get the ball rolling. But, as Bill McBride noted nearby, not everyone shares our vision. Unethical bastards all? I think not- maybe just unsophisticated, underexposed, taste-impaired, starved for knowledge, etc. awaiting edification from the better angels of gca.com.