"Have" and "should": two different questions, courtesy of former Golf World editor Malcolm Campbell.
He spoke about links being both a bellwether and a lesson for sustainability. How links course are maintained therefore carries implications for all courses. It's important.
Out of all the courses in the world, he said just 170 are links. Less than one half of 1 percent. So they're rare, too. But all those other courses should be maintained more like links, so every time a links becomes a not-a-links, then that's like taking two steps backward. There are fewer courses to emulate and fewer to learn from.
So...
Does anyone have instances of where a links course became a not-a-links course? Is this a material problem?
What is the standard to determine when a links course becomes a not-a-links course?
Personally, I had thought all you needed to qualify was sandy seaside dunesland deposited there by a river.
Loss of firm and fast is an obvious and probably uninteresting criterion.
What about the standard of doing anything at all to a course, as opposed to playing it if you will as nature finds it? Does that get us down to...Rye?
Elie ran perhaps not as fast and firm due to weather, Cruden Bay's rough was in June form, Lundin Links's fairways were tanning nicely and TOC's rough already has advanced to "The Wispy."
It would appear these states are nature's doing...
On the other hand, Elie divots showed black earth and don't all these have irrigation systems; does that mean they have moved over to the credit side of the ledger, that each now is a not-a-links and therefore not to be emulated?
Campbell received a spirited rejoinder - not quite utterly cryit doon but still impressive to watch - citing Lundin's installation of an irrigation system, presumably to return as a qualifier course.
A show-me-the-money type of ad hominem argument.
What about the black earth of Elie?
By the way, Campbell fingered ANGC as the culprit, triggering another rejoinder.
Interesting to bookend his remarks to those we heard from R&A & Hoylake at dinner in 2006 regarding the presentation of Hoylake in the Open. Hoylake was a step in the right direction but Campbell's comments seem to indicate we still are off the path, namely the path to sustainability.
It's also not clear whose job it is to steer us back onto the path. In a sense, we have met the enemy and it is us: ignorant golfers / club members make for implacable enemies of change.
What is to be done and who is to do it?