Ryan:
Please -- hold the phone amigo.
You're the guy who tries to sell the thought that Rock Creek and Oakmont are on the same page in terms of overall greatness.
I said in clear terms - which you conveniently ignored that the PA layout was great before the tree clearing and now only improved that much more.
I've played Oakmont on several occasions over the years and been to all the major events held there since the '73 US Open. My knowledge of the course is not at the member level but it's far more than the occasional guest who simply wanders in for the one time play.
Oakmont is world class golf -- got it. It's a clear ten without any reservations on my part. I love Rock Creek and think it's absolutely no less than an 8.5 but there are a few shortcomings I mentioned. They are not fatal -- I said that previously in the event you missed it -- but they are there in my mind.
Now -- since you asked me to repeat after you -- I offer the same suggestion to you now.
Shivas:
Let me clue you in -- I've played countless par-3 holes where architects have overdosed the downhill dimension -- it's fine for a hole or two at most -- but repeating it that many times doesn't add much to the ultimate variety aspects that I'd like to see. It's more about creating the expansive "view" which developers have fallen in love with and with which architects throw in to capture that sense of euphoria. That's the design element I mentioned previously. The downhill par-3 / dropshot hole has been overdone way too many times and when has four par-3 holes that should each reflect a good bit in overall differentiation.
You know Shivas -- I've come to respect #13 more now because of your comments. The other three collectively, are not fatally flawed -- otherwise I would not have the course at 8.5 -- but they are not uniquely different for me.
And, most of all, when you provide a course with a 9 on the Doak scale that means nearly all the holes are as close to bulletproof as one can be.
I don't see the totality of the par-3 holes at Rock Creek to be at the highest of levels. I salute Doak for inserting a long par-3 (the 13th) right after a short hole like the 12th. That's quite interesting and refreshing.
However, the 8th is a nice looking hole but it's downhill from the back tee. Ditto the 12th and ditto again with the 17th. Each is a fine hole -- but really c'mon enough of the blatant fan booster cheerleading routine. I really liked Rock Creek a lot -- maybe a tad below your unbidled enthusiasm.
How bout an uphill par-3 hole?
Such holes are event more demanding to gauge for club selection. How bout a very short par-3 beyond the 12th which I don't see as being that great anyhow?
The idea that you are championing that a flat par-3 is somehow easier than a downhill shot really depends upon specific case examples. My point, which you conveniently missed, is that repeating a general flavor of hole layouts doesn't add much to the overall diversity of shotmaking requirements needed.
Nothing more than that.