I just read the entire "Pinehurst Hearsay" thread with my mouth open in stunned amazement.
It must be something to do with the evolution of "photogenic golf" that has tarnished the reputations of courses like Pinehurst #2. Does everyone needs to be wowed by ocean fronts or dramatic tee shots off of cliffs or heroic carries over quarrys. Does it have to be 18 completely different challenges to keep your interest? What happened to the loving a simple and well designed golf course.
I read that someone felt that #2 was boring and repatative?
Other simply didn't see its greatness. My heads still spinning, I thought the course to be the most consistant and well conceived designs I have ever played. The course has more "options" than any other course I have played. Options make the great golf, and test the mental make up of a player.
Being forced to playing to a one well defined target makes for simple golf. Boring golf. Pinehurst's options are set up to test the best you have, but also allows a much less aggressive route to avoid most of the difficulty. Of course you will have to conceed strokes along the way. The greatness of Pinehurst is how fiercly it punishes a player who will not conceed a stroke and tries to play the "imaculate shot" (I imagine this is the souce of frustration from some). If you play the course more than once, you come to realize Pinehurst is more a test of management than of shotmaking. To emphasise this, my father broke 80 without even trying to hit half the greens. He simply conceeded where he felt he should to score. Your score becomes more about where you avoid, as opposed to the shots you pull off. I was more aggressive and had both the only birdie and all the triples.
Pinehurst is incredibly subtle in its test and in its beauty.
It remind me of similar course, Muirfield. Muirfield is not a beautiful seaside property, like many others in the UK, but is strategicly a masterpiece. Muirfield is another course that does not generate the praise it deserves. There are more comments about Cruden Bay and other such spectatcular sites. But Muirfield will always be a better course.
Ask any architect and they would tell you they wished they would have designed either course, rather than some of the more spectacular course that generate more praise
My frustation comes from the thought that if golfers aren't visually blown away, they come away underwhelmed. I'm worries that a subtle piece of great architecture will always lose out to a spectacular looking piece of fluff.