Is there any job that you would love to go back and have another shot at and do things considerably different?
There are a few I wish I had more budget on, including the one Chris Clouser is asking about. At Dornick, as I have explained, I wasn't hired to restore it. I was hired to match Dick Nugent's style while being more accessbible from Dallas. We asked about restoring it - I noticed the grass hollows that were clearly bunkers at one time. No one was interested, esp. since it had been torn up a few times before. But, that job could have been better. We really didn't even match Dick's style as well as we should have.
I hope that Jeff would say he would totally change the green complexes at Great Southwest GC.
Not sure why you would say this Lou. Some say they have too much contour, but they don't bother me a lot.
What is your favorite golf course on Earth (or elsewhere)? I'm not asking for "the best"; I'm asking for your favorite. In other words: You have one day of golf left. Where will you spend it?
My faves are many Raynor courses (started liking him at Shoreacres years ago) Royal Melbourne, SFGC and Seminole. It would be one of those.
How did you end up in Dallas?
When I decided to go on my own, I thought it would be honorable NOT to open up shop down the street from KN. Also, my then fiancee and I wanted to be down south somewhere. I went to the library (you know, Barnes and Noble for the poor and/or frugal) studied the phone books and found out that Dallas was the only major southern city without a gca in the yellow pages. I went home and said "Honey, pack your bags for Dallas." I could have written "Cheap but good Market Research."
What is the best hole you've ever designed? Why is it the best?
I am partial to a few holes at the Quarry, like the 6th and the 8th. I just like how different they are from most of my stuff, and how I was able to use the Quarry features.
Do you start every job with a checklist of hole-types that you MUST include, if the land allows it? If so, what are they?
I call it a "hip pocket list" and unlike many gca, have way more than 18 concepts I would like to try. I detailed the basic thinking in Paul Daley's book and on Cybergolf. In essence, presuming the golfer likes to hit the driver every time (accepting a few layups because of environmental restrictions) I think you can ask him to optionally carry, skirt, or stay short of fw hazards, on both the inside and the outside of the DL. Of course, you can have no hazards, fw rolls of various types (spline, gentle rolls, etc.) and you can have the occaisional double fw hole - either short cut or two equal routes. Since all those options total more than 14 long tee shots you are going to have on a course, I figure each course shouldn't have more of each type.
Ditto approach shots. My list includes 9-10 "Sunday Pin" Greens, with the tough pin in each of the nine spaces of a tic tac toe board, maybe 3-4 small single target greens, and then a few multisection greens and at least one green that makes you go "hmmm" or based on a historic concept. All placed in appropriate locations, of course.
Have you ever designed a hole and thought: "There's nothing else like this anywhere"?
I have designed several commenting that "you won't see that hole on your home course!" At the same time, everything I have ever done that seemed unique, I have eventually seen was done somewhere in similar fashion else way earlier.
Which course (of yours, or anyone's) would you most like to redesign? Provided: You are allowed to blow up and plow under everything that's there now.
Last (but not least): How many helpless rodents have you golf-carted to death?
Just the one.
Why are you a Raynor fan?
I just fell in love with Shoreares years ago. The then super explained the whole copy and template concept way before it was famous with more people. It just seemed so different than modern design. But, the big valleys at SA also provided natural beauty.
Are you happy you did that Biarritz green at the Wilderness at Fortune Bay?
It might be a little deep.
I understand that the guy who owns (or originally owned) the Legacy in Des Moines sets extremely quick deadlines and keeps costs down by using his contractors to do the work. Presumably that approach sacrifices from detail in exchange for cost reductions and revenue coming in the door more quickly. Do you think that approach makes sense form the perspective of a person who is opening a golf course? By the way, while that is not the prettiest course on the planet, it is a fun test of golf.
His contractor was he and his sons, although we found him one shaper and one tractor guy. To my eye, the course is poorly detailed. I was surprised when I saw it 10th on the best new affordable list of GD that year. I also get a lot of nice comments on it. But, the owner built it for about half what normal courses cost, so he can make it as an affordable public golf course. Again, nothing wrong with that. And, its a good lesson in what is important to the retail golfer.
Is a trip to the 3 Minnesota courses (Giants Ridge Legends, Quarry and Wilderness at Fortune Bay) a pretty good representation of how your design approach has evolved over time? Particularly with respect to green contours?
Those three courses are probably too close together in time to be a real judge, but in a way, the flattish greens at the Legend are pretty typical of my earlier work. The Quarry was an attempt to break my own mold and I was asked at the Wilderness to split the difference, which I think I did well and which many say is their fave of the three - the right bowl of porridge so to speak.