By now, we appreciate that Flynn built a limited number of eighteen-hole courses and that his best courses reflect the high degree of personal attention that he bestowed among them. The camera might be more in love with MacKenzie's bolder features/bunkers, but for subtly and nuance, Flynn's designs are tough to beat. This point was driven home to me twice again this year, one time after a tour of some of Merion's holes with Wayne Morrison at the Walker Cup followed two months later by a first time visit around The Country Club in Pepper Pike, Ohio.
Even within this Discussion Group, I haven't read much about this Cleveland gem. Case in point is the 17th at TCC which Wayne argues has ever bit the playing merit as the seventeenth at National Golf Links of America - and he may be right! Still, TCC is far from a one hit wonder as just the opposite is true: top to bottom it is so strong that I put it with the likes of Oak Hill. The only difference is that it doesn't court the spot light via hosting televised events.
The more you see of Flynn's work, the more you appreciate it (the same can't be said for most architects). Wayne and I have started a Feature Interview on Flynn and his eye-popping 17th here will feature as one of the questions.
Cleveland's plethora of fine to great courses including The Country Club somehow mysteriously flies under the radar as a prime example of the Golden Age of architecture. How? I don't know but we are going to keep adding profiles from this great golfing area of the country.
It will be interesting to read your reaction to the course profile. I know Tom Paul and Wayne are both big fans, which says a lot as Philly guys rarely say anything nice about a course elsewhere
. For instance, how does TCC stack up against Flynn's Philadelphia work?
Cheers,