"Certainly a "Championship Course" can be poor architecture, just look at all the 'championship' golf courses built in the 70's and 80's. However, the very best of the championship courses, the ones where we see the US Open's played, specifically, BPB, WFW and Oakmont, are said to be very, very difficult, yet also said to be some of the very, very best."
John K. Moore:
I think that's a very intelligent and important observation.
However, I am certainly mindful that it was apparently not just the so-called "championship" type golf course of the 70s and 80s that some important golf analysts felt were lacking in some way. Otherwise how could Bob Jones have made the remarks as early as he did about how one dimensional he felt some of the earlier so-called American "championship" courses were? And one can add to that the fact that Bob Jones was never particularly critical of any specific course (perhaps because he was too much the gentleman to be so) but in one lapse he was particularly critical of the bunkers of Oakmont.
Nevertheless, it is certainly true to say that many of those courses that were the best at testing the best, and not just in tournaments or championships, have always been considered by so many to be the best examples of superior architecture!
Maybe it's all something like the reality of the Bell at the State Fair---eg most all understand they are not capable of ringing it but that does not seem to prevent them from being fascinated by it and the concept of it somehow!
Personally, like some on here, I don't think the so-called "Fun Factor" has all that much to do with superior architecture. Or at least I guess I should say that personally I sure don't think it has just about everything to do with superior architecture as apparently some others on here do.
I've told the story on here a number of times but one of the courses I had the most fun on in my entire career for an entire week was this pretty simple little golf course in Southern Ireland, Mallow GC. It was sort of on the side of a gentle moutain and it was really hot and dry in the summer of 1999 when I played it every morning for a week at daybreak. It was the fastest course I ever saw----eg the ground was just super alive in that the ball could bounce and runout more than 100 yards at a time. To me it was totally tansfixing, and I don't remember having more fun trying to figure out what to do on it.
But was little Mallow GC's architecture superior to Pine Valley or Merion or NGLA or Shinnecock or Oakmont or Myopia or so many others of the highly respected ones I know?
Of course not.
However, what should I say about the architecture of Mallow, particularly with the extremely fast conditions on which I played it? I would say its architecture was just fine given the fact it was on and had some really lovely sloping and rolling ground----the kind that just makes for good and fun golf no matter where the hell it is or what it's name is.