I post this question having read through several of the highly entertaining WS threads on the go at the moment.
I know several GW raters that give WS a score that places it outside the top 10 modern. Hence, it stands to reason that there are some who give it enough points to place it even higher than #3 modern.
How can that be? WS has many fine holes and its long views over the lake are certainly inspiring. It has wind going for it as well and its other attributes are detailed in some of these other threads.
However, WS is totally manufactured and isn't perfect with holes like 5, 9, and 18 still raising eyebrows. Plus, every single hole screams at you with Dye never giving your senses a break
. I hate this part of his later work and whether it is for TV or not, I don't care - it is what it is. No doubt WS is quite a construction achievement (and the look/texture that the green keeping staff has cultivated is phenomenal) but voting it ahead of the real deals is a mystery to me.
PacDunes et al at the Bandon resort, Sand Hills, Ballyneal, even Dye's own Ocean Course at Kiawah are but the start of a list of courses that featured a better raw site from which to work than Whistling Straits (despite its long coastline). Yet, the majority of these courses are rated below Whistling Straits. According to GW raters, Doak and Coore have only produced one course each worthy of higher marks than Whistling Straits, despite each of them having had several sites in this country that were better for golf. Indeed, are we all sure that Whistling Straits represents better golf than Harbour Town or The Golf Club or The Ocean Course at Kiawah? I'm not.
We are supposedly in another Golden Age, marked by a return of using natural landforms to create arresting, unique golf courses. How can a totally manufactured course with 900 bunkers be ranked at or near the top? In addition, as Pat Mucci points out, it is maintenance intensive. While the big picture is grand, are the subtleties there? Yet the raters of Golf Week put it forward as a poster child of great modern design. How can a course with 900 hazards be among the handful of best courses built since 1960? If hazards/difficulty are the measuring sticks, where is PGA West in GW's modern rankings?
I pose the question(s) with a well known bias toward courses like Woking with a parsimonious amount of hazards strategically placed (indeed, a quick glance at my own personal course rankings gratifyingly shows Woking rated ahead of Whistling Straits). Is Dye's work here really that exceptional (i.e that the handiwork of man can trump nature)?
Many Golf Week raters post in this Discussion Group - perhaps one of them can share his/her insight into giving marks that place it #3 modern? It is very, very difficult and that will treat us to some lurid viewing this afternoon but is it really #3 modern?
Cheers,