Tom Paul,
My dad meant to say that they will dump "the club" after getting a US Open, not the Open (they need the $$$). I'd guess it's a better than 50% chance they will try to sell Riviera if awarded the Open and the USGA surely must know that (well, then again, maybe not, they are pretty out of touch). The lead lawyer trying to run the club has openly said his interest was to get into brokering golf course sales, and I'm sure Riviera will fetch a decent commission at some point for him, but long after he's ruined the course and devalued it by at least $20 million. I really do believe the owner, Watanabe, used to have good intentions, but now he seems to have changed and is all about satisfying his ego. The course and club do not mean much to him anymore. Getting the Open is somehow going to make him feel better about himself. After spending $12 million on a clubhouse renovation that no one really cares too much about, he's been pretty aloof. Somehow, piped in Muzak in the locker room doesn't seem like something you find at other Top 20 courses, maybe that's why the $12 million seems so painful.
JohnK and David Wigler,
Classic stuff from the LA Times eh? They ran a picture of three old guys playing the course from about 5 years ago too. Poor Larry got sent out with about two hours to write something before he went back to his real job (reviewing sports on TV). He clearly picked up the club's glossy press packet that is laid out in the media center. It's a doozy, incidentally, compiled by USGA staffer Tim Moraghan's wife (nice conflict of interest there, but I'm sure that today's USGA respects such displays of integrity). On one glossy photo page, the text refers to the "restauration" of Riviera by Fazio Golf Course Designers. I love it, there's Reestoration, and now, Restauration! The packet also has several classic descriptions of the course sterilization work, including the summation line that declares, "George Thomas, welcome home!" Ugh...
I think the players will love the new work, A) because most are clueless about architecture, and B) because if they say otherwise, the commissioner will fine them. And you are right John, the average guy will believe what he reads. It still doesn't change what's in the ground, which looks truly gross from a design and construction standpoint, and of course, looks nothing like anything Thomas every built that I'm aware of!
The McBunkers looked beamed in from Bethpage, the McGreen add-on's just so silly. The McTees are out of scale, and the landscaping of the barranca really bizarre (it's an easy up and down out of the barranca? What's with all the turf?) Everyone involved should be ashamed to keep throwing George Thomas's name around and declaring this to be restoration. But they have no shame or integrity, which is why the next wave of work will really be bad.
The good news is the course is in beautiful shape considering the weather we've had. The greens are hard and fast and smooth, so it should provide an interesting and reasonable test. But if the winning score is low, it'll be deemed a failure and in need of more Muzak inspired "restauration." How backwards, eh?
Geoff