Kelly:
Great comment.
Tom:
Let's be clear -- I don't see how rating courses like collegiate football teams makes any sense. I understand why GD led the parade -- it makes for good copy to say some course is #1 and then two years later have another #1. I can't for the life of me see what the real differences are between such heavyweights as places like Merion / East and Oakmont. A solid ten in both cases and for anyone to say one is better than the other is likely tied to a personal preference.
When you have groupings of ten you are better able to fit courses to particular areas of emphasis. Sure, one could do it just with a grouping of 100 and leave it at that. I don't think that provides a sufficient level of differentiation and that's something that can be broken down a bit more. No doubt any grouping will have a starting and end point. When GD had its ton ten listing it went through that for the first 50 courses -- the remainder weere simply lumped into a "second 50."
Tom, don't get a knot in your shorts -- my comment on "intellectuasl honesty" was not geared towards you but a system that GD eventually changed to include such collegiate football ratings. It was nothing more than attempt to create "news" with every ratings when in all reality places like Oakmont, Merion, CP, PV, et all of that type, are all within a whisker of one another.
Scott:
Fair question -- but far from your erroneous statement that my "arguments are all over the place."
Here's why ...
The difference in my asking Adam is that he is a lone individual -- I wanted to know how he might be able to diffentiate between the key courses he has played from the C&C portfolio of one's he has played. Getting him to analyze each and for him to see what he personally liked better than another is quite helpful for me in better understanding his overall feelings on a given course.
This is a bit different than when aggregate lists are provided by an assortment of people when pooled together. I believe the aggregate approach works best when divided into set groupings -- such as what GD did previously with its top ten ratings from a "first ten" to a "fifth ten" and then a "second fifty."
Hope this clariification helps with any misunderstanding you might have had.