David:
Your scorecard reminds me of an article I read in the paper in Myrtle Beach years ago, where a developer announced he was building his new course with the specific intention of qualifying for the GOLF DIGEST 100 Greatest Courses, and to be sure they would make it, his architect [name withheld] was carrying around the GOLF DIGEST criteria in his back pocket! I wondered when he decided he needed to add a bit more aesthetics or more memorability to the third hole, how he would go about that, but I didn't write in.
My point is, golf course architecture is NOT paint by numbers. It's a fine exercise to try and analyze what makes the great courses tick, but it's ridiculous to build a golf course by trying to tick all the boxes. So, enjoy your scorecard exercise, but at the end of the day, throwing away the scorecard and having fun out there is what it's really about.
Tom,
What I'm suggesting here isn't intended to be prescriptive. (though, if it were successful enough that architects carried the list in their pocket, wouldn't that be a victory?)
Instead, I'm suggesting that we attack the problem of GCA appreciation with an approach that is, descriptive, accessible, understandable, scalable, and relevant.
This site already meets many of these goals. The long form course reviews, IMO, and discussion group threads are very rich sources of material. But at the end of the day, detailed reviews of the best of the best are only relevant with a small portion of the golfing population. Granted, many of those are thought leaders, and given what happened at Pinehurst, the paradigm shift has happened for some of them. But for the average Joe, not only will they never play Pine Valley or NGLA, they've never heard of them, nor appreciate or care about their significance then or now.
What they do know is the course they play on Tuesday, the local public courses, a couple of private courses, and the public/resort courses in Myrtle Beach/Hilton Head. They also are familiar with the big tournament courses, but only from TV. I think I read on this site an interview with a gentleman who has a perfect record of playing every course on some top 100 list. The folks I'm suggesting we target, like me, also have a perfect record; we've played 0 of the top 100.
That doesn't mean they/we don't aspire to play or emulate the top courses. Quite the contrary. The best of the best set the standard.
What I'm proposing in a GCA Scorecard is a scalable, relevant tool to connect the dots from the abstract qualities embodied in the best courses to the reality of the courses average Joe's play every day. To be relevant, you need to drive down to courses average people play. You also need a format that relates the best to the rest in a consistent manner. To be scalable, which means to have a practical chance of capturing the data, you need something that is easy to create (from a data perspective).
Keep in mind that scorecard comparisons are the norm today. Unfortunately there are only four metrics: Par, Yardage, Rating, and Slope. I think everyone on this site wants to get beyond the perverse strategic incentives those metrics drive. But without an alternative, how? Is this that alternative? I'm proposing that yes, it could be, and not only that, but it is a doable alternative that the participants on this site could use to drive the actual change in paradigm down into the public.
For as persausive as the people on this site are, you are only going to get so many converts from people like me trying to find out who the hell Devereux Emmet is, and why should I care enough to join a club designed by him?
(and for the record, I have played Manele and soon will play Rustic Canyon . So much for perfection, top 100 public course list!)