David
Can you outline for me what you think the characteristics were of this second golden age ie. what made it a golden age of design other than an awful lot of golf courses got built ?
Certainly there was a huge increase in golf course development in the UK during this period but I assume your question to be was any of it any good and did it have similar value, design wise, to what was going on elsewhere, correct ?
Of the Scottish examples given eg. Kingbarns, Castle Stuart, Renaissance, Dundonald, Crail (Craighead), Carrick, The Castle, The Dukes (St Andrews), St Andrews Bay (x2) and Machrihanish Dunes, the first 3 courses were not only designed by Americans but were conceived by Americans, the 4th and 5th were designed by Americans, the 6th by a Canadian, the 7th and 10th by a Brit (? Paul Kimber), the 8th by an Australian (and subsequently modified by an American) and the 9th partially at least by a New Zealander (Scott MacPherson). That seems to suggest that either their is very little design talent in this country or perhaps it just hasn't had the chance to do it on home soil.
As an aside I have played all of the above bar the two Kimber courses and while they range from average (Craighead) to very good (Renaissance/Kingsbarns) none represents a "breakthrough" in golf course design IMO other than perhaps Kingsbarns for its creation of a landscape and Castle Stuart with its ultra wide fairways which again IMO are a detriment to the design.
Niall