Since we now know the eight finalists, I thought the continual debate of who is going to win should have a separate new thread. I think Tom has an advantage, yes everyone has their shapers and supervisors but the bigger firms have supervisors that supervise an outside contractor and I see Tomīs crewīs as more in house contractors, which is what seems to work best in South America. He has shown in the past that he can still deliver quality products to foreign market by setting up these in house construction crews. I have been here over twenty years now and during that time frame I would guess there have been well over 100 courses built in the Southern cone of South America and out of that 100, around five have had general contactorīs, three in Chile and two in Argentina and none in Brazil. Nicklaus has a general contractor in Argentina but that surely will increases the overall cost of the finished project and as stated previously in some of the threads it doesnīt make sense to create a course over the five million dollar mark. I think the idea of the present stage as a competition will also favor Tomīs team. When it comes to lobbying and internal political connections, there are three strong groups, Nicklaus, RJT II and once again, Tom. I stated months ago in another thread, I have faith they will come to the correct conclusions and contract the highest qualified firm, that will produce the best course at a reasonable price. I still stand by that but it will be a very close vote and a tough battle. We donīt actually know of all the committees involved but the knife will have to put into the hands of one particular group to cut the cake and it seems to me that knife will go to the group that puts up the money (also stated on other threads six months ago) and I have a good idea of where that will be coming from and therefore my optimistic conclusions. So as of today, this is how I see the individual firms chances.
T.D. 2-1
Jack Nicklaus 3-1
Robert Trent Jones Jr. 4-1
Greg Norman 6-1
Gary Player 10-1
Martin Hawtree 10-1
Gil Hanse 15-1
Peter Thomson/Ross Perrett 30-1