Serious Question?! After a few years on Golfclubatlas I look at the contributors as broken down into about three categories. 1. Those that like to come on here and learn more about architecture, find out what others are thinking (those in the business(?) and offer their opinions and comment on others opinions of various things relating to architecture and maybe help educate others. 2. Those that like to play golf courses, gain access to golf courses, discuss the relative architectural merits of golf courses and rank and rate golf courses. 3. Those that like to do research on golf architecture, golf courses, trends of various times and the history of golf architecture.
I've just had a fairly healthy discussion with Mark Fine on the "Framing--blame it on Pine Valley" thread about Pine Valley and also Seminole and Huntingdon Valley. A lot of the discussion revolved around the specifics of these golf courses architecturally and the opinions expressed about them. Mark clearly likes to play a lot of courses and does and he might be a rating panelist for one of the golf magazines. He also says that he doesn't have the time to do research on many or maybe even any of these courses (I don' know if that means he's not interested in research and doesn't care about it) but he says he does know the architects' styles and such since he's played so many their courses and his opinion even on architectural specifics, right or wrong, should be valid because of that. I have no problem with that unless his opinions and statements are proven inaccurate by research and he still doesn't consider changing his opinions or statements because of it. If he doesn't believe the research for some reason then that's a great reason to do more research in my opinon. Otherwise I'm not sure where it leads except to misinformation and misunderstanding.
I like to do research on courses, their architecture, the evolution of their architecture, styles, trends, architects and such. I admit, I don't like ratings and rankings personally, and have just resigned from the rating panel I was on for one year.
There seem to be a number of people on here like Shackelford, Bahto, TommyN, Mike Cirba, Tom MacWood, Jeff Mingay and many others who like research and are some of the best one can find with it.
There are those in the business who come on here and explain and discuss technical issues, construction, maintenance practices and such like Jeff Brauer, Doak, Meagher, Echenrode, Rewinski, Curry, Tiska, Hanse, Phillips, Andrew, Glenn and many others that are very valuable to this site.
There are others like the writers; Klein, Shackelford, Wexler, Papazian, Kelly, Ward and many others that are real valuable. And then there are the owners/developers like Bakst, Hansen, the man from Black Creek and some others. They could be some of the most interesting and valuable of all since they sort of span all these interests and categories and they're the ones who put all this together and get done those courses we can talk about and hope for.
My interest primarily is restoration and that to me requires research--and the more the better. I was just at the New Jersey Turf Expo in Atlantic City at a seminar on restoration where Ron Forse, Craig Currier (Super Bethpage Black), Joe Alonzi (super Westchester) and Geoff Shackelford spoke on the panel. All the panelists were excellent as were their presentations but Shackelford was the best to me with his presentation "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" which spanned almost every vantage point of architecture but being that the overall subject was restoration, he stressed over and over the importance of research.
So anyway, this might sound self-evident that there are a number of different interests on here but they all go into making this website very unique and potentially an enormously valuable resource, in my opinion. To me, if Golfclubatlas was nothing else, Tom MacWood's five part essay on the influence of the Arts and Crafts Movement on golf architecture would have been enough--and I can't imagine the research that must have gone into those essays.
What do you'all use this site for and what would you like to see it concentrate on more with these various interests or which would you like to see it get further into? For me its research, definitely not exclusively, but I sure think it's valuable. Do you agree with that?