I was there today - what a great finish. After watching the action from the Hagen pavilion, going from tv to 14 tee to approach on 18 and green on 18, I really got an appreciation on what's important for a venue for a big event - and it's not the architecture.
I was told Medinah, which they may split this, made about 13MM on the event. As a non-profit, you can pull up Medinahs tax return in a year or so and be able to see how much of an impact to the bottom line. By any measure, it was a home run. Does the course succeed in creating a great venue for a major? Yes. There must have been 30 suites around 18 alone and each one was 150K.
After playing the course before the renovation, I can say the latest renovation improved the golf course. It no longer feels claustrophobic and you have real chances for recovery shots. I stood right behind the tree on 18 that Poulter hit over yesterday. Ryan, they must have cleared the trees a bit on this hole to give better views to spectators and suite holders? I bet Pouter would have had to chip back to the fairway or hit a low cut rather than boldly go over the tree.
While there are some weaknesses to the course (one too many par 3s over the water, a pedestrian stretch in the middle of the course, the water hazard on the wrong side on 15), it's very solid and an excellent venue. There are some phenomenal holes, particularly the stretch from 12 to 17.
The Ryder Cup brought out the best of the course. I was fortunate to be invited at the last minute.