This would explain why Kingsley's biggest fans are all younger guys who are not members of a prominent, older course.
They aren't? How do you know this? Are you just talking about the 5 or 6 people posting on the other thread? If so, how do you know their membership status with other "more prominent" clubs? There very well could be big fans of Kingsley who are members at "more prominent" courses.
Also, for an anti-rankings guy you seem to be coming back to the rankings a lot. What do you mean by "more prominent"? Are you talking prominent today or are you talking 30 years ago? Prominence obviously changes, should membership at a club that is considered prominent today be a barometer for opinion validity? What if the club is no longer prominent?
But it does not completely address why they are so dismissive of the opinions of others who are more familiar with such courses.
Who has been dismissive of Crystal Downs or any classic course or dismissive of others who are more familiar with "more prominent" courses? Do you consider disagreement to be dismissive? If anything, the classic course apologists have been and are dismissive of those who think highly of some modern courses.
When you hit the scene challenging the "ranking" of various courses back in the day, were you being dismissive?
JC: I'm sure my sweeping generalizations above do not fit every fan of The Kingsley Club. However, maybe they hit too close to home. If you want to make this personal, let's turn it around. Let's test my theory out on one of Kingsley's biggest fans -- you.
1 - Are you a member of another club?
2 - How many of the top-100 courses have you played?
3 - How many of them have you played more than twice?
4 - How many of them had you played before you started playing Kingsley regularly?
For myself, the only club at which I'd been a member prior to Crystal Downs was being a national member of the TPC at Sawgrass, when it first opened. [It cost $50.]
By the time I saw Crystal Downs the first time, I'd already been to Merion, Pine Valley, Oakmont, SFGC, LACC, and about 20 others in the top 100, and I was surprised how well it held up to them.
I hadn't played many of them more than once, except for Pebble Beach and Cypress Point and Harbour Town. That's probably how Cypress Point became the gold standard for me.
By the time I came back to Michigan and started playing Crystal Downs regularly, I had spent my year in the UK and seen about 500 courses, and I'd played a bunch of the best ones multiple times.