Mike,
No. At least not at Golf Club Atlas. We are here to discuss golf architecture. Getting into financial matters will only discourage people involved with projects from participating here and that would be a step backwards.
Financial matters should remain private.
Tim,
1. It is really nice to see you posting again.
2. Here is why you are completely wrong
It was 10+ years ago that I played golf at Yale with Tommy, Dr Childs and a friend of theirs who was a very thoughtful guy and obviously he really loved golf course architecture. He was a GCA.com guy before there was GCA.com and this kooky website brought us together. Now I was just starting to drink the juice so I just listened to these three guys rip into and have absolute passion for Yale Golf Course (today it is "The Course at Yale" - yikes).
I was somewhat surprised when this thoughtful guy posted a thread at GCA.com titled
"Is Yale The Greatest Tragedy in Golf?". Now at the time I was just starting to understand my appreciation for golf courses, I was a new "Ivy League Member" at Yale, aka second tier non-Yalie, so I did not know what to think or how to respond. I tiptoed my way around that thread (my first, not logged in response, was on page 3)
http://www.golfclubatlas.com/forum/index.php/topic,5219.0.html Yes, Yale is a private golf club in the European tradition, but this was a controversial topic back then.
That thread by a thoughtful and well meaning guy, imo, was a catalyst of many many things at Yale Golf Course. I won't go into all the drama but fast forward to today and Yale:
- sits pretty solidly on most of the rankings list except for Golf Digest, which can be argued is a good thing
- has hosted the NCAA regionals and they are coming back in a few years
- is beloved on gca.com and has hosted many outings and trips via many gca.com members
- has the perfect Super in Scott Ramsey, he is trusted and tireless in his passion
- hopefully is profitable on the Yale P&L, but certainly is at least a great alumni contributor catalyst
- had a now also famous thread by Tom Doak about Yale's boldness/craziness just last summer after a recent re-look/visit
I really don't think it is too much of a stretch to say that thread by Tim Weiman contributed to the updating of Yale Golf Course. Let's not kid ourselves however, great architecture does cost money.
Fast forward to last summer and three of us (Mark, Jon, Mike) hosted an outing for GCA.com on a Sunday at Yale and Scott Ramsey came out on a Sunday to speak with the group at lunch before the round. Now since I "know everything about Yale" I stayed at the range to hit balls with my son and to make sure newbies knew the logistics as the range is a long walk from the clubhouse. I walked in at the end of the talk grabbed a burger and traded some cheap shots with Pat Mucci.
Now I married a Connecticut girl and I have been playing Yale, been a member, love the place for over 20 years (yikes #2). It was not until Pat Mucci (see the ultimate in private club old guard) published highlights of Scott Ramsey's talk on GCA.com that I ever knew the yearly greens budget of Yale.
My reaction: How can I continue to support Yale to meet its annual nut? I did recruit a new member this year so I have that going for me.
My wife always says about her business, "Information is the cure.". Kids today get their information from the internet, not PDF files, and certainly not phone calls. Architecture cost money, so my thought is let's talk about how much it cost and why private golf is so expensive. I always think to John Kavanaugh's position that he pays to "not have people on his golf course".
Maybe Tom Doak will step in and post his P&L in Google Docs for us to review
Just kidding Tom....
PS. Just saw Archie's thread on Atlantic City CC. Maybe the perfect case study as it has bounced around a variety of models over the last 20 years. I also love that place.