There was a thread a while back on the ratio of slope to course rating. The thought was that a course with a high rating and a low slope might embody the ideal of being fun and challenging for the most golfers. This idea appealed to me at the time. If this were the case, and appealing to the most golfers drove ratings (!), Talking Stick North would be near the top of most lists. The course is 7133 yards from the Blacks with a CR of 72.7 and a slope of 125. However, how do you then explain my and others' fascination with places like Kingsley which are the other way 'round (6450, 70.8/133 Member Tees)? Bottom line is that ultimately you can't quantify art. Comparing, for instance, Medinah #3 and Shoreacres, both Doak 7's, solely on their Doak rating and plugging it into this formula is silly. Hence the descriptions in the CG. Even Tom, whose numerical ratings are vastly superior to most of the rags IMO, isn't immune to the undue respect for difficulty promulgated by Digest et al. (In regards to Shoreacres, "Alas, the overall yardage is quite short, but it's still a real gem".) Furthermore, I wonder if our brethren from across the pond aren't in fact better critics of courses as they're immune from posting every round as an equivalent medal score and only play in 3 comps a year, and not always at their home club? I used to go to state math competitions in high school. I was a dweeb then and I fear this discussion veering dangerously into Mathlete territory... When you can take Led Zeppelin 4 and Coltrane at the Village Vanguard and plug 'em into a formula and get something beyond mental masturbation out of it, please let me know...