I had the incredible privilege to see so many courses last summer, so many of them are knocked off this list for the most part. For me, the feeling of playing them is wonderful, but so much can be learned from just seeing the designs in person.
So, in these moments as I procrastinate on my finals:
Sunningdale Old and New: My exposure to Colt is extremely minimal, and of all the architects I would like to study, by far, he's the one I know the least about, and I have absolutely no exposure to heathland.
Huntercombe: Ever since reading Ran's review, I've been fascinated by this place. The hollows look thrilling, and, particularly for an old course, the type of hazard which may be the greatest threat to professionals in the future. In a US Open, wouldn't it be more thrilling to try to see a player try to recover from one of the grassy pits like those at Huntercombe? I'm interested to see how it would play in person.
Kingston Heath: The course that got me into golf course architecture was Pasatiempo. While MacKenzie's course in Santa Cruz has been encroached on by homes, particularly on the front 9, that wasn't originally the case when it opened, which is why I find the old pictures of Pasatiempo so fascinating. Seeing how MacKenzie handled such a small site would be interesting.
Jockey Club: For similar reasons above, I would love to see what MacKenzie did with a much flatter site than Pasatiempo. With both courses.
Royal Hague: It pains me to say that despite being a Dutch citizen, I've never played golf in the country. Royal Hague seems like a really good place to start.
Kingsley Club: I haven't seen any of Mike DeVries work in person, and for that reason I'd readily substitute any of his own work for Kingsley (although I did play a high school tournament at Meadow Club, which he did a restoration on), particularly Greywalls or, now that the photos are coming out, Cape Wickham in Australia. But I figure Kingsley, with all of the talk it gets on here, is probably a good one to put down.
Himalayan Golf Course: I'm sure there's loads to learn about it architecturally, but just the journey there alone, on top of what would probably be some time spent in the mountains, would be incredible. To this day, the most I learned about myself was on a 26 day backpacking trip in Death Valley in high school. I'd probably do something similar while out there.
SFGC: It's painful to dream of a course, be geographically so close to it (growing up in the San Francisco area) and feel so far away from even thinking of seeing/playing it. For me, I'll always feel like my understanding of Tillinghast will never be fully understood until I get to see SFGC. That has probably as much to do without GCA as it does with GCA.
So much travel, so little time.