A response in four points.
1. My honest opinion. The book promises my honest opinions of every golf course I've seen, and that's what I wrote about the Castle Course, whether you agree or not. Has anyone doubted this? Partly, this discussion is about whether I should still express my opinion even when it's controversial, or swallow it for political reasons. Anyone who speculates about my ulterior motives is essentially calling me dishonest; but in fact, they are saying I should have been dishonest in reporting my opinion.
2. The zero rating. It would have been much easier to just eliminate the "0" rating from the Doak Scale and avoid this controversy, except I had already set a precedent 20 years ago, and many people would have accused me of copping out by eliminating it. And that's exactly what it would have been, a cop-out.
The "zero" is not one point below a "1". It's reserved for a small group of courses which I feel are completely beyond the pale, that cost a lot of money to build and to play. When I'm considering giving a course a 0, it's usually either a 0 or a 5 … because if I didn't find the course in question offensive, it's probably big and well-conditioned and all of that.
The problem with the 0's is that they are all going to be modern courses. If James Braid had built one, it would probably be long gone by now, and for sure he wouldn't have wasted a king's ransom to build it. So anytime I use this grade, it's going to be for a course designed by a contemporary of mine, which is easy to turn into a controversy.
If I'd given the Castle Course a 5, I would have been rating it even with Crail and Dunbar and Gullane #2 and the Eden Course at St. Andrews, among many others. I think you should play all of those before you consider spending $200 to play the Castle Course.
3. The Castle Course itself. Those who express shock that anyone would dislike the course are being a bit disingenuous; it's hardly a beloved institution in St. Andrews. I have walked it twice -- once during construction and once on a tour with a bunch of other architects -- so my review is not just a knee-jerk reaction. Since the course opened, they've modified several greens and taken a bunch of lumpy mounds out of the middle of the fairways, that were part of the original design I saw.
4. The magazine business. I rated 288 courses, and the first magazine article about the book focuses on the LOWEST-rated course out of 288. Why is that? It's because I've given the magazine a free option -- they can finally publish a negative review of a golf course that will attract a lot of attention, and I take all the heat for it. That's the way they operate, and I know that better than anyone; but I still didn't expect it to be the first thing out of the gate, before anyone had read any of the other reviews for balance. If you think I'm deliberately using that to promote my book, I'll refer you back to #1.
Or, as a friend in a 12-step program is fond of saying, "Your opinion of me is none of my god-damned business."