It is difficult to believe - given the "good taste" initiative Ran and I discussed on the phone a couple weeks back - that Barny's original post was not deleted immediately. I think we all know Barny has an ugly, repressed darkness within his psyche - hidden from polite company in the light of day, but something he cannot contain once the moonshine rises.
It is one thing - buried in the context of a thread - to piss in the cheerios of an architect (guilty as charged, re: Rees and Nicklaus) and quite another to come straight off the bat with a j'accuse right in the grill of a respected gentleman. It's a bit like talkin' smack about John Harbottle or booing Matt Kucher coming down the stretch in a tournament.
Redanman took me on a tour of Applebrook and I loved what I saw - it had a quality of intimacy, sense of space and proportionality. I was quite sorry we did not play it and think it a better golf course from the standpoint of architectural interest than Aronimink. Does that make Gil better than Donald Ross? Probably not, but in a small sampling, I would rather play his modern offering than that particular recognized classic.
I'm not sure why nobody ever mentions Stonebridge Links on Long Island. I LOVED what Gil and Uncle George did out there - a wonderful, scaled down version of Raynor/C.B. - like if you put Westhampton in the dryer and sort of re-stretched it over a funky piece of ground. Last time I was there, it was obvious the Superintendent didn't have a clue how to properly maintain the golf course to optimize the strategies, but if you look past management stupidity, the architecture is terrific.
The inability to remember more than one hole of Rustic Canyon is either evidence of a brain aneurysm or the onset of Alzheimer's. Look, Rustic Canyon is not a perfect golf course by any means. The routing works very well until you try to figure out where the 13th tee is hiding, in this case down a dusty road along a wire fence - or that awkward, three-tier 15th green that looks like a parody of R.T. Jones Sr.
The putting surface on the par-3 17th is too small relative to the prevailing wind, the firmness of the rest of the golf course and hazard placement. The right side of the short par-4 #12 looks incomplete (just my opinion) and the opening tee shot on #1 is horrible - with an incomprehensibly bad geometry, horrible sight lines (for an opener) and needlessly hidden hazards.
However, aside from those flaws, it easily passes the essential test that I am willing to travel many hours in a car just to play it. How many low-budget, public, neighborhood courses are worth that? There are at least 12 holes out there I think about on the drive down to Moorpark - and it is all I can do after putting out on #18 not to run back to the tee and have another go. That is the ultimate compliment - a course as addicting to me as Donkey Kong or the Grateful Dead.