Thanks for another great interview.
I thought many of the responses were interesting (particularly those on foot golf, green grass, and his belief that Dye's course at French Lick is the best in Indiana), but I found none more intriguing than his last question:
The Ryder Cup sites in the United Kingdom are frequently – and disappointingly – on modern courses. We understand the financial element that goes into a winning bid to host and yet … given the magnitude of the Ryder Cup, shouldn’t it be held on some venerable links, at least from time to time?
Ryder Cup Europe has a vastly different approach to selecting sites as opposed to the PGA of America. It’s just a totally different philosophy regarding Ryder Cup selection by the European PGA. They are shrewd and look at it more from a financial standpoint. As they have shown over the last five Ryder Cups and again with the selection of Paris in 2018, it all about money.
Our philosophy is to go to a great golf course and make sure that there is enough space for infrastructure and the ability to sell hospitality. Look at Hazeltine which is a big site with a tremendous amount of room. Bethpage is the same which has absolutely no issues. Whistling Straights is going to be a challenge but they have the room. There are some logistical issues especially with the hotels and how they are going to get people in and out.
As someone who has grown up loving the Ryder Cup more than any other golf event, I found this very interesting, but wonder if the selections made by Ryder Cup Europe are solely from a financial standpoint or if it is the product of having far less championship courses. One of the things I've always believed about golf courses abroad is that they are less prone to significant changes in length and difficulty because the R&A has established a limited rota of courses for its major championships, and the likelihood of any course contending for a major is very unlikely. ( if Castle Stuart and Trump Aberdeen don't get one, it'd be a resoundingly strong message to the rest of the UK: don't bother trying to build a 7000 yard monster, you'll never get a major and no one will care to play it from that distance.)
In the US there's a far greater selection of golf courses not only capable of hosting something like the Ryder Cup, but qualified. The same cannot be said for the European courses. New courses are far more likely to get big events (Chambers Bay and Whistling Straits certainly fit this mold, and Trump Ferry Point seems likely to get an event in the future, among others). Truth be told, that's a loss for us. For every Chambers Bay, we get a 7500 yard course that is both boring and useless. What a shame.