I am struggling to understand why an owner would want to pigeon hole his archie...seems like an unnecessary risk...and one that could potentially thwart a great orginal design being constructed.
Ciao
Sean, doesn't the same argument apply to Old Mac?
Here are a few ideas on why Lido might appeal to certain owners:
Lido was by many counts one of the top few courses in the country. Some said the best, and that included NGLA, Merion and Pine Valley. Intriguing possibility to build a new course that, right out of the box, might measure up to today's top-ranked world-class courses.
CBM designed Lido. A guy like, say, Mike Keiser, admires CBM. So much so, he had a tribute course built around CBM's ideas. That course is one of the top-ranked in the nation. As I understand it, it's extremely popular. Suggests Lido could be very popular as well.
The belief that they CAN reproduce a nearly exact Lido replica. Maybe even improve on it. That's why it's a shame Tom Doak doesn't seem interested in the job.
Lots of marketing potential for a Lido replica. Reprint some of the rave reviews, by golf's leading lights, that called this course the best in the country, better than Pine Valley, Merion and NGLA. Built by the father of American golf courses and architecture, who laid out many of the nation's best courses, and whose ideas and designs shaped the future of American golf. Tough as nails for the pro's, but a joy for bogey as well. You probably will never play Augusta National, but you can play a course that might well be its rival or superior.
Keiser has wanted to build Lido for years. Sounds to me like this might be almost irresistible for him. And does anyone have a keener sense than him about building great courses and marketing them?
I like the idea for several reasons. Not least of which is it will give the public a chance to play the type of course that has mostly been limited to a small number of country club members.