Brother John graced me with the maroon edition of The Confidential Guide in 1994 for Christmas. Quickly thereafter, I spun into a tizzy over Tom's grades for MuirFIELD, Westward Ho!, Royal Aberdeen, St. Michaels, SFGC, et al. Some of his grades were too high, some too low - what was he thinking?! In those pre-internet, Guttenberg press days, I sent him ....gasp ....a letter (remember those?). Though Tom likely regrets it now, he kindly responded and ... here we are!
So .... where did I screw-up in Volume 1 or 2? And more importantly why? I ask in part because we are writing Volume 3 and for ~1/4 of the courses, I am on the ratings fence. What should be the final determinant? I'm curious about what you have to say and what I might glean. Please be as specific as possible.
If you and I differ by 1 point, no big deal, that gets swept under the two reasonable people blah blah blah carpet. But, a two grade separation is a glaring difference on Tom's exponential scale. Such variance can occur for many reasons, the most obvious being not seeing a course after a significant restoration. For instance, Masa gave Mid-Pines a 4 (not having seen Kyle's work) while Tom and I rated it 7. That's straightforward. That would apply for me at SFGC - I haven't seen any of Tom's work there.
Other reasons exist too. We each enjoy pet likes/dislikes, biases, etc. which helps keep the Discussion Group so lively. Bill S. has made it clear that he rates (berates!) Alotian a 5, largely because it is cart ball and he doesn't think much of the greens which he feels are very similar. I understand his first point (though I walked plenty of holes tee to green) but we differ strongly about the greens. When I played, they were firm, blazingly fast and crazy fun. For instance, after the round, we putted on the 18th – the direct line to the hole was ~30 feet but the best way to get close was to putt away from the hole to point x from where it would be gravity fed to the hole completing a broad arc nearly 60 feet. Elsewhere on the course, I found some very appealing opportunities to use tight short grass just off the putting surface to bank/deaden approach shots, and have the ball then creep onto the putting surface and toward the hole. I love shots that slowly unfold with time. Combine this short game interest with a gorgeous setting undiluted by outside disturbances, and Bill and I are off by 2. So be it.
My ex claims that I fail to embrace constructive criticism; this post is yet another instance of her being wrong and me being right!
So have at it: what courses in Volume 1 & 2 do you really like or dislike much more than me and why?
Best,
One of Golf's Most Beloved Piñatas