Darren
Firstly, if you really shot gross 63, with a CSS of 66, you played to a +3, not scratch (and well, done, my man!). However, I suspect that you shot gross 66/net 63 and you have fallen into that particularly Scottish disease of only speaking of net scores..........
As for what you think I said, read again. You are wrong.
Geoff
Of course I am not of Jamie Slonis' standard (I assume, never played with the dude) from day to day, but, like Darren, I too can play to scratch, and in fact did so in the last tournament round I played, 2 weeks ago. I've even beat guys of Jamie's caliber (+2?) over the past few years. Regardless of these facts, I can still dream, even though a lot of the time I play crap!
My point about NGLA is that it's lots of driver/iron wedge, and I firmly believe that if you don't have to play mid-long irons or woods into more that 1 or 2 greens, a course is just too short for really testing one's game, mediocre as mine (or others) may be.
All that being said, I stand by what I said a few posts earlier that I'd take NGLA as a day to day course if I had to make a choice between the three. That is assuming, of course, that the clubhouse, which I only saw from the outside, is not too inferior to that of Muiirfield, which I know pretty well.......
Huckster
I think all of us could do OK at Shinnecock if we got there on a day when the stars were in alignment and we'd eaten our Wheaties. Also, I think all of us could get bitch slapped by NGLA on any old day of the year if we weren't careful. The issue is not about hard or soft or even what day of the month it is, it's about which course gives good golf, day in day out. Recognising that my experience is limited, I'll still rank them 1. (joint equal) Muirfield and Shinnecock; 3. NGLA.