It is often said that the best sites make the best courses.
Donald Ross's two most acclaimed courses, (depending on who you ask) #2 and Seminole both sit on less than perfect sites. Sure, Seminole is one of the few courses built on the atlantic, but all he had to work with were two North/South running ridges. Im not trying to debate Seminole's "greatness", because it is a great. I just don't believe that the site was all that special (although its probably pretty darn good for florida). Pinehurst #2 sits on sand, but the site isn't exactly comparable to that of Cypress Point or Pacific Dunes.
Without having the quote in front of me...Gil Hanse once said something along the lines that Plainfield was one of the very best sites Donald Ross was given. While Plainfield is certainly a terrific site, I'm of the understanding that it wasn't without its flaws. I've been thinking about the Gil Hanse quote for a while, and wondering if it really true. If it is true, then how is it that one of the most acclaimed architects of all time, who is credited with 300+ courses, never got that opportunity to work on that perfect piece of land?
Im curious as to if Donald Ross who is said to "get the best from each site" truely did so. If he did get the best from each site then i would imagine that his best courses are in fact on his best sites
Anyway...What I'm looking for is examples of the best SITES Donald Ross had to work with, and not necessary the best COURSES he produced.
Are there examples of better sites he had to work with that didn't produce great courses? Or did he get an overwhelming amount of Mediocre sites?
Any examples you can name, or any insight you can offer is greatly appreciated.