Interesting. I didn't mean the repetition thing tongue in cheek. Note first we are talking about two kinds of variety. There is the variety of template holes within a course and the variety of template holes across different courses. The iconic templates are different enough that they provide variety within a given course. I assume we are talking about the latter kind of variety, that is, the variety (or lack thereof) you find in the same template holes on different courses.
So sure, there are differences between the Redans at NGLA, Yale and Yeamans. But the main reason Raynor and others used templates was not for their variety, but rather the opposite. He built template holes because they reliably called for certain kinds of shots. Raynor et al. thought that was ok because those "certain kinds of shots" are among the most interesting the in the game. And I agree with that. The shots template holes call for are indeed interesting and fun.
But that doesn't absolve them from the charge of being repetitious from course to course. I think that has to be true, almost by definition. If such holes weren't repetitious (at least to some degree), if they didn't require (more or less) the kind of shot choices we associate with a certain template, the hole is not a template hole. If a hole doesn't have the playing characteristics we normally expect of a Redan, it's not a Redan. It's something else. Right?
Which suggests to me that if Raynor is laying out 36 holes at Yeamans Hall he's got a challenge on his hands. Assuming he wants to build two Redans, neither can stray very far off the template reservation. If one (or both) does, it ceases to be Redan. Templates are templates because they play like templates.
I'm not a fan of template holes generally, not because they aren't good holes. They can be and often are very good holes. I'm not a fan because they suggest to me an architect taking short cuts. I wonder if an opportunity has been lost. Which is also why I like it so much when MacK (at ANGC) and Doak (at OM) mess with templates. They designed holes that seem to be satires of templates. They are wonderfully imaginative holes.
This thread brings to mind Pete Dye's facetious, one word answer to Ran when he was asked what he liked most about Raynor courses. Pete's answer - "variety". I assume Pete was smiling broadly. And Ran moved on to the next question.
I'd love to hear others thoughts.
Bob