Anthony, Ive been a member member at St michaels for the last few years and couldn't agree more. The course has been very disjointed and has suffered from bad design decisions but the potential is definitely there for a really good course. they are doing some new work that has been improving the course and I hope it continues.
I just wonder what the good doctor would have done if he carried on down the hill from NSW!
Alan... Let me ask you this. Do you happen to know the ownership status of St. Michael's property? As you probably know NSWGC is unusual insofar as was established as a private club on what was then land owned by the Army, who took the course back by public domain during WWII.. Several decades ago, it passed from the Federal Government control to NSW Parks and Wildlife's management. The club leases the property for around $300-500k per year.. With everything going through the government for approval, that means re-routing of the course has been off the table since the late 80s. (The club has a 1975 letter from Bruce Crampton where he proposes building two holes east of No.5 and re-siting the clubhouse right onto the ocean. Also included was the idea of a 100 yard long salt-water swimming pool dynamited out of the rocks!)
Dealing with today's reality, it took over two years simply to rebuild the bridge to the 'island tee' on the 6th hole after it was destroyed in a storm. Now they want to move the green site about 8 yards closer to the water.. thankfully executing even that plan has proved to be challenging since it's a stupid idea.
A similar situation at St Michaels would limit the scale of any redesign. That said, you could improve the course 100% simply by redoing the current green sites and moving some of the tee boxes to accommodate new angles into the greens.
P.S. If Mackenzie had visited the property, St. Michaels would have been a lot better... If you think about NSW, it's not a regular piece of property, at least for a golf course.. it's really three different landforms, the 'bowl' near the clubhouse, the open field where 4, 8, 12, and parts of 13, 15 1& 16 are laid out, then the coastal area where you'll find 5-7 and 13-15. Mackenzie put together a routing and topographical map based on two visits to the course that lasted a total of 5 hours.. Without a formal land survey as reference, his topographical map was no more than 3' feet at any point on the course.
St. Michaels is a contiguous piece of property and more well suited for a golf course. In those days they would have been able to build a couple of holes closer to the ocean as well..