http://golfclubatlas.com/courses-by-country/scotland/northberwick1/Over the past twenty years, Seth Raynor's stock has risen more than that of any Golden Age architect, even more than Flynn’s, at least to me. What course has risen the most? Excluding Old Town, The Cal Club, LA North, and all those courses where transformational work has taken place, I nominate North Berwick, a course that save for the usual tweaks is largely as it was in ~1996. If not, it is running a very tight race with (what else) Fishers Island. Today these exuberant designs are so much ‘better’ than what we were told was 'great' only two decades ago.
Architectural tastes have shifted and evolved at a more rapid clip over the past two decades than at any time in the history of the sport. The reason? Surely it is tied to the internet, social media, and how quickly we interact with so many and can view so much. As to what constitutes great architecture, Ron Whitten noted in his February 2000 Feature Interview on this site that
‘the only true influential course I can think of is the Old Course at St. Andrews. Everything in golf architecture is pretty much either a reaction to it, or a reaction against it.’ But mention blind shots, quirk, stone walls, bad bounces, out of bounds, "unfair" bunkers in the middle of fairways, severe greens and are we talking about The Old Course or its prettier kissing cousin North Berwick?! Both are idiosyncratic and then some. Yet, because North Berwick never hosted an Open and because it tips out at 6500y (which, as an aside, is what TOC measured in the 1950s), the design is seemingly only now getting its proper recognition as one of the game’s elite.
Growing up, my 'bible' for good taste was
Following the Fairways edited by the wonderful Nick Edmunds. In the 9th edition, published 1996, North Berwick placed 36th among the UK and Ireland's top 50 links. Well - times they be a changing! Witness GOLF Magazine where the course has surged to #68 in the world - and I know at least five panelists that rank it higher than 36th in the world, let alone GB&I. How wonderful it is to see golfers these days embrace something unique like North Berwick. That patently was NOT true in the 1960-1990s when so many of the best received courses fit a certain 'championship' mold. Sand Hills forever repudiated that concept, punctuating the countercurrent Pete Dye began.
In March I posted that being a member of Royal Melbourne might be the ultimate for those that enjoy the juxtaposition of city life with nature. I stand by that sentiment BUT since a landscape of Edinburgh’s famous buildings is what wraps around my wedding band, I must say that the northern hemisphere equivalent of enjoying big city life while being able to quickly immerse yourself in nature might be the potent Auld Reekie/North Berwick combo. LACC and TCC fans harrumph all you want but neither the charms of North Berwick or Edinburgh are easily replicated elsewhere. One minute you can be battling the elements along the Firth of Forth and the next, down a close and snuggled in a pub watching fencers go at it outside in a courtyard!
A tip of the hat to all those that live in Edinburgh and play golf at North Berwick – I am not sure life gets any better.
Best,