Hello,
Like most of you, I've been getting familiar with Erin Hills. Even forecasting it for my own golf at 1500 yards less, it's hard to see something amazingly good or novel out of it.
To me it just looks so "faux" and so full of hyperbole manufactured for challenge...all these collection areas and crowned green pads and uneven lies and capricious fingers in the bunkers. I don't know why they are holding back on the tees... they should be on sideslopes too; hell, put the tees in the bunkers; that would be memorable.
And while I'm sure the whole of it up close and in 3D is a beautiful landscape, as individual tests of golf and holes that will linger in the mind, it all kind of gels with an unfriendly (to enjoyable golf) sameness. I'm not even talking about the extreme length in the least, I think half these holes could be fretful for elite play at a course of 750 less yards.
While I understand the intent to build something in a naturalistic style that accords the maximum links values a select property offers, a course such as this seems to constantly remind me of how manufactured those results can turn out.
One value of true natural architecture as found in vintage links is that design was just behind man's use for play...Now, we're "ahead" of play, determining the capricious results that will result if you miss the large plateau pad on the hill, where the flagstick is...intentionally setting mowing patterns and selecting which natural depression will get sand, expose sand and which will not, where the fescue starts.
It's every bit as designed and managed as Baltusrol is, and kind of unfriendly in a brutish, withering way as the critiques of Baltusrol sounded last year...almost "boring" in the way Baltusrol is among the championship rota of Early Age courses.
The ironic thing is, like Chambers Bay, this is probably a fantastic course to view/play a professional match, but as a test of medal golf in an important championship...it merely has designed facilities of mass for hosting a major championship. If that is one of its virtues, I'd rather seen them return to Bethpage, Torrey, Medinah, Congressional, or something bigger, a little "meh" but older school than launch courses "intended" for a US Open.
I could be wrong, we'll see, but this course is going to pick the winner, and I don't know if it will pick from the world's best handful.
cheers
vk